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A65408 The practical Sabbatarian, or, Sabbath-holiness crowned with superlative happiness by John Wells ... Wells, John, 1623-1676. 1668 (1668) Wing W1293; ESTC R39030 769,668 823

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spirit who is our intercessour within us And in correspondence to this blessed Trinity there Rom. 8. 26 27. are three species of beings who enjoy glory the glorious God the holy Angels the glorified Saints and thus meditation may tune the morning of a Sabbath and the musick may sound all the ensuing day CHAP. XXII God is most illustrious in his Bounty and Presence WE must meditate on the morning of a Sabbath not onely on the nature of God on the attributes of God and on the works of God but likewise on the bounty of God and his indulgence in giving us his Sabbath Our very work on this day is our reward our spiritual duties are our greatest dignities O what an honour what a favour what a happiness doth God vouchsafe us in giving us this golden season David though a King and the Head of the Psal 84. 10. Psal 42. 2. best people in the world esteemed it an honour to be the lowest Officer in Gods house Psal 84. 10. The ordinances Psal 63. 2. of God are called our appearing before God Psal 42. 2. The fruition of them is as the seeing of his face Capernaum Deut. 4. 7. because of them was lifted up to heaven Mat. 11. 23. Who can tell what honour it is to appear in the presence of this King Or what happiness to see his lovely countenance In the ordinances of God the Christian hath sweet communion with ravishing delight in and enflamed affection to the blessed God if in them he tasts God to be gracious and hath the first fruits of his glorious and eternal harvest Well might the Protestants of France call the place of their publick meeting on Gods holy day Paradise Ordinances are heaven in a Glass and the Londs day is heaven in a Map O the bounty of God in giving us this blessed day This day is to be valued at a high rate therein we enjoy fellowship with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ we have tasts of the Spirit and feel the influential impressions of his grace we are going up the stairs till we come to the highest loft of 1 Joh. 1. 3. Psal 34. 8. glory The Jewes call the week dayes prophane dayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but the Sabbath a holy and precious day The Greeks call week days working dayes but the Sabbath is a day of sweet rest Other dayes are common and ordinary dayes but this holy Sabbath is the chief of dayes Many daughters have done vertuously but thou excellest them all Many dayes as Lecture Prov. 31. 25. dayes Fast dayes Thanksgiving dayes have done vertuously but thou O Sabbath excellest them all Well might the good soul run to meet thee in the morning and salute thee with a Come my sweet spouse thee have I loved for thee have I longed and thou art my dearest delight How far then Honos ne sit onus nec verba spiritus verbera carnis should we be from accounting the Sabbath our burden and our attendance on Ordinances upon that blessed day our task or bondage O let us not esteem spiritual opportunities our fetters but our freedom Think what the Phaenix is among the birds the Lyon among the beasts the Fire among the elements the Prince among the Subjects that is the Lords day among other dayes Wax in the shop is worth something but wax put to some Deeds is worth thousands Ordinary dayes are wax in the shop but the Lords day is wax put to the deeds Upon this day Christ carries the soul into his wine-Cellar and his banner over him Cant. 2. 4. is love Can. 2. 4 5. Upon other dayes Christ feeds his members but on this day he feasts them on other dayes they have their ordinary dyet but on the Sabbath they have their exceedings on this day Christ brings forth his living waters Gen. 43. 34. his best wine Joh. 2. 10. His finest bread his Benjamins Haec visio non est personalis et Jacobi solummodò consolatio sed commune piorum solamen ut de praesentiâ et divino auxilio dubitemus Par mess On the Lords day Christ pitches his Tabernacle among us we are as it were taken up into the mount with God there to be transfigured before him Mat. 17. 2. When the Lord appeared unto Jacob in a vision by night he saw a Ladder erected between Heaven and Earth and the Lord on the top of it the Angels ascending and descending by it and when he awoke How dreadfull saith he is this place the Lord was here and I was not aware surely it is no other Gen. 28. 16 17. then the house of God and this is the gate of heaven Are not Hos 11. 9. our places of assembling the very gates of heaven In our Deut. 33. 3. solemn assemblies is there not a ladder erected between earth and heaven and is not the Lord at the top of it The gracious Sicut deus sanctus est sic etiam populum sonctificat et servat et in medio eorum est et apparet Riv. instructions which we receive are they not so many Angels descending The gracious motions which arise in our hearts upon meditation on Gods word upon thanksgiving to God or rejoycing in him or else sorrowing for our sins are they not as so many Angels ascending And have we not then great cause to be filled with admiration and holy gratulations to God for Sabbath indulgence for his rich bounty in the donation of his blessed day On the morning of the Sabbath let us meditate on the presence of God Many miscarriages are acted by man and many miseries do seize upon man for the neglect of this ever Deus totus oculus est et minima videt August seasonable meditation A solemn consideration of Gods presence would restrain us from sin would quicken us in duty would draw out our graces would compose our spirits and cast a holy awe upon us which things would be inductive of much fruitfulness and piety When we sin we forget Gods eye is upon us when we flag in duty we do not think God is nigh to us when we trifle away Sabbath we do not remember Gods hand will certainly be against us Now there is a two-fold presence of God There is a more general presence and God is present every where Deus presens est 1. Per Essentiam Psal 139. 12. 1 Chron. 28. 9. First By his Essence and so he fills all things 1 Kings 8. 27. and thus he fills heaven with his glory Earth with his goodness and Hell it self with his power and justice Secondly God is present every where by his knowledge so he beholds all things 2 Chron. 16. 9. Light and darkness 2 Per Cognitionem night and day are all one to him Psal 139. 12. He seeth the very imaginations of our hearts His eyes behold and his eye lids try the children of men Psal 11. 4.
sorrow Titus an Heathen Emperour when a day was past and he h●d done no good Pedr. de Mex Hist Imper. on that day was wont to break out into sighs and sorrow to those who were about him and cry O my friends I have l●ft a day The loss of any day is matter of moan but Ezek. ●9 14. to lose the Lords day and the Lord in that day this is a lamentation and shall be for a lamentation In nature the interp●sition of the Earth between the Sun and the Moon causeth an e●clipse and surely when earth vain thoughts earthly discourse froth and neg●ect have interposed between God and thy soul on his own day what an ecclipse of sadness Eccles 12. 5. should it cause upon thy heart Upon the loss of friends we go in mourning and why not in the loss of Sabbaths which are good friends to the soul Christ waited for thee in every Ordinance thou didst not give him the meeting go home and like the Dove bemoan the loss of 2 Kings 2 12. thy m●●e It is most equal when Ordinances are not our Tristitia nobis data est ut dole ●m●s non de morte sed de peccato ibi sol●●● utilis est ●●●stitia alibi est inutilis Chrysost treasure that they should be our trouble and what we want in good we should make up in g●i●● When Elisha went with Elijah and a chariot of fire parted them asunder carrying Elijah to heaven and leaving Elisha on earth Elisha looked up and cryed my Father my Father Hath God and thee O Christian been parted asunder on a Sabbath and hath the Lord left thy heart on earth and himself gone to heaven O think sadly of this and with bitter moan cry out my Father my Father Repent for the loss of the Lords day and lament after the Lord of that day Sad hearts do well become empty Sabbaths It is very doleful to pine for thirst at the wells mouth If thy heart hath been dead in duties let it be drowned in sorrows Christ looks through the lattice in every Ordinance if thou hast turned thy back upon him by neglect or a vain spirit say with the Church Is any sorrow like unto my sorrow Lam. 1. 12. Search into the cause of this heartless and fruitless passing away Gods precious Sabbath It is good for a Christian to examine what way-l●id his work what kept God and his soul a sunder It may be thou didst not tune thy heart by holy preparation Lo●se strings make no musick every peg must be wound up Vndressed gardens yield no delightfull prospect Mattaina praeparatio necessaria est per diligentem cultus consideratiorem et opis divinae implorationem Riv. in Decalog nor do the nowers grow but on the b●ds where the Gardiner hath used his industry and his artifice Thou hast not happily pl●wed up thy heart aforehand by prayer and meditation and so it is fallow when it comes to Ordinances Holy duties themselves are harsh when the heart is out of tune Marshalled armies engage in battle and prepared hearts engage most properly and most beneficially in Ordinances 1. Cor. 11. 28. To examine our selves is not onely the preface to a Sacrament but to every holy Ordinance No wonder thou art dead in the Sanctuary if thou art deficient in the Closet thou didst lose the morning and therefore thou didst lose the day See is not this the cause thou art so heavy and so stupified in holy Administrations The clock was not wound up and therefore it did not strike Thou wast not Jer. 14. 9. with God in secret and therefore thou didst not meet God in publick so thou looked'st for healing and behold trouble The fire must be blown before it turn into a flame Prepared physick contributes to the cure there must be the Apothecary to prepare as well as the Physician to prescribe Medicines Barascue est feria sexta qu●m nos vocamus diem veneris quae praeparationis nomine appella tu● quia Jud●i s●l●bant illo the necessaria pa●are ●● prox●me 〈◊〉 Sabbatu● 〈◊〉 ●b omni op●re servili cess●●d●m erat Ger. Our hearts must be taken pains withall before they are fit for the Ordinances of a Sabbath The Jews had a Preparation day as well as a Sabbath day John 19. 43. The heart must be broken by repentance raised by meditation spiritualized by prayer over-awed by a sense of the Divine Majesty before it is fit for communion with God It was a serious prayer of holy Hezek●ah 2 Chron. 30. 18 19. The good Lord pardon every one that prepareth his heart to seek God and the Lord God of his Fathe●s though he be not cleansed according to the purification of the Sanctuary And in the subsequent verse it is said The Lord hearkened to Hezekiah and healed the people Experiment this preparatory work and no doubt but thy complaint will cease and the case will be satisfied It may be thy thoughts are low of Sabbath gains Men will not run a race for a trivial prize Merchants venture to Sea Phil. 1. 14. not for Pibbles but Pearles Thou lookest on Ordinances as empty breasts and so thou liest carelesly at them But this is a strange and a sinful mistake Faith the best of graces is the fruit of hearing Rom. 10. 17. The Spirit the best of gifts is the fruit of praying Luke 11. 13. And Christ Christus ill● tri-d●● 〈◊〉 et sepulturae fuit ●●●ciculus My●rhae propter d●l●rem sed p●st triduanum dol●rem absorpsit laetitia et f●ctus est ●t botrus Cypri●n vine●s enged●i illa myrrha ●●mmutata est in vinum suavissinum et salutare the best of banquets is the fruit of Sacramental receiving Mat. 26. 26. Are not Ordinances the Exchequer of soultreasure more sweet then the clusters of Camphire Lam. 1. 14. more transcendent then mountanes of Spices Cant. 8. 14. More pleasant then the Vineyards of Enge●di Cant. 1. 14. Surely thou art mistaken sinner Didst thou ever consider Prayers have held the hands of the Father Exod. 32. 10. Gospel doctrines have employed the tongue of the S●n Luke 4. 43 44. And a shower of the spirit hath fallen upon the Congregation at a Sermon Acts 10. 44. Nay the whole Trinity have been present at a Baptism Mat. 3. 16. Such fruitfull womb● must not be called Barren But this sinfull level which so prostrates Ordinances is no more then the evidence of Satans power and that he leads thee to much Del Rio. captive at his pleasure None will call Ordinances empty but the Father of lies What is it which causeth thy neglect of or slightness in Sabbath duties It may be the force of a temptation Satan hath an enmity to our communion with God It was the Evil one hindred Paul from going to the Thessalonians to scatter and disseminate the truths of the Gospel 1 Thes 2. 18. He stirred up the Jewes against the
pandorize the Sabbath to our lusts and vanities what is it but to make God serve with our sins Or as our Saviour phraseth it To turn the house of prayer into a den of thieves Mat. 21. 13. Is it fit for the witch of Endor to put the Devil into Samuels mantle 1 Sam. 28. 12. And for wicked Ahaz to put the Idols Altar into Gods temple 2 Kings 16. 14 15. Indeed the same wickedness they act who make the Lords day vile and cheap by sinfull abominations which should be honourable Isa 58. 13. in holy worship and service and those adorations which become the Lord of the Mark 2. 28. Sabbath To vitiate the Sabbath by visible prophaneness opens a way to all licentiousness and will be bitterness in the latter end Sabbath-breaking is usually the preface to other sins The 2 Sam. 2. 26. breaking of the two tables commonly begins at the fourth Commandment we first make bold with Gods day and then with Gods name and so break the third Commandment and then we can trinkle in his worship and so violate the second and by degrees we can slide into thefts adulteries Deut. 5. 21. and murders and so dash all the Commandments in Isa 28. 8. pieces he will easily covet his neighbours Wife for wantonness Claudius Tiberius Nero vocatus fuit Claudius Biberius Mero propter ebrietatem intemperantiam Sueton. who will sacrilegiously arrest Gods holy day for his excess and drunkenness It is the observation of an ingenuous person That he hath heard many malefactors at their execution bitterly bewail their prophanation of the Lords day and humbly acknowledge that sin was the leading cause of all ensuing mischiefs and miseries At the Gallows their Conscience hath pointed at the very sin which had been the chief actor in their wofull tragedy When Satan hath prevailed with us to violate Gods holy day he hath got his head in and he will easily draw in his whole body Prophanation Gulones nihil faciunt nisi ingerere digerere et egerere Bern. of the Sabbath is the gates of Hell the foundation upon which all other sins are erected Indeed the carefull observation of this day is a chain upon the soul and ties it up from sinfull vagaries it casts an awe upon the heart that it cannot presently startle but when the chain is filed off there is no end of licentious ranges as Cattle when they are got out of the pound they run into every ones field This sin of Sabbath-breaking it is like a Serpent whose sting is in its tail Indeed sanctified afflictions turn a Serpent into a rod but Sabbath-prophanation turns a rod into a Serpent and brings the most prosperous sinner into unexpected calamity It is observable of the people of Israel that sighs and groans Exod. 3. 7. brought them out of Egypt and Songs and Vanities on Gods day brought them into Babylon The Hebrew phrase Ezek. 23. 38. in Ezek. 20. 13. is very expressive the same word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chalal which is rendred to pollute and prophane viz. the Ezek. 20. 13. Sabbath signifies likewise to tripudiate and dance as the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Daughters of Shiloh did Judges 21. 21. where the same word is used to denote unto us one method of the Jews in prophaning the Sabbath viz. They passed it away jocularly Psal 87. 7. in sinful frolicks and immodest vanities and this was one of the chief sins they might sit down by the waters of Babylon Psal 137. 1. Cyril and weep over It is undeniable that the prostituting of the Sabbath by prophane practices both hath and will ruine Gaud●ntius c. Judaei non deo sed sibi die Sabbati ociantur Muscul Nations Families Persons and dig the grave to bury all comforts in It was generally complained of by holy and devout men in the primitive times that the Jews neglecting spiritual duties which God commanded abused the Sabbath The Jews which were killed at Hierusalem by the command of Florus were 630. By the Inhabitants of Caesarea were 20000. at Scithopolis 30000. at Ptolemais 2000. at Alexandria 50000. at Joppa 8400. at Askelon 1000. at A●haca 15000. at Gariz●m 11600. at Jotopata 30000. at Gamala 9000. at the si●ge of Hierusalem 1100000 c. 1 Cor. 10. 11. to case and luxury and wasted that holy day in gluttony and idleness and idle delicacies and this accusation in the first times of the Gospel became proverbial so that to keep the Sabbath loosly was to keep it after the manner of the fews And what judgments God brought upon them in those dayes how he did scatter them unchurch them unpeople them and leave them to be a vagabond Generation to all successive ages who knows not is a great stranger to Antiquity It would fill a Volume to relate the several slaughters of them and their exiles from Nations France Spain England and other places so that even at this day their mask is their best security and their veil is their only safety The Quotations in the margin give in some evidence of the infinite slaughters which were made of them they were a prey even to all Nations as if they were only fit to glut the Sword of an enraged enemy Let us therefore observe the Apostolicall advice and take these perishing Jews for an ensample of Gods heavy displeasure against debauched practices on Gods holy day To serve our lusts upon a Sabbath is to throw off Jehovah and to serve other Gods The person who is intemperate on a Sabbath doth he not serve Bacchus The effeminate person doth he not serve the Goddesse Venus And Phil. 3. 19. the luxurious person he makes his belly his god He that In nostris ecclesiis diebus dominicis carnis voluptatibus profusissime absque ullâ dissimulatione servitur quemadmodum Judaei qui die Sabbati ociantur et libidinantur acta verò et studia carnis Baccho et Veneri luxui et sastui omninò deputan●ur Muscul prates away a Sabbath doth his devotion to Mercurius he that plays at Cudgels and wrestles in a seeming valour acts his service to Mars he that sports away the Sabbath in Courtships and caresses offers his sacrifice to Jupiter that wanton God whose effeminacies are the best part of the Legend we have repored by Pagan Historians Strict and holy communion only becomes a holy God on a holy day Musculus very piously and gravely cryes out Let us throw off all cloaks of dissimulation and if we spend our Sabbaths in the pleasures of the flesh let us never say we keep a day to the Lord Jesus but let us say we will worship Bacchus and Venus or some Idol God who is the Patron of such wickedness And indeed a Tavern or Alehouse on the Lords day is a fit temple for Bacchus a Stews or Whore-house is a fit Sanctuary for Priapus a Table full of vain chat is a fit
quam jus Domini the right of an indulgent Father then of an Authoritative Lord. Mans good and benefit is twisted into Gods Command as rich embroydery is put upon a piece of sine cloth This is a Precept not only prefaced with a memento but seconded with an appeal to mans reason and conscience Let us take a view of the force of this equity It is most equal that God should have one in seven to add somewhat to what hath been said already If God gives us six dayes shall we deny him one It is the confession of Mr. Brerewood Our adversary in this cause of the Sabbath That it is meet that Christians dedicate the Lords Day wholly to the Lord and to the honour of his name and that we should not be less devout in the celebration of the Lords day then the Jews in the celebration of their Sabbath because the obligation of our thankfulness is more then theirs Thus far our adversary pathetically exhorts us to keep Gods blessed day wholly and fully to himself Holy Greenham saith If God had given us one day for our selves and kept fix for himself it had been equity in him to command and duty in us to obey But now God hath kept but one for himself and that for our profit too to break this Commandment then when God hath shown such liberality it must needs be a stupendous sin It was a rational discourse of Joseph with his Mistriss Gen. 39. 9. My Master hath kept back nothing from me but thee because thou art his Wife and therefore how can I do this great wickedness and sin against God God hath kept no day in the week from us but only the first day because it is his Sabbath how then can we do this great wickedness to prophane his Sabbath and sin against God This amplified Adams guilt he was only forbidden one Tree in the Garden and he must eat of that and this will aggravate our sin we are only forbidden one day in the week and yet we must do our owne 2 Sam. 12. 4. work please our own corruptions and gratifie our flesh and Datur Sabbatum homini ut se segreget et quiescat propter dei gloriam Aben. Fzr. sense on that very day Nathans parable which he used to David 2 Sam. 12. 3 4. is rightly calculated for every one who prophanes Gods day Hath God only one day which he hath kept to himself and sanctified to his service and laid as it were in his bosome and shall men be so unworthy then when their hearts tempt them to vanity they must take the time of this one day to please and gratifie their own corrupt hearts when they are rich in time and have six days every week given them for themselves I may here take up that of the Apostle Rom. 8. 1. Shall we sin and continue in it because Grace abounds Gods bounty should encourage not dispirit our duties it should be a spur to holiness and not a gap to prophaneness Psal 119. 164. 2. And most equitable it is that Time being one of the most precious blessings on this side eternity a jewel of inestimable worth a golden stream dissolving and as it were continually running down by us out of one eternity into another yet too seldome taken notice of till it be quite passed by us and from us It is most just I say and meet that he who hath the dispensing of other things less precious and momentous should be the supreme Lord of our time especially Eccles 9. 12. when he takes so little to himself as one day in seven And our guilt must boyle up to a great heighth if we dash the eighth Commandment upon the fourth to break both in pieces and rob God of his little spot of time the Sabbath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Homil 5. in Mat. day to waste it upon our lusts sloath or vanities It is a zealous and pathetical speech of the excellent Chrysostome What desperate folly is it saith he for people to bestow five or six dayes upon the affairs of the world and not to give one day to spiritual things Therefore let men be perswaded that at least they would set one day apart wholly to these things whatever they do on the week dayes one of the seven dayes must be set apart to our common Lord. Let us observe the Argument of this holy man not only Gods indulgence but our own dependance commands Sabbath-holiness God is the common Lord and shall we not consecrate one day in the week to his service to the great Jehovah in whom we live move and have our being Acts 17. 28. His time is not only in our hand but our times are in his hand Psal 31. 15. And if we abuse his time he can shorten ours And besides all our labours which are as the humming of a Bee or the fluttering of a Butterfly are not so valuable to take up six dayes as his sacred worship which is Psal 31. 15. not only our homage and tribute but our way to life and salvation to take up one day Gods honour and glory which is promoted on his own day by all devout and holy Christians is infinitely more considerable then all our worldly gains and petty interest which is carried on the other six dayes Bucer saith most truly and gravely He discovers himself a most deplorable despiser not only of his own salvation but of divine bounty and indulgence and not fit to Deploratum sanè i●se contemptorem demonstrat sicut salutis prop●iae sic admirandae dei ergà nos beneficentiae ecque omnino indignum qui cum populo dei vivat qui non studet tum ipsum diem domino deo suo glorificando et providendae suae propriae saluti sanctificaro maximè quùm deus nostris nego●iis et operibus quibus praesentem vitam sussentemus sex dies concesserit live among Gods people who doth not study to spend one day in seven viz. the Lords day to the glory and honour of the Lord and to look after his own salvation especially seeing God hath given us six dayes for our labours and employments to sustain our selves in this present life This holy man thinks him unworthy of any station in the Church of God who hath so far sunk himself below the shadow of all reason and justice as not to take Gods grant in giving us six dayes for our selves and so to conscerate the seventh in holy duties and exercises to the glory of a bountifull and a gracious God And indeed the waste and prophanation of Gods day only one in seven would fill any pen with gall and turn the smoothest tongue into a sword such sacrilegious and unreasonable men who prophane this blessed day a day in a week would fill any face with blushes and any tract with sharpness Dr. Twisse observes that Gomarus and Rivolus two learned men though much differing from other Divines in
have been eminent for Sabbath-holiness Let us trace the Apostolical practice which in this case is our brightest beam for our conduct and guidance Acts 20. 7. How indefatigable were they in their labours powerfull Acts 8. 4. in their reasonings multifarious in their administrations Acts 20. 10. frugal of their time copious in their preaching and 1 Cor. 16. 2. stupendous in their works upon Gods holy day On this day they discovered their thirst after souls their love to the Gospel and as so many stars they scattered the light of glorious truth They would preach on a Sabbath although it 2 Cor. 4. 4. Acts 13. 42. Acts 16. 13. was in a proscribed Synagogue and they would pray on a Sabbath though it was by a Rivers side a place of more privacy then shelter And shall these Heavenly patterns put no animation and life in us to honour the Lords day with duty and devotion The Limner who hath a beautiful person before him and yet draws an unseemly picture deserves to have the pencil snatcht out of his hand and to be discharged of his employment Arg. 7 Let us take a prospect of the golden age of the Church and observe the carriage of the Primitive Christians upon the Lords day O what a heavenly spirit breathed in them on this Coimus ad caetum et deum quasi manu extensâ precationibus ambimus Tertul. Christiani a mediâ nocte caetum inch●averunt Hier. blessed day insomuch that Tertullian cryes out in a kind of a rapture On this day we meet in our assemblies and as with a stretched-out hand we clasp about God with our prayers If ye will know when the Primi●ive Christians began their Sabbath Hierome tells us about midnight which likewise Basil affirms to be the usual practice of those times and tells us a story of himself in relation to these midnight meetings But that the Christians met before day light on the Lords day it was so generally known in the world that Pliny a modest Epist Plin. secund ad Trajanum Heathen took notice of it and makes mention of it in an Epistle to Trajan the Roman Emperour and spake of it in commendation of the Christians and urged this practice Tertul. de Coron mil. Apol cont Gent. Cap. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. as an alleviating argument to soften the Emperour to more mildness towards them and so to slacken the present persecution These meetings before day on the Sabbath are likewise mentioned by Tertullian in a Tract of his We see then the early zeal of the Primitive Christians on the Lords day Nor did they rise so soon but to spend the time to the highest advantage Justin Martyr gives us a full account of the Christians deportment on the Lords day Upon the day called Sunday saith he All that abide within the Cities or about the fields do meet together in the same place wherein the Records of the Apostles and the writings of the Prophets are read unto us the Reader having done the President gives a word of exhortation that we may imitate those good things which are there repeated and then standing up together we send up our prayers to the Lord c. And as Justin Martyr shews us how those of his time acted their duties So Tertullian tells us how the Primitive Christians acted their Graces on the Lords day On this day saith he We feed our faith with holy preaching we lift up our hope and we fasten our confidence upon Tertul. God Hierome speaking of some in his time tells us They designed the Lords day wholly to prayer and to the Hier. ad Eustoch reading of the holy Scriptures and he highly commends them for that practice And that you may not think that the Primitive Christians served God only in publick upon the Lords day Ambrose layes it as a severe injunction upon Ambro. Serm. 33. tom 3. pag. 259. the people That they be conversant all the day in prayer or reading and if any could not read that he should labour to be fed with holy conference And Chrysostome presses the people That presently upon their coming Chrysost in Joan. homil 3. home from the publick they should take a Bible into their hands and make rehearsal with their wives and children of that which had been taught them out of the word of God Tertullian and Justin Martyr positively and fully inform Just Mart. Apol. cap 30. pag. 692. from us That when the Christians were departed out of the Congregation they did not run into the rout of swashbucklers or into the company of ramblers such as did run 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Euseb lib. 4. cap. 22. up and down hither and thither but they had care of the like modesty and chast behaviour out of the Church as when they were in the Congregation Nay Theodoret assures us That the Primitive Christians did celebrate other Festivals much more the Lords day their great Festival and their Saviours Resurrection day with spiritual hymns and religious sermons and that the people used to empty out their souls to God in fervent and affectionate Theod. prayers not without sighs and tears No wonder then if Basil say We fill up the Lords day with holy prayers And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basil Clemens Romanus definitively concludeth Neither on the Lords dayes which are dayes of joyfulness do we grant any thing may be said or done besides holiness A holy speech of an excellent person And therefore Augustine in his sixth Book de Civitate Dei Cap. 11. speaking of Seneca's scoffing of the Jews Sabbath for which he had too much cause Notwithstanding saith he Seneca durst not speak of the Dies dominicus divinis conventibus sequestratus est Isych Christians even then most contrary to the Jews least either he should praise them viz. the Christians against the custome of his Country or reprove them perhaps against his own will So that the Christians observation of the Lords day in the primitive times was above the snarling of a Heathen and the scomms and sarcasmes of a gentile Phylosopher Thus we have the pattern of the primitive Church and it is a good standard for our practice Their early rising should make us more frugal of the time of a Sabbath their fervent zeal should make us more spiritual in the Ordinances of a Sabbath and their devotion at home should make us more Rom. 12. 11 conscientious in our families upon Gods holy day Let us therefore bestrict and exact in Sabbath-observation having the golden age of the Church for our ensample And indeed pure Religion and undefiled which the Apostle speaks of Jam. 1. 27. Jam. 1. 27. never looks so comely as upon a Sabbath day the day inhances the duty as the lovely dress sets off the lovely person Beauty taking advantage from the attire Argu. 8 The holy observation of the Sabbath is the
Son too He takes upon him the rags of our flesh and they are farther torn by sorrows and afflictions and at last dipt in bloud How Christ glosses upon his own love Joh. 15. 13. and sheweth us that death was the most sincere testimony and the most superlative Character of entire love his wounds dropt more love than bloud his arms spread upon the Cross were stretched out for amicable and Cùm inimici essemus reconcil●ati sumus deo per sanguinem filii sui et Christus mortuus es● pro ●●●cis et si nondum q●i●●m amantibu● sed tam●n jam amatis Bern. amiable embraces There was a threefold Inscription upon the Cross of Christ I will only a little invert it let it be this The wisdom of the Father the love of the Son and the Salvation of sinners Christs heart was full of love Joh. 10. 15. He lays down his life it is not forced from him Ioh. 10. 18. he deposits it as the pawn of his affection Christ dies for his friends saith Bernard happily not yet loving him yet already beloved by him The mercy of God did most illustriously shine in the glorious work of Mans Redemption The Apostle Rom. 5. 10. Rom. 5. 8. assures us that Christ died to reconcile enemies to his Father and what would have been the issue of enemies how bitter Coristus ex charitate suâ et Patris pro ●ohn injustis et malefactoribus peccatoribusque mori voluit Christus ergo longe omnem omnium hominum charitatem superat et transcendit Alap in Rom. Ezek. 16. 6. their portion how full of wrath their Cup how sure their slaughter Luke 19. 27. But Christ comes to die for us in this low and lost condition Ezek. 16. 6. when we were ready to receive the reward of enemies when we were falling by the hand of Justice as so many enemies How sweet and seasonable was this pity and compassion we had all the Characters of misery upon us which are fastned upon the Church of Laodicea Rev. 3. 17. we were blind miserable poor and naked both helpless and hopeless then Christ redeemed this dying Captive crew by the ransom of his bloud and as the price of his death Our Messiah must die for us when nothing else can help us and his wounds must bleed to stanch ours his bloud must be our balsam his Corrosives our Cordials his fresh wounds must cure our festred ones Heart-breaking pity and mercy brings our beloved to the slaughter when mankind was ready to drop into the flames Alapide observes There was more charity Gen. 42. 25. ●en 44. 1. and pity in one Christ dying for sinners then there can be bowels in all mankind Joseph in pity preserves his Family from famine Christ in softer bowels preserves his people from raine The wisdom of God was greatly seen in the work of mans Redemption in this work there was apparent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 3. 9 10. the manifold wisdom of God as the Apostle speaks all the embroydery and artifices of rare contrivance and wisdom Omnes illae ●ultae variae e●p●gnantes inter s●r●tiones quibus us●s ●●t deus in redimendis elect●s Christo conjungendis omnes haerationes ab aeterno definitae fuerunt in divino consilio admirabilem vere 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fuisse aeternam Dei sapientiam Zanch. in Eph. Zanchy observes that many seeming contrarieti●s and contradictions were reconciled in the Redemption of mankind Jew and Gentile dissevered in Name Nature and Priviledge are copulated in the same Gospel with the joyful news of our Redemption by Christ God and Man at an infinite distance united in the same person of Christ who is our blessed Redeemer Justice and Mercy in a mutual antipathy one to the other meet and kiss each other in the same work of our Redemption What an efflux of wisdom was this that the Son of God should die to free the Sons of men that so the Sons of men should become the Sons of God what rare contrivance of divine wisdom That justice should be executed and yet mercy no way impaired that justice should over-take the surety but mercy should be displayed to the sinner that our pardons should be written in anothers bloud our favours should lie in anothers smiles our persons clothed with anothers robe of spotless righteousness Rom 13. 14. 2 Cor. 5. 19 20 Heb. 7. 25. Rev. 1. 5. Christus jam vivit non sibi sed nobis nostram causam agens in conspectu dei that our Prayers should be heard upon the account of anothers intercession Heb. 7. 25. That our souls should be cleansed in the bath of anothers bleeding Rev. 1. 5. All these methods of interwoven wisdom may be both our wonder and meditation Christ is the wisdom of his Father 1 Cor. 1. 24. not only as he was his Son and his Character but as he was our All-sufficient Redeemer The power of God did eminently appear in the work of our Redemption Love brought Christ to the grave but power Heb 9. 14. brought him out of the grave Justice laid the weight of sin upon Christ but power sustained him under that burden Simplicius est res postulat de ipsâ Christi divinitate intelligere hunc phrasm aeternum scil spiritum quae nisi aeternam fragantiam humanae Christi victimae ospirasset utique satisfactoria pro mundi peccatis aeternaeque justitiae meritoria esse non po●●isset Par. which would have crushed men and Angels into nothing It was nothing but Almighty power which supported Christ and carryed him effectually and gloriously through the work of mans Redemption which must necessarily be exerted to sustain Christ under those effusions and chataracts of divine wrath which were poured out upon him and to raise him from that grave where he lay breathless for an appointed time What but omnipotency could break the bonds of death and petarre the Sepulchre to make way for the Resurrection of a glorious Redeemer CHAP. XXI God exceedingly to be praised in his works of Grace and Glory LEt us meditate on the morning of Gods holy day upon the works of grace Now divine grace may be taken in a Rom. 8. 28. Rom. 9. 11. Eph. 1. 11. Eph. 3. 11. double sense First Either for grace the cause which is nothing but the favour and good-will of the Lord his rich grace and mercy folded up in purposes of eternal love and therefore the Apostle 2 Tim. 1. 9. joyns Gods purpose and his grace together Gratia ab aeterno data in decreto scil Dei praedestinatione et haec donandi voluntas absoluta est et irrevocabilis Alap to evidence his gracious purposes of favour which he had from eternity towards his dear Saints These methods of grace are various and admirable The rejection of the Jews and the calling in of the Gentiles the different dispensations used in the Church before the Law under the
a pleasant thing to behold the Sun Eccl. 11. 7. because it will not meet with its last setting till the consummation of the world Gold it self is despicable because corruptible 1 Pet. 1. 18. Duration is the excellency of every good thing that which makes grace it self look so lovely and beautiful it is because it cannot faint away it is as immortal as the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isid Pelus soul it enricheth this sets off its comeliness it cannot lose its beauty Cant. 8. 7. But to return to our Christian Sabbath It therefore differs from and hath the preheminence over the Sabbath of the Jews because it walks over its grave and will survive till all Gospel Institutions shall cease and our weekly Jubilees shall be turned into eternal triumph CHAP. XXV The Comparison of the Christians Sabbath here with his Eternal Sabbatism or Rest above AND that the joy of meditation may be full and may be wholly indefective in suitable objects to prey upon on Gods holy day especially in the morning so far as time and convenience will permit Let meditation look forward Dies Dominica est imago venturi seculi et assidua commotione vitae illius nunquam desiturae non negligimus ad eam demigrationem viaticum parore Bas or rather upward and observe what proportion our Sabbath here bears with our Sabbath above This pleasing task will cause meditation to renew its strength like an Eagle Psal 103. 5. and to take its flight with greater vigour and liveliness And to make the comparison more considerable we will observe wherein our earthly and our heavenly Sabbath do perfectly agree and then take notice wherein our heavenly doth transcendently outvy and surpass our earthly Our earthly Sabbath doth resemble our heavenly in the holy nature of it They are both holy our Sabbath here is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Exod. 35. 2. A holy day a day set apart Exod. 35. 2. Exod. 28 36. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by a holy God to be spent in holy services destinated to sacred and holy purposes vouchsafed for holy Communion with Jesus Christ and appointed as a blessed means to make us holy The Lords day as our Sabbath is called Rev. 1. 10. carries holiness in its very title It s name is written in the golden Letters of sanctity and so our heavenly Hoc Sabbatum aeternum inchoatur in renatis per spirituale Sa●batum hujus vitae et consummabitur tandem in futurâ vitâ in quâ Deus erit omnia in omnibus Ger. In die judicii plenè et perfectè sub pedibus conteretur Satan In hâ● vitâ reportant Pii victoriam ex pugnâ in futurâ plen●riè liberabuntur ● pugnâ Sabbath is an undefiled rest Heaven admits of no impure thing no unclean person Eph. 5. 5. There are no weeds in our Paradise above Our future Sabbath shall be an everlasting holy day we have there a holy God to behold a holy Redeemer to enjoy holy Angels to joyn issue with spotless and glorifyed Saints to delight in nay the rivers of pleasure which run at Gods right hand Psal 36. 8. Psal 16. 11. have Chrystalline streams and are excellent not only for their sweetness but their purity Every thing in glory is unblemished and without spot else heaven could not be the seate and residence of the great King A learned man observes Our eternal Sabbath is onely the consummation of our spiritual which consists in a full cessation from sin And indeed in heaven all causes of sin shall utterly and everlastingly cease First The Corruption of the Flesh Secondly The Temptations of Satan Thirdly The Seductions of the World Fourthly A Propensness to Evil. Fifthly A Faculty and capacity of offending In glory the Saints shall be endowed with such perfect purity that suppose Temptation could get within the Veil and intrude among the glorifyed Saints that Syren should no way impress or allure them So then our Sabbath here and hereafter both look fair because of holiness Our Sabbath here resembles our rest above in the duties and employments of it In our Sabbath below our whole business is with God we run it out in hearing something drop from the heart of God when we attend upon his word in making our humble addresses to God by secret and more publick prayer in fixing our fledged meditations on God in singing Psalms and making melody in our hearts to Eph. 5. 19. God The Saints task is wholly to serve God his priviledge Intra in gaudium Domini i. e. gaude de eo quo gaudet in qua gaudet Dominus sc de fruitione sui ipsius Tunc gaudet homo ut Dominus cùm fruitur ut Domi●us Aquin. is to enjoy communion with God his ambition is to Sun himself in the presence of God on Gods holy day And all our employment in our celestial Sabbath will be to rejoyce in God and to glorifie God we shall spend eternity in venting our joys for the blessed fruition of God I say in venting those joys First Which will be rare for the subject of them they are the joys of the Saints John 16. 22. Secondly Rare for the fountain and spring of them they are the joy of the Lord Mat. 25. 23. Thirdly Rare for the plenty of them it shall be the fulness 1 Pet. 1. 8. Exultabunt Sancti in gloriâ videbunt Deum et gaudebunt laetabuntur et delectabuntur fruentur gloriâ et in faelicitate jocundabuntur aeternâ Cypr. Beata Deitatis visio est gaudium Domini tui O gaudium super gaudium vincens omne gaudium extra quod non est gaudium Aug. of joy Psal 16. 11. Fourthly Rare for the adjunct of them joy in the Holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. Fifthly Rare for the efficient cause of them they are joys from the Holy Spirit Isa 35. 10. Sixthly Rare for the characters of them our joy in our eternal Sabbath shall be First True in eternal cordial joy all the faculties of the soul shall tripudiate and leap for joy they shall be as a dancing Sun or as David danced before the Ark 2 Sam. 6. 14. and their several measures shall be the elevation of the exstacy The understanding shall joy in the Lord for its divine light the will shall joy in the Lord for its perfect consonancy to the divine will The memory shall joy in the Lord for its full strength and so the affections for their heavenly purity Secondly Our joy in our Sabbath above shall be sincere without mixture of grief or disgust Our worldly joys are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bitter-sweets sweet brier which can tear as Prov. 14. 13. well as sent but in our celestial Sabbath there shall be no Gall or Vinegar in our Cup. Thirdly Our joy in our Sabbath above shall be stable and sempiternal neither to be interrupted nor concluded because the fountain of it will be eternall viz. The sight of
liberty but licentiousnesse the loosning of the r●ines not the laying hold on our Priviledge To that which is cleared from Scripture may be added the testimony of the Reverend Perkins who writing on Revel 1. 10. saith thus The day which is here called the Lords day among the Jews was the first day of the week called sometimes by us Sunday It is called the Lords day for two reasons 1. Because on this day Christ rose from death to life for Christ was buried on the evening of the Jews Sabbath which is our Friday and rested in the grave their whole Sabbath which is our Saturday and rose the first day of the week early on the morning which is our Sunday 2. The first day of the week according to the Jewes account came instead of the Jewes Sabbath and was ordained a day of Rest for the times of the New Testament and sanctified for the solemn worship of the Lord and for this cause especially it is called the Lords day the manifestation whereof as some think John chiefly intended in this title And it is most consonant to the tenour of the New Testament to hold That Christ himself was the Author of the change of the Sabbath from the last to the first day of the week and my reasons are these 1. That which the Apostles delivered and enjoyned in the Church that they received from Christ either by voice or instinct for they delivered nothing of their own head But the Apostles delivered and enjoyned this Sabbath to the Church to be kept a day of holy rest to the Lord as appeareth 1 Cor. 16. 1 2. where Paul ordained in the Churches of Galatia and Corinth that the collection for the poor should be on the first day of the week this he left not to the choyce of the Church but appointed it by Authority Apostolical from Christ Now the day of collecting for the poor as appeareth in the Histories of the Church was on the Sabbath day when the people were assembled for Gods service For this was the custome of the Church for many yeares after Christ Apostolicâ institutione Collecta fieri solebat die dominico ubi conveniebant fideles in ecclesiâ Hinc patet Apostolorum tempore muta tum esse Sabbatum in diem dominicum First to have the Word preached and the Sacraments administred and then to gather for the poor And for this cause in the writings of the Church the Lords Supper is called a Sacrifice an Oblation Because therewith was joyned the collection for the Poor which was a spiritual Oblation not to the Lord but to the Church for the relief of the Poor and this collected relief was sent to the poor Saints abroad 2. The Apostles themselves kept this day for the Sabbath of the New Testament Acts 10. 27. And it cannot be proved that they observed any other day for an holy Rest unto the Lord after Christs ascention save onely in one case when they came into the Assemblies of the Jewes who would keep no other then their old Sabbath of the Law All this and more that man of renown in the Churches of Christ hath left upon record to assert the Christian Sabbath as a set and standing day for the solemn worship of God every week till the second coming of Christ And therefore clamorously to plead a liberty to worship God as where so when we please in Gospel-times is not onely a contradiction to holy Writ but it is likewise a giving the lye to the Testimony of the most approved Lights of the Church To be left to our selves to serve God when we please and not to be tyed to any set day of solemn worship is not Christian liberty but unchristian misery This is our snare not our priviledge If we may serve God at any time we will serve God at no time Mans corrupt nature is not so accommodated Rom. 8 7. to spiritual Ordinances that it should be often fledged with satisfaction and delight The Jews who had a clear command for Sabbath observation were weary of Quidam asser●●●t omnes dies esse aequales quilibet dies est Sabbatum Christianis sed hi dum Sabbatum multiplicant annihilant multitudo festorum interficiet Sabbatum their Sabbaths and wished them over that they might set forth Wheat Amos 8. 5. And yet this people was disciplined by God himself and carryed in his bosom Numb 11. 12. Shall men be left to themselves to serve God when they please when will the worldling shut up his shop to be at leisure for holy worship and communion And when will Proud persons leave consulting the Glass in their Chamber to consult with the glass of Gods word The covetous person will hardly spare time for solemn and divine services and to wait upon the worship of the Almighty Voluptuous persons will be lovers of pleasure more then lovers of God 2 Tim. 3. 4. And those who frequent the stews will seldom approach the Sanctuary Truly to leave man to his own liberty to serve God is only to give the reins to loose nature to range in the broad way which leads to destruction We see experimentally that all Laws divine and humane which concern the Sabbath cannot shackle corrupt man and keep him close to a due observation of it Some sin it away in acts of gross prophaneness some trifle it away in foolish talk and recreations some formalize it away in sleeping at Ordinances or neglecting family duties and he who keeps it strictly and purely is a Job 33. 23. De iis timendū qui omnes dies aequant dum dies aequant aequarent etiam divitias dum arripiunt praeceptum è decalogo opes arriperent e loculo Professor one of a thousand To take all obligations from conscience that it may serve God when it pleaseth and not be tied to any set time is to spur forward corrupt man to irreligion who is too forward of himself A grave man seriously asserts Lay waste the Sabbath and lay waste all Religion that blessed day being the hedge to keep in Man to his duty which being broken down how should we turn as wild beasts of the forrest So that this ruinous opinion will easily prove the unhappy Parent of a thousand soul-destroying mischiefs it not being probable that laying aside Mic. 5. 8. the Sabbath of the Lord we should lie under the smiles of the Lord of the Sabbath It is true that under the New Testament all places in a fair sense are equally holy but it doth not follow from hence that all times are so and Walaeus stands stiffly to it the Mat. 18. 20. argument is invalid For it is not easie or meet but is very John 4. 21. dissonant from divine wisdom to appoint in his word all 1 Tim. 2. 8. particular places where his people should meet their meetings Mat. 1. 11. being to be in so many thousand several Provinces and
reverence and devotion honour the Lords Day and abstain from all carnal actions and all earthly labours and go to the publick Assemblies devoutly The Council of Aken which was held 800 years ago Forbids all Marriages on the Lords Day as being too often introductive of unseemly vanities most improper for that holy day In a Council at Rome it was decreed That no Market should be kept on the Lords Day no sentence should be past though the offence of the Malefactor should require it In a Council at Coy it was decreed That men should do no servile work nor take any journey on this day At a Council in Petricow it was decreed That Tavern-meetings Dice Cards and such like pastimes should be abandoned on this Holy day The Council of Eliberis decreed If any man inhabiting the City come not to Church for three Lords days together let him to kept so long from the Sacrament that he may well seem corrected for it And the famous Council of Laodicea decreed That Christians ought not to Judaize and to rest from work on the Jewish Sabbath but prefer the Lords day before it and rest thereon from labour If any be found to Judaize let him be Anathema And thus we may say with the wise man Prov. 11. 14. In the multitude of Counsellors there is safety the Governors of the Church in their grave and solemn Conventions have in all ages remembred to establish the honour and Holy observation of the Lords day The Lords day hath met with acceptance and veneration in all ages of the Church In the Primitive times it was universally Ignat. Epist ad Magnes 4. Iren. l. 4. c 19 20. Tertul. Apol. c. 39. Orig. contra celsum Ambros Serm. 62. August tract 5. in Joan. Euseb eccles Hist l 4. c. 23. Hieron Epist ad Eustochium Cyril in Joan. l. 12. c. 58. Greg. l. 11. Epist 3. Justin Mart. Apolog. 2. embraced owned and observed And Ignatius Justin Martyr Irenaeus Origen Tertullian Basil Athanasius Chrysostom Hierome Ambrose and Augustine c. were but the trumpets of its praise These famous lights in the best dayes of the Church liberally contributed to the glory of the Lords day and cast in freely to the treasury of its commendation and observance And these Orthodoxal Fathers both Greek and Latin do with one mouth testifie concerning the Christian Sabbath 1. The Original thereof which they say was first established by Christs own blessed and inspired Apostles 2. The cause and occasion of this day In memory of the resurrection of Jesus Christ our Lord who rose as upon this day and triumphed over death and hell 3. They bear honourable testimony exhibit general approbation and give notice of their continual practice in the sanctifying of the Lords day in their several times and ages 4. They effectually established it by their practice preaching Athanas de circumcis Sabbat Chrysost Serm. 5 de Resur Felis f. 292. Vaulx Cath. c. 3. Ribera in Apoc Catech. Roman part 3. f. 319. Stella in Luc. Rhem. Test in Apoc. Eccii Enchyrid tit de sestis fol. 134. Hos confess fol. 300. and writings that the memory of it might never be l●st nor the prefixed time be changed or altered The Papists coming between the primitive and the later purity as a Nettle between two Roses as they kept the Letter of Gods word the matter of Baptism the Doctrine of the Trinity so they kept the time and doctrine of the Lords day And they did always acknowledge 1. That the Lords day was by the Apostles themselves established and some of them say Dominico jussu by the command of the Lord himself 2. That this was done by them in the memorial of the Lords resurrection 3. That those texts of Scripture Acts 20. 7. 1 Cor. 16. 2. Rev. 1. 10. do manifestly confirm this day 4. That it is a day above all other dayes to be honoured and esteemed 5. That the observation thereof is pars cultus divini part of divine worship and so consequently jure divino of divine right All this the Papists have freely acknowledged although they are so subject to the epilepsie of errour and the spiritual falling-sickness nay although they are so byassed by interest their fundamental maxime and so closely chained to the Popes Chair But in this particular we will grant them infallibility Nay in the darkest times of the Church when the Sun of Abbas in cap. de feriis A●gelus in verbo Feriae Sylvester in verbo Dominici Quaest 1. Et dicit hanc esse communem opinionem quod dies dominicus est jure divino Pisanella in verbo dominica truth shone most faintly and was behind the blackest cloud even then many School-men of note and eminency acknowledged the Divine right of the Lords day and gave in their plentiful attestations to that important truth And Sylvester one of them is bold to assert that this was the common opinion among them the Lords day was so venerable in the Church it could not be contemptible in the Sch●●l● Learning in the very worst times knew not how to become sacrilegious and to rob the Lords day of the honour of its di●ine original it knew not how in the very midst of the triumphs of Idolatry which was most rampant in the middle times of the Church to sink down the Lords day into An. Dom. 189. An. Dom. 822. an humane Ordinance And one thing is observable that those two famous Edicts of Charles the Great and his Son Ludovicus Pius concerning the holy observation of the Lords day were dated from those times when the Church of Christ was covered with the blackness of darkness and the Spouse had on her the thickest veil As for the times of Reformation these latter ages of the Melanct in Cateches Bu●●r de regno Christi Gallas in Ex●d Jun. in ●enes Faius in Thes Zanch. in quartum praecept Chemnit harm Evangel Beza in Th● Geneven Piscat in observat in Gen 2 3. world have not blemished the glorious work of reformation with degrading the Lords day from its due just and Scriptural honour More then a Jury of Forraign Divines acquitting this blessed day from the mean original of an humane institution And if they shall be called in they are ready to avouch it Beza Junius Piseator Rolloche Chemnitius Walaeus Bucer Melancton Gallasius Viretus Amesus Peter Martyr Zanchius Pareus and Faius c. all concurring in their sentence That the Lords day was consecra●e●●y the holy and infallible Apostles Nor are there deficient Divines of note of our own who give in the same verdict and joyn issue with the suffrages of those beyond the Seas what the eminent Perkins his opinion was in this cause hath already been suggested Let me now produce the testimony of the famous Mr. Joseph Me●e whose worth and learning was not of an ordinary s●●ture and thus he expresseth him-himself I say therefore that the Christian as well as the Jew after
observe in this Edict of this worthy Prince not unfitly called Pius that the Crimes committed on this day were onely rustical works which might easily meet with an Apologie and lay a specious claim to a dispensation yet the judgments mentioned are fearful and tremendous And the use this noble Emperour makes of these doleful Providences is most excellent and commendable becoming the Throne of Majesty a fit Motto for Princes Courts and Kings Pallaces Luke 7. 25. where holy zeal would be as genuine and proper as soft Rayment and to live piously as becoming as to live delicate●y God for the prophaning of his Sabbath hath poured forth wrath upon whole Towns and Corporations as may be abundantly testified by these ensuing Instances G●●gorius Thronensis who lived a thousand years since and upward in the end of the fifth Century according to Greg. Turon Beliarmines Chronology this learned man a verred That for the dishonour done to the Lords day fire from Heaven burn●d ●oth men and houses in the Town of Lim●ges in France But to come nearer home at Tiverton in Devonshire which was often admonished of the prophanation of the Lords day which day was very much polluted by their An. Dom. 1598. keeping a Market the day following and notwithstanding they would not reform presently after the Ministers death upon the third of April 1598 a su●den fire from Heaven consumeth the whole Town in less than half an hour excepting onely the Church Court-house and Alms-house and in this fire was consumed four hundred dwelling houses and fifty persons were destroyed The same Town fourteen years after on the fifth of Augu●t 1612. for the same sin was wholly consumed excepting some thirty poor peoples houses the School-house and the Alms-house Thus God redoubled his wrath as he did Pharaohs Dream Gen. 41. 32. to confirm this great Truth viz That Sabbath prophanation is a crying and God-provoking sin and shall be pursued with the severest extremity Stratford upon Avon was twice on fire and both times on the Lords day whereby it was almost consumed and chiefly for prophaning that blessed day and contemning the These two Instances are cited by Bishop Baily word of God out of the mouth of his faithful Ministers And is it not just that Market-Towns should be laid waste where the Souls Market-day is despised and prophaned And it is no wonder if we make Gods day the stage of sin if he make our houses the fuel of wrath God hath brought ruine upon Churches for the sacrilegious abuse of his holy Sabbath the blow which was first given to the German-Churches was on the Lord● day which was too carelesly observed among them and on that day Prague Mr. Sheph. in Bohemia was lost a fatal loss which filled the Papists with fury and rage and caused the true Professors of Religion to rowl in ashes Thus Sabbath-prophanation paved the way to their ensuing and intolerable miseries The prophanation of Gods day hath blasted whole Kingdoms and populous Nations The Council of Matiscon imputed the irruption of the Goths into the Empire to the prophanation of the Sabbath Germany may now see that one great cause of their late trouble was that the Sabbath wanted its rest in the days of their quietness and many moderate men have thought that the abuse of the Lords day was a principal procurer of Gods anger since poured forth upon poor England in a long tedious and bloody War and such observed that our Fights of greatest importance were fought on the Lords day As the Fight at Edgehill Newbury c. as pointing at our sin in the punishment and Gods wrath was written in Dominical letters And it is remarkable that Edgehill Fight which was fought on the Sabbath-day first brake the Peace and made an irreconcilable breach between the two contending Parties Indeed God is very jealous of his own blessed day which when men dare to prophane it is not in populous Towns to watch against nor in City-Gates to shut out nor in mighty Kingdoms to resist or beat back his furious and severe indignation Therefore let all the premised Examples in their several varieties cause us to walk with all due circumspection and to keep Gods holy day with just solemnity and holy devoti●n and so we may secure our selves against these heavy strokes which have broken others Jer. 19 11. like a Potters vessel CHAP. L. Some Remarkables relating to the dreadful Fire of LONDON which began on the Lords Day Sept. 2. 1666. THat God doth threaten the fiering of Cities for the pollution of his holy day is clear and manifest from Scriptural attestation and more especially from that remarkable Text of Scripture Jerem. 17. 27. the words of the Text are these But if you will not hearken unto me to hallow the Sabbath-day and not to bear a burden even entring in at the gates of Jerusalem on the Sabbath-day then will I kindle a fire in the gates thereof and it shall devour the Palaces of Jerusalem and shall not be quenched In this solemn Text we have 1. A specification of the judgment that God will punish Sabbath-pollution with viz. Fire 2. The specification of the Object that this fire shall fall Si violatur Sabbatum vorabit ignis portas urbis i. e non extinguetur ignis donec consumat totam urbem Scimus tunc temporis babitos fuisse conventus in portis Duc suerunt loca celeberrima incensum item fuit templum consumpta domus fuerunt Calv. upon viz. A City not a Village a place of meanness and poverty but a City a place of stateliness and plenty a City a place of traffick and safety 3. Here is the specification of the City Not every City neither but Jerusalem the best of Cities not the subordinate but the Metropolitan City It was not Tyberias a Maritime City not Caesarea Stratonis a Garrison City not Tyre a merchandizing City nay not Samaria the chief City of the Kingdom of Israel but Jerusalem the Metropolis of stately Judah which only was crowned with the honour of being called the City of God Psal 87. 3. Jerusalem where Gods honour dwelt Jerusalem where Gods Temple stood Jerusalem the general Rendezvous of Worshippers at set and solemn times Jerusalem whose fame was noised all the World over yet God threatens this Jerusalem with f●re and flames for prophaning his Sabbath and did God onely threaten it No He fully executed his threats upon it Jer. 39. 8. And the Chaldaeans burnt the Kings house and the houses of the people with fire and brake down the walls of Jerusalem God did not onely light and shake the Match in a threat but shot off the Piece in tremendous execution he lays Jerusalem waste which would not hallow his holy Sabbath And is not famous London the sad counterpane of destroyed Jerusalem Englands Metropolis lies in its rubbish fire hath taken hold of it and turned it into ashes What those Chaldaeans were
thus declares himself You must know Brethren that therefore it was appointed and commanded Christians by our Holy Fathers That in the Solemnities of the Saints and especially on the Lords dayes they should rest and be free from earthly businesses that so they might be more free and ready for the service of God when they have nothing to hinder them and might leave earthly cares that they might the more easily intend the will of God Chrysostome calls the abstinence from worldly affairs on the Sabbath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys Hom. 5. in Matt. Greg. of Tours Dies Sabbaths indeterminatè sumptus est dies requiei Alex. Hal. an unmoveable Law such a Law as nothing but Sacriledge and Irreligion can shake or suppress we must on this day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abstain from all works saith that golden mouth'd Father And if we come to the midle times of the Church the Sabbath still is fenced with the same cautions that no work be done thereon Gregory of Tours hath an excellent saying Being the Sabbath was the day whereon God made the Light and after was the witness of our Saviours Resurrection therefore it ought diligently to be observed by every Christian no manner of publick work to be done upon it And the same Author tells us a story of a fearfull judgement of Lightning which befell the City of Limoges ob diei dominici injuriam for prophaning the Lords day And another Gregory of a far greater fame Greg. Mag. viz. Gregory the Great speaks the same language Viz. We ought to rest on the Lords day from earthly labours and altogether give our selves to prayer And if we slide down to our dayes and the dayes of reformation servile works on the Sabbath incur the same censure If we call in the Testimony of forraign Divines Doctor Ames that pious Ames Mod. Theol. p. 364. and learned Divine observes That all servile works were to be abstained from in other festivals among the Jewes Lev. 23. 7 8. Numb 28. 25. Multò magis exclusa fuerunt à Sabbatho Exod. 12. 16. Much more on the sacred Sabbath Other forraign Testimonies might be subpaena'd in to give witness in this Cause but the Reader shall not be cloyed with a multiplicity of Quotations Onely as forraigners So our own Divines give in their suffrage to the same truth Famous Hooper Bishop and Martyr thus declares himself To that end Bish Hooper did God sanctifie the Sabbath day that we being free from the travels of the World might consider his works and benefits with thanksgiving hear the word of God honour him and fear him c. And holy Babington most pathetically Even as Bish Babington on the fourth Commandment you will answer it before the face of God and his Angels at the sound of the last trumpet weight whether Carding and Dicing c. and such exercises be commanded of God for the Sabbath And thus this Godly Bishop restrains the Sabbath to its own viz. spiritual work Not onely the Church distributive but the Church collective condemns labouring on the Lords day Many famous Councils have decried and prohibited this uncomly practice The famous Council of Mascon gives a severe prohibition to secular employments on this holy day in these words Let no man meddle with litigious controversies Concil Moscon Concil Cartha Concil Chalons or works of Husbandry on the Lords day but exercise himself in Hymns and singing praises unto God being intent thereon hoth in mind and body and much more to the same purpose I could name the Council of Carthage the Council of Chalons and others but this truth shall stand no longer before humane Tribunal Nay the great taking argument of Reason the Idol and Diana of most men joynes in the Verdict for the guiltiness and condemnation of labours and working in our Callings on the Lords day Servile and secular labours are too pedantick and low for 2 Cor. 6. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost the dignity of a Sabbath as the Apostle speaks What communion between light and darkness and what between the drudgeries of the world and the affairs of Heaven The Sabbath must not be degraded by servilities and low employments it was appointed for more noble undertakings it was set apart for Divine contemplations heavenly actions spiritual ordinances supernatural converses between Christ and the Soul and not for the culinary sweats of an empty any world To work on the Sabbath what is it but to plece a Silken garment with Canvas Greenham formerly complained There are many who make the Lords day a packing day for earth and make it a custome to have their Servants follow their Callings but these men act as Heathens who never Greenham's Treatise on the Sabbath p. 215. knew any thing of the Creation of Heaven and Earth by God nor never heard any thing of the Redemption of man by Christ nor ever tasted any thing of the sanctifying power of the Holy Ghost Reas 2 Worldly labours they tend nothing at all to the worship of God they are onely sinfull and unseasonable divertisements Can we be intent on the works of our Calling and yet at the same time our heads fill'd with divine meditations our hearts breaking with holy affections our tongues employed in sacred devotions surely this would speak us more then men and it is but a mear dream to fancy such Veniendum est ad coenam a peccatis surgendum in vale dicendum Christus fide est amplectendus nova vita inchoanda Chemn nimbleness and agility Worldly affairs will take the soul off from heavenly employment they are contraries in themselves The Shop-board and the Church cannot unite Drossie avocasions will call us off from spiritual devotions The guests who were invited to the Supper if they will mind their secular affairs they cannot come to the Supper they cannot mind their Oxen and their Farmes and the Supper too and therefore they must be excused from the Luke 14. 16 18 19. one Such men who work on the Lords day a holy man saith their hearts are possessed with covetousness their minds Doctor G. are filled with the affairs of the world and what shall God have if their hearts and their minds are alienated to another Aug. de temp Serm. 251. purpose Augustine saith We are commanded to rest upon the Lords day from earthly business and he gives us this reason That we might be the more fit for Gods service And so Calvin upon Deut. Cap. 5. Serm. 34. Calvin We ought to cease from those works which hinder the works of God Let us not stay from calling upon his Name or exercising our selves in his Holy Word Now secular affairs Concil Arelat 4. Cap. 16. a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Est omnis cessatio ab opere quies scil à motu labore Leid Prof. 218. Joh. 3. 8. Exod. 34. 6. Exod. 35. 2.
Sabbathum propriè quietem et vacationem ab opere servili significat quod deus in ipsâ mundi origine quieti sarctae consecravit Gualt Sabbathum Domini Sabbathum dicitur in scripturis Exod. 16. 20 Lev. 19. 26. Eò quod deo consecratum est et iis studiis quae ad dei honorem spectant Id. 1 Kings 6. 7. Exod. 13. 2. would keep us and chain us up from such seraphical and heavenly duties And the Council of Arles which was celebrated under Charles the Great speaks to the same purpose concluding Let those things onely be done on the Sabbath which appertain to the Service of God Nay secular works and the works of our Calling upon the Sabbath they illegitimate and contradict the very name of a Sabbath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies quietness and rest a cessation from labour it is nothing more then a denyal of toyle so that when we labour on the Sabbath we do but rough this calme and quiet day which is given us to hear Gods still voice when the spirit that wind blows gently yet powerfully in the dispensation of the word God will have his own Name known that he is a God of mercy and purity and he will have the name of his Sabbath known to be a day of quiet and cessation and therefore it is called a Sabbath of Rest Exod. 35. 2. That if we at the first view did not understand the meaning of the word Sabbath Moses Comments on it and gives us an explanation it is a Sabbath of Rest a meer Hebraisme when Sabbath and Rest are the same thing and in the Original the word is onely repeated for it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And as in the building of the Temple of the Lord so in the keeping of the Sabbath of the Lord there must be no hammer heard no axe no noise of working instruments or secular employments 4. Labouring in our callings on a Sabbath doth not only deny the name of the Sabbath but subverts the manner of its observation which is by sanctifying it The Sabbath must be kept holy so in the forementioned place Exod. 35. 2. so in the fourth Commandment Exod. 20. 8. Now 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cadash sanctifie a word used in both these Texts and many Exod. 40. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Restaurari ad sanctum usum Buxtorf Sanctificare idem est quod ad usus sanctos applicare ceu adhibere Wal. diss de quarto Praecepto De modo sanctificationis duo dicuntur primum opera propria cujusque sex diebus clauduntur deinde opera Divina hoc die omnibus praescribuntur Idem other places it signifies the separation of any thing to a holy use So the first born among the Israelites were sanctified to God the same word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cadash there they were consecrated and set apart to God So the vessels in the Sanctuary were sanctified Viz. they were set apart for the worship and service of God So the Temple was sanctified 1 Kings 9. 3. in the same sence So that whatsoever is hallowed and sanctified is set apart for holy use by the Will and Commandment of God And that great School-man Thomas Aquinas speaks to the same purpose Illa dicuntur lege sanctificari quae divino cultui applicantur Those things are sanctified in the Law which were dedicated to Gods Worship So then working on the Sabbath overthrows this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cadash this sanctifying it it diverts that day to our own use which is sanctified separated onely to a divine use Secular works oppose the very purpose of the word sanctifying they rob God of his time dedicated to holy use and give it to the Labourer to him who works which is both impudence and sacriledge Labouring casts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cadash sanctifie out of the fourth Commandment and alters the will of the great Legislator it layes waste and makes common the holy day which God hath limited and inclosed to an holy use And it is remarkable that the observation of the Sabbath is never urged by Moses or the Prophets but rest and Exod. 35. 2. Exod. 31 14. Deut. 5. 14. Jer. 17. 27. Qui●quid aliquam speciem haberet operum servilium prohibebatur in Sabbato Rivet cessation is commanded too Exod. 35. 2. It is called a Sabbath of rest Exod. 31. 14. Thou shalt do no manner of work The same strictly enjoyned Deut. 5. 14. and so Jer. 17. 27. So that God hath put rest and cessation from secular employments into the very nature and essence of the Sabbath he hath engraven rest upon the Sabbath in an indelible Character that you cannot abstract it from the Sabbath without an abolition of the Law it self If you will keep a Sabbath keep it free from worldly labours or never set upon the observation of it Rest is as necessary for us as for former times for the holy sanctification of the Sabbath our bodies are subject to Mat. 26. 41. Exod. 23. 12. Recreabitur alie●●gena muliò magis incola Ne ●ontinu●s labor●b●● s●●i●gent●r homines sea fessa memb a l●ventur die S●bb●thi Leid Prof. Exod. 31. 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 respiravit deus Corpus nostrum mortale est in quo brevi tempore tanquam in tabernaculo moramur Alap in Corinth tiredness our spirits to faintness our flesh to weariness as well as those who lived in former ages and therefore are not we as much necessitated to a quietation and rest from labours Christ may say to us as well as to the Apostles The flesh is weak though the spirit may be willing we are clogged with as many weaknesses and disinabled by as many infirmities as former times and therefore Thou shalt do no manner of work That blessed indulgence and dispensation granted in the fourth Commandment cannot but be as pleasing and gratefull to us as others in the elder dayes of the world Shall the Jewes observe an exact rest on the Sabbath and not we Christians Are our Tabernacles of clay better fixed then theirs Our tired bodies require a cessation from labours to attend on the Divine Services of the Sabbath The main ground of Gods first institution of the Sabbath was rest from his works Viz. the works of Creation and the main cause of the re-institution of the Sabbath if I may so speak in the change of the day from the Seventh to the First was Christ's resting from his work Viz. the great work of Redemption The very reason of the Law and Statute concerning the Sabbath condemns secular labours and business this day A Quietus est first started the Law it self and a Quietus est must keep the Law now setled and Gen. 2. 3. Humano more e● quad mattemperatione ad nestram institutionem loquitur scriptura Divina c Quievit deu● substitit cessavit a procreandis producendisque rebus ex nihilo ut essent Chrysost established Rest from our labours is
f●rtior u●● al●er● sed qui libidi●●m repressi f●rtior ●at s●i●so Cypr. de bono Pudic. cause and needs not the supplement of another Advocate But if the whole day of a Sabbath must be spent with God in publick private or secret duties and in managing of the affairs of the soul which comes now to be prov●d in this Chapter then the Argument for sports and pastim●s on the Lords day will lose its force and significancy And here I may begin the Argument with that sharp expostulation of Naamans Servant to Naaman himself What if God as he speaks of the Prophet had required some great thing of us would we not have done it What if God had It is most equal if man have 6 days that God should have the 7th and this is the reason the soul and life of the fourth Commandment Mr. Shep. required of us six dayes and given us onely one for our selves should we not have observed them Much more when he requireth but one day and giveth us six shall not we observe that Shall we abate God of the tale and measure of his time Shall the stream of time wherein we are commanded to worship God be so small and yet shall it be turned into several channels and diversions Reason it self here seems to condemn the straightness of our spirits but for the clearing of the Argument we will fetch our evidences from the treasuries of Scripture Reason and conveniency In the fourth Commandment which yet our Liturgie confesseth to be of equal obligation with the rest in praying for pardon for the breaches of it and begging grace for the better observance of it as was hinted before I say in this Commandment the initiatory and first words command Exod. 20. 8. the sanctification of a day not a part of a day or a few hours of a day for the words of the Statute run thus Deut. 5. 12. Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy and it is very observable and not to be passed over with silence that Memento diei Sabbathi ut cum sanctifices inquit Dominus in quarto Praecepto Ad hoc recteintelligendum notandum est ex vi ipsius praecepti non aliquam partem diei sed totum diem esse Domino sanctificandum Wal. We are to account the sanctification of one day in a week a duty which Gods immutable Law doth Enact for ever Hooks Eccles Pol. Lib. 5. God would have at least one day in a week to be allowed him Ferus The Divine Law required that one day in a week should be sequestred for holy worship Bellar. de Cult Sanct. Lib. 3. Cap. II. 1 Kings 3. 26. Mat. 25. 24. God doth not onely command us to keep holy the Sabbath which might be a time indefinite and indeterminate but the Sabbath day which amply prescribes the time of observance A day no less then the time of a day it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jom Ha Sabbath the day of a Sabbath Now the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 jom properly and usually signifies a full day unless it be figuratively and by way of Synechdoche it signifies sometimes time indefinite as Critiques in the holy tongue observe and so Gen. 1. 5. where it is said the Evening and the Morning was the first day there the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 jom and the day mentioned in this great Commandment must needs comprehend the space of twenty four hours nor do the Learned by their interpretations or glosses abreviate or shorten the time but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 jom is a whole day by the confession of all Now shall God enjoyne the observation of a day and shall we mutilate it Shall we maime or curtaile it and take part of this holy day for our labours or recreations Surely this savours of too great presumption We must by Divine command keep holy a day not a part or piece of a day and therefore for us to say as the Harlot to Solomon in another case Let not God have the whole Sabbath nor let us have the whole Sabbath but let it be divided between his service and our sports what is this but with the unprofitable servant to call God hard Master and that his requiring a whole day was an act of too much austerity And as we have an Argument in the beginning of the fourth Commandment wherein God shews his Soveraignty so we may discern an Argument in the body of the Commandment wherein God shews his indulgence for in this fourth Commandment God allows us six dayes for labour Exod. 20. 8. but the seventh is to be a day of holy rest and observation Now the six dayes for labour are six full and whole dayes Naturale est diem septimum quemque deo sacrum esse Jun. Com. in Genes without any deduction or abatement Man may without regret on these six dayes pursue 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those things which belong to this life as Chrysostome calls them He may go forth to his labour till the Evening as the Psalmist speaks nay if his strength still fail not he may draw the curtains Morale est ut ex septem diebus unus cultu● divino consecretur Armin. Disp 77. Chrysost Psal 104. 23. No man doubteth the meaning of these words six dayes shalt thou labour c. to be this That seeing God hath permitted us six dayes to do our works in we ought in the seventh wholly to serve him VVhitguift Defence of the Answ to the Adm. p. 553. Jam hinc ab initio doctrinam hanc insinuat Deus erudiens in circulo hebdomadae diem unum integrum segregandum et reponendum in spiritualem operati●nem Chrysost 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Septimum diem non utilem deus putabat ad creandum sed ad quietem accommodandum statu●t Theod. quest in Genesin Perpetuum est ac aeternum quamdiu Ecclesia agit interris quòd unus dies in hebdomade cultui divino mancipetur hoc stabile firmum est Pet. Mart. loc Com. Aug Serm. de Temp. Requirit Deus quietem hanc corporis et cess●tio●em ab operibus non qualemeunque et dimidiatam sed justam plenam et exact●m i. e. proposito accommodam Musc Totus ergo dies ex toto ammo quantum fert humana necessitas et imbecillitas ritè ac piè Deo servandus erat Leid Prof. of the night and make a further progress into his toyle and painfulness and all this without blame and violation of the fourth Commandment Now shall not the seventh day be of as long continuance and duration as any of the other six Shall the day for Heaven be more contracted then the six dayes for Earth The day for spiritual rest shall it not be of an equall length with the dayes for secular labour Whence ariseth the inequality that the six dayes may be wholly employed in our worldly affairs but if part onely of the Lords day be spent in
Jer. 31. 33. of growth in Promissio facta est Christianis amicitiae dei remissionis peccatorum et regni coelestis grace Hos 14. 5. the gift of a Christ lay under a promise Gen. 3. 15. Luke 1. 71. the gift of the spirit was bound up in a promise Acts 2. 33. Gal. 3. 14. If a new heart be put into our bosomes it is the issue of a promise Ezek. 36. 26. And God in a pursuance of a promise breaths a new spirit Ezek. 36. 26. into our souls Shall we rise higher Thirdly God hath made promises to his people of things eternal Of a future Crown 2 Tim. 4. 8. Of a glorious Kingdom Luke 12. 32. Of a heavenly Throne Rev. 3. 21. Of eternal Inrer pocula Germaniae clamatum est spiritus calriviamus est spiritus melancholicus Sclat Life John 3. 16. Of everlasting Habitations Luke 16. 9. Of everlasting Salvation Heb. 5. 9. And therefore how much are they to be censured who accuse Religion of sadness and sorrow and upon the force of that argument draw back to courses of sin and prophaneness What do they less then blaspheme both the God and the priviledges of the Saints Joy is a constant dish with the people of God but Cujusmodi est gaudium quod est in domino In his quae secundum domini mandatum fiunt gaudere debemus Basil their joy is hidden Manna it lodges in their bosomes not in their looks their musick-room is a little more retired the world doth not hear their melody Look upon the Saints in their lowest condition when grace it self is at an ebb at very low water Yet then First The Lord assures us that little is a pledge of more 2 Cor. 1. 22. And even Secondly That little he will enable to get a final victory Rev. 3. 8 9. And in Rev. 2. 7. the promise is made to him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who is overcoming not to him who hath already overcome And Thirdly That little shall be kept perfect to the day of the Lord Jesus 1 Thes 3. 10. Phil. 1. 6. So many causes of constant joy are there to all Gods Children what roses do they walk upon here even while they are in a valley of tears In their bosomes lies a pardon like Aarons Rod blossoming in the Ark their consciences are serene and calme with holy peace nay they can laugh in a storm they can joy in tribulations Rom. 5. 3. Jam. 1. 2. And they can Gaudium Christiano utile est immò necessarium ut jucunde vivat et alacritèr in virtutibus pergat glory in a ship-wrack they can triumph in death it self 1 Cor. 15. 55. And therefore the Apostle inculcates and reduplicates the command for holy joy Rejoyce in the Lord alwayes again I say rejoyce Phil. 4. 4. But though the joy of the Saints open to the wide Common they can and may rejoyce in all things and in all times yet in the inclosure of Gods blessed Sabbath the freshest and sweetest springs of joy are to be found And thus much for the third duty Jam. 1. 2. to be performed on the morning of a Sabbath before we go to the publick congregation Viz. Labouring with our own hearts The fourth duty to be discharged before the publick on Gods holy day is private reading of the Scriptures What a charge doth God lay upon the Jews to be acquainted with Deut. 11. 18. the Scriptures Deut. 6. 7 8 9. And these words which I command thee this day they shall be in thy heart and thou Verbum dei in nos totos admittamus in mentem in memoriam in affectus in vitam ut nulla sit pars nostri in quâ verbum dei non inhabitet shalt teach them diligently to thy Children and thou shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thy house and when thou walkest in the way when thou liest down and when thou risest up and thou shalt bind them as a sign upon thy hand and they shall be as frontlets between thy eyes and thou shalt write them upon the posts of thy house and on thy gates Let us summe up this charge First Gods word it must possess every part it must be between our eyes for direction it must be a sign on our hands to regulate our works and operations it must be lodged in Evangelica historia debet esse perpetua lectio cujuslibet hominis Christiani Mirandul our hearts to sanctifie and spiritualize our love and affections that the heart may be warm but not feavourish Secondly Gods word must possess every room it must be our discourse in our Parlors where we use to sit it must be our meditation in our chambers where we use to lie and if we take the air abroad this holy word must be our companion this must be testis conversationis the witness of our conversation Thirdly Gods word must possess every season It must go to bed with us to sanctifie the farewell thoughts of the day that we shut up the day and our eyes with God if we rise in the morning it must be our morning star to guide us our morning dew to soften us our morning Sun to warm us Ne patiamini verbum dei esse quasi peregrinum et foris s●are sed intromittatur in domicilium cordis nostri versetur assiduè in animis nostris non secus ac domestici versantur in domo suâ immò sit nobis non minùs no●um ac familiare quàm illi esse solent qui apud nos habitant Daven it must be our first company and our best Breakfast in the morning And Fourthly Gods word must not only possess the inside of the house but the out-side too it must be written on the posts and the gates to shew its own excellency that we must hold it out and own it in the view of all the world This is the summe of the charge and indeed it is not unnecessary if we consider the Scriptures are the guide of our youth 2 Tim. 3. 15. They are the cure of our minds Mat. 22. 29. Ignorance of Gods word breeds errour and spiritual distempers in us They are the comfort of our souls Rom. 15. 4. They are both a Cordial and a Julip to warm us in cold affliction and to cool us in careless prosperity They are the treasure of our hearts Col. 3. 16. He is the potent and mighty man who is an Apollos in the Scriptures Acts 18. 24. Nay they are the breathings of the Holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1. 20. They are not only mens advantage but the divine issue of the third person in the Trinity The result of the whole is this if God lay so much weight on reading of the Scriptures and man receives so much advantage by acquaintance with them no season fitter for this duty then the morning of a Sabbath First The reading of the word prepares for the hearing of it that we
Christus est rosa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 optimè flos quia florum flos Del. Rio. men tell over their riches with no small delight The very Gospel is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 glad tidings and can we be weary in hearing glad tidings messages of love and life from heaven news of a Christ and a Kingdom The soul which is tired on a Sabbath understands not its own interest but as the Prophet Jonah saith forsakes its own mercies Jonah 2. 8. Can our conversation be in heaven as the Apostolical command is Phil. 3. 20. and yet droop and be flatted in heavenly Sancti in coelis habitant dum hic vivunt atsi Aquilae quae in arduis nidum ponunt Greg. duties in heavenly ordinances and pine after a dismission and release Burdens of Roses are not painfull but pleasant Ordinances are onely bundles of Myrrh to refresh and revive the Soul Surely the Sabbath may plead with tired professors as once God did in another case Mic. 6. 3. O my people what have I done to thee and wherein have I wearied thee testifie against me So might the Sabbath expostulate what is in me so burdensom Is it my institution because it is divine Luke 2. 37. Is it my duration because it is for a few hours onely David longed to dwell in the house of the Lord all the dayes of his life Psal 27. 4. And Anna the Prophetess departed not from the Temple but served God with Fastings and Prayers Insabbato unusq●isq s●dere debet in suo loco Exod. 16. 29. et non procedà● ex eo Quis est locus spiritualis animae Justitia est locus ejus et veritas et sapientia et sanctificatio et omnia quae Christus sunt et hic est locus ex quo eum non oportet exire Orig. night and day Still the Sabbath may plead are the Ordinances of God my Jewels and my Ornaments such causes of surfet Or rather are they not the Galleries for Christ and the soul to walk in the very stages of Christs presence Mat. 18. 20. The rich opportunities for soul-advantage the spiritual mans Mart Here the sinner like the sloathful servant can answer nothing It is both our doom and degeneracy to be weary of divine Ordinances and it loudly speaks 1. That Christ is not our beloved else his company would ravish not tire our attendance and be our satisfaction not our surfet Lovers are not quickly weary of their interchangeable converses 2. That heaven is not the end of our race surely if it were we should not then be so soon tired in the way Ordinances are the road to glory The Traveller puts on till he allight at home 3. That the world hath too much influence us The Jews were weary of the Sabbath Amos 8. 5. but it was that they might set forth Corn. Carnal minds do not relish spiritual duties they are their clog not their complacency To be in the flesh in fleshly desires and delights and to be in the spirit are a real contrariety The love of the world will cast out the love of ordinances This and much more our wearisomness in and of ordinances proclaims to every observer It is the observation of Origen that burdens were not to Onera non sunt portanda die Sabbati onus est omne peccatum Orig. be carried on the Sabbath day Nehem. 13. 15. saith he What is this burden but sin And this is the mistake of many when sin should be they make service their burden when they should groan under vile practices they groan under precious Ordinances One well observes wearisomness in duties sucks out all their sweetness and makes them dry and unpleasant and casts a dishonour on the God of ordinances Isa 5. 20. as if he was a fountain shedding bitter streams but on the contrary delight makes duty savoury meat and Gospel recreation Jacob for the beauty of Rachel served seven years and they seemed but a few dayes Gen. 29. 20. The Gal. 6. 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gen. 27. 4. Psal 119. 97. Psal 1. 2. Psal 110 3. Dr. Full. Eccl. Hist Saints in the beauties of holiness run through many services and they are not their toyle but their prerogative they rise from duty as Galen usually did from his meals with an appetite Dr. Fuller observes a Philosophical act did once so please Queen Elizabeth that her delight did drown all tediousness and she heard the Disputes till within night in the midst of Summer And shall Philosophy refresh and captivate more then Divinity shall the hand-maid more please then the Mistris Shall disputes of Nature be more satisfactory Deus est nat●ra naturans et creaturae sunt natura naturata Baron then the God of Nature Shall the Schools more delight then the Sanctuary Nay shall the Mathematicks of Archimedes so drown him in rational pleasure that being in his study he heard not when Syracuse the City of his habitation was taken by the Romans Shall such raptures drop from the contriving of a Mathematical Instrument and is there no fruit on the tree of Life no delicacy in ordinances to affect our souls and to wear off a cloyed irksomness from our spirits on the blessed Sabbath Surely it argues weak and faint grace when the breast that feeds it becomes troublesome and the sincere milk of the word 1 Pet. 2. 2. becomes sowre and stales because it is not made use of Caut. 2 Let us take heed of trifling away the Sabbath under the pretence of vain excuses The Sabbath is the solemn time of mans Aurum igne probatum alii intelligunt de v●rbo dei Illud enim argento septies dec●cto est probatius Auro obrizo desiderabilius Alii intelligunt de fide quâ solâ divitiae caeleste accipiantur quaeque igne afflictionis quovis auro purgatior redditur Coram deo non facit divites aurum sed fides Christum cum the sauris suis possidens 2 Cor. 5. 21. life the soules gale of opportunity the good wind for the harbour of Rest On this day God sets forth his merchandize Rev. 3. 18. for man to buy up to enrich himself to eternity then God offers his gold to make us rich in grace his white raiment to make us rich in beauty his eye-salve to make us rich in knowledge Pareus well observes Adams fall proclaimed him bankrupt and he naturally labours under a three-fold malady 1. Of Poverty and so God offers Gold Rev. 3. 18. to set him up again to repair his lost revenues and estate 2. Of Nakedness when Adam sinned his first sin Gen. 3. 7. himself and so after himself his posterity was shamefully naked and now God offers especially on a Sabbath day the spiritual fair-day for such merchandises white raiment to cover our nakedness and to adorn us with a beauty exceeding our Primitive loveliness He offers the righteousnesse of Christ a fairer Garment then Adams
this sin we must Ex hoc textu Augustinus solebat disputare solam infidelitatem esse peccatum damnans Chemn be cautionated especially on the Lords day which is faiths working day It is observable that miracles are attributed to no other grace but faith Mat. 17. 20. This grace can remove mountanes Luke 17. 6. Bring faith to an Ordinance it can remove the mountane of carnal reason the mountane of prejudice the mountane of fleshly mindedness A Believer at an Ordinance disputes it not with God is not disaffected with any thing of God is dissolved into the will of God he puts up his prayers as a wise Merchant waiting a seasonable return Psal 85. 8. Hab. 2. 1. He hears Omnibus Evangelium praedicatur sed non omnibus creditur omnibus deus salutem offert sed non consert nisi fidelibus sicut medicina omnibus aegris pro ponitur sed non medetur nisi eam sumentibus Chrysost the word and he claps it close to his soul by personal application Vnbelief throws away the plaister but faith layes it on the wound Faith is both the mouth to receive in and the stomack to digest spiritual food The word striketh boldly and worketh miraculously under the banner of faith Rom. 1. 16. 1. Cor. 1. 21. 2 Tim. 3. 15. But there is a blindness in unbelief which cannot see the beauties of an Ordinance and how lovely Christ looks in it Faith hath an eye to see the excellency and an ear to hear the melody of an Ordinance and to attend to Christ speaking loves to his beloved Faith in the threatnings of the word causeth humiliation Faith in the precepts of the word causeth subjection Faith in the promises of the word springeth consolation The unbeliever like a man in a swoon shuts his mouth against the cordials of the Gospel Other sins indeed wound the soul but unbelief like Joab strikes under the fifth rib and kills out-right This sin spoyles all sowres all disanuls all 1 Pet. 2. 8. The word to an unbeliever is like rain upon the Rock like dew upon a barren Heath The Apostles advice Heb. 11. 4. Eph. 3 12. is sweet and sacred Heb. 10. 22. If we will draw nigh to God with acceptance we must do it with affiance Faith is an instrument which justifies both our persons and performances Of all Virgin Graces Faith is the Hester that God will set the Crown upon Let our design then be on a Sabbath to avoid the rock of unbelief and get that indispensable and inestimable grace of faith Let us be earnest for the spirit to plant it and let us attend seriously on the word Luke 11. 13. Rom. 10. 17. to water it that this blessed grace by a divine Chymistry may turn the metal of every Ordinance into gold Caut. 4 Let us take heed of undervaluing the Ordinances of a Sabbath Many make a bad market of a Sabbath day because they do not prize those things which are then set to sale They speak in the language mentioned by Job Job 21. 15. What is the Almighty that we should serve him and what profit shall we have if we pray unto him And take up the peevish expostulation of the froward Jews mentioned by the Prophet Mal. 3. 14. Ye have said it is in vain to serve God and what profit is it that we have kept his Ordinance Slighted meals may cloy but not strengthen they may be our surfet not our satisfaction Customary approaches will meet with dead Ordinances It is the humble soul who highly prizes the opportunities of life will be the thriving soul David prized the sanctuary and he saw God there Psal 63. 2. But indeed ignorance is the cause of our disesteem we do not value Sabbath love because we do not understand it we slight the Ordinances of grace because we know not the grace which is conveighed from the Ordinances Ignorant Children throw away Pearls a Lapidary would Canales gratiae à quibus aqua viventes affluentèr diffim duntur not do so The Ordinances they are the channels cut out by Christ through which the waters of life run to the soul they are the spiritual Alymbecks to drop the sweet stillings of grace upon the heart they are the hives of that which is sweeter then the honey and the honey comb Psal 19. 10. They are the Conduits which run with Wine on Christs resurrection day our blessed Sabbath These Ordinances which many foolishly despise but as God saith to their own hurt Jer. Gen. 41. 48. 7. 6. They are the Suhurbs of heaven the Coelestical Exchange where Christ and his people barter for spiritual commodities they are Christs Granary and store-houses to find the soul with bread In these golden seasons God exchangeth mercies for duties not as if our duties deserved mercy but out of his own free grace and shortly will exchange glory for grace Exod. 29. 43 45. If Paul can come in the fulness Externis institutionibus utimur tanquam adminiculis ad veram conte●plationem divi●● Majestatis ●● gloriae ejusdemque erga populum su●● 〈◊〉 Riv. of the Gospel Rom. 15. 29. how much more our dear Jesus in his blessed Ordinances These are the Chariots to bring believers down into Goshen a place of light and pleasantness Every holy day is a Sun beam which conveighs light and heat to the inward man Ordinances are those chrystal glasses wherein the soul sees its beloved Those divine graces which are for meat to satisfie and for medicine to heal are found onely growing on the banks near the waters of the Sanctuary Gods tabernacles are amiable Psal 84. 1. And who will nauseate beauties the captivations of sence In the Sanctuary there is strength and beauty Psal 2 Cor. 3. 1● 96. 6. Christ is never more beautifull in the eye of the believer Cant. 1. 14. Isa 33. 17. Psal ●0 17. Psal ●● 2. John 5. ● John 9. 7. then when sitting at his table Cant. 1. 12. Or walking among his Candlesticks Rev. 2. 1. David desired to see the beauty of the Lord in his holy Temple Psal 27. 4. It must needs be Satans artifice to beat down the price of Ordinances How many Criples have been healed in this Bethesda How many defiled souls have been washed in this Isa 53. 2. Siloam Thou who undervaluest Ordinances look again and see whether there be no form nor comliness in them cast thy eye upon the Author of them the Author and giver of them is God they are his Institutions He hath appointed Jer. 3. 15. Prayer a means to prevail with himself for m●rcies and blessings He hath commanded our attendance upon the word 〈…〉 that the day spring from on high may visit us and the Net being spread our souls may be taken by the hand of Christ God owns and he crowns Sabbath Ordinances Cast thy eye upon the nature of them they are the sweet intercourses between God and the Soul the
not drinking things luke-warme nor walking measured paces not rejoycing in dances c. And Chrysostom urges with much holy fervency That on the Sabbath we should lay aside all the affairs of this life and withdraw our selves from them and spend all the leisure of the Sabbath in things spiritual and divine which concern our souls This eminent Person makes a difference between sloth and rest the one concerns the body the other the soul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Tom 5 p 225. and he clearly states the Question that the Sabbath was never given us to please a piece of clay but to serve the interest of that piece of eternity which every one of us carry in our own bosoms And on this manner Augustine courts his Auditors We must know dearly beloved That it is therefore August appointed of our holy Fathers and commanded to us Christians that upon the Lords day we should rest that reposing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Concil Load Can 29. from all worldly business we might be more fresh and prompt for Gods divine worship and may with more ease attend upon the will and service of God Nay a whole council viz. of Laodicea in the twenty ninth Canon hath these words It doth not become Christians to Judaize and to be idle on the Sabbaths This was the spirit and temper of the Primitive times they press that our Sabbaths might be spiritualized not that our work should wholly cease but only should be changed that the labour of the hand should be turned into the working of the heart that manual operations should be turned into mental contemplations and on this day our work must not be servile but seraphical we must not throw away the Pen but we must write the fairer In the middle times of the Church when such dark Thom. Aquin. 22dae quaest 122. 4 3. 11. 3 dist Art 15 Quest 1. clouds had over-spread it that spiritual worship was as Saul among the Prophets rare to a Proverb yet then the employing of the time of a Sabbath in holy service was accounted morall in the fourth Commandments and scoffs were bestowed freely by the writers of those times on those who wasted the Sabbath in plays or idleness This bright Alex de Alens p. 3. quaest 32. Scol l. 2 de instit qu 4. Artic. 4. truth like a star in the night made its way to shine in the darkest times The fine spun disputes of the Schoolmen could not distinguish it away but it brake through all their curious webs This truth was so fastned in the Church it could not be disputed out by the School And let Semper eadem not only be Queen Elizabeths Motto but the Sabbaths holy observation In the dawning of Reformation there was light enough to discover this truth many eminent Divines those burning and shining lights which blaze more because they are nearer to us give in their suffrage for spending the Sabbath in holy exercises sharply decrying Hinc colligimus deum non de re nihili aut fl●cci loqui cùm sanctificationem Sabbati nobis commend●verit Calv. sluggishness and sloth on this blessed day It is the grave observation of incomparable Calvin That God speaks not of a small matter when he commands the sanctification of the Sabbath but doth exhort us to a diligent marking of it and our want of care to mark is a breach of this Commandment This worthy man could not imagine that a Memento should Preface a day of sloth and idleness that we might take our carnal ease without such an alarm To walk in the fields to sit idling at the door of our house to chat in a room upon a Sabbath are no such importances as to require such diligent attention or exact observation there is little holiness in any thing of this A carnal man may rest from labour and never much mind or need a command Nature will let us to take our case without any special command from the God of nature The great Jehovah had never needed in the midst of thundrings and lightnings with great Exod 10. 18. terrour and Majesty to give out a command for us to go to a Bench to sit on to a couch to talk on or to a bed to lie on A School-master need not make a set speech or tune his language to strains of Oratory to perswade his Scholars to go to play and be idle Idleness needs no great enforcements wants no arguments of reason nor paintings of Rhetorick we can prate of worldly affairs and take our pleasing pastimes without any attractive engine Zanchy speaks very pregnantly to this purpose I call saith he this dayes rest Zanch. de oper creat p. 3. l. 1. c. 1. divine and holy because as God is never idle so he would have us take rest in soul and conscience after that manner that yet notwithstanding we be alwayes employed in those things which are of Gods spirit and which appertain to the glory of God and to the good both of our selves and others The cause of commanding rest upon the Sabbath was not for rest sake and that man might be idle but that he might altogether spend that whole day in divine worship Thus this Reverend Person Sed ut toto illo die possint vacare cultui divino Zanc. in quartum praecept rightly state● the Question and truly asserts that as rest is included in the Commandment so holy and spiritual worship is the end of that rest God calls us off from Earth to mind Heaven and the body must have a vacation that the soul may have a Term the body must decrease that the soul may increase Corporal rest is only the means by Non igitur cum Ethnicis sentiendum festos dtes tantúm quiet●s remissionis causa suscipi quorum finis ●sset reco●datio beneficiorum dei in convocatione sancta c. which we may pursue our eternal rest This learned Rivet looks upon it as a brutish and heathenish Opinion to think that God should give us a holy day for sloth and remisness and he positively tells us That the end of the Sabbath must be the recordation of divine benefits and to refresh our memories with most grateful rehearsals of Gods bounty and to put up prayers for future grace for the leisure of Saints must not be fruitless The eccho of this golden sentence is true and sweet A godly mans leisure must not run waste When the world gives him a short quietus est he must rest in God His spare hours from his outward affairs must be his serious hours for his soul The Saints have alwayes work to do on this side eternity but especially on that day when rest is commanded us to look after eternity Hospinian here accents Finis tertius est Sabbati ejusque otii ille est subli●●or Vt vir spiritua●is ad aeternam sui salute● propior accedat ut vitae sanctae ●ffici●● occupetur
world the Sun which he created he now causeth to rise every day the waters which he created he now either restrains to calmness or leaves to rage Man whom he created still he forms him in his Mothers womb Psal 139. 16. And in this we must imitate God who is not onely the Legislatour to command but the pattern to exemplifie Sabbath Rest we must be still working we must on that holy day work out Phil. 2. 12. our salvation with fear and trembling and this is our greatest providence the great work of Government for us to subject 2 Cor. 10. 5. our souls to the obedience of Christ 2. Idleness on Gods holy day swerves not onely from the pattern of the Father but likewise from the example of the Son Jesus Christ was as the School-men speak upon another John 5. 8. account purissimus actus all activity upon the Sabbath Luke 13. 12. then the wrought his wonders then he made his cures then Luke 14. 4. he preached his holy and heavenly doctrines then he enriched Luke 4. 32. the world with his heavenly discourses then he went up and Luke 14. 16. down doing good The Sabbath was the sphear of his love Acts 10. 38. the orb of his light the testimony of his power and the Mat. 12. 13. stage of his most glorious actions It is observable Christ Luke 4. 3● enriched the Sabbath with all variety of good then he taught the soul then he cured the body then he healed men of their sicknesses and women of their infirmities then he cured patients of spiritual maladies then he cast devils out of them these embroydered robes of love and power Christ cloathed the Sabbath with and canst thou sinner eye Christ and slide over a Sabbath either doing nothing of that which is worse then nothing Canst thou melt a Sabbath into dross by idleness Shall the head be so vivacious Fug tiniquitatis est signaculum gratiae Alap and thou who pretendest to be a member be in a Lethargy in a Swoon be crampt with sloth and laziless on Gods holy day Either name not the name of Christ or depart from this iniquity Study to draw Christ upon a Sabbath 2 Tim. 2. 19. and this will be as Aristotles iron ball in his hand which when he fell asleep fell into a brass bason and so awakened him this will keep thee active and vigilant say Christ and this this will put thee upon work and service Idleness on a Sabbath is neglecting great salvation the idle sinner on this day loseth great opportunities of life great Heb. 2. 3. condescentions of love great advantages for the soul How many have been delivered from the womb of a Sabbath new 1 Pet. 2. 2. born babes in the Church when God hath said to the loins of an Ordinance give forth and to a spiritual opportunity keep not in When the wind blows strongly the waterman Quid prodest Christum sequi si non contingat consequi sic currite ut comprehendatis Bern. sets up his sail rnd plies at the Ore more industriously Sabbath opportunities are our good wind for heaven now we must set up our sail by diligent attention and sweat at the Oar by earnest devotion now we must row hard towards the shore of rest and happiness we must not be as the Drone but as the Bee sucking honey from the flower of every Duty and every Ordinance Indeed sloth is one of the blackest spots in the feast of a Sabbath And yet how many are sitting 2 Pet. 2. 13. idly at the doors of their houses when they should be Jud. v. 12. knocking at the door of heaven and enquiring for the way of salvation they are talking frivolously when they should Luke 16. 17. be speaking to God in holy Orisons and Supplications they are throwing away time when they should be laying up treasures Luke 12. 33. even treasures in heaven I may say to such foolish sluggards in the same language which the Mariners spake to Jonah Jon. 1. 6. What mean ye sleepers why do not ye gather your clusters in the vintage of a Sabbath why do not Mat. 20. 6. ye reap your advantages in the harvest of a Sabbath why do Omnes sine vocatione dei sunt otiosi nec sibi nec aliis utiles Par. ye not follow the suit of your eternal souls in the term-time of a Sabbath Pearls are not found in every Rock Gums do not drop from every Tree Mines are not sprung in every field nor is Manna for the soul to be gathered on every day The careful traveller will not spend his day in sleeping in an Inn. And let us consider the Sabbath is a day of diversion but not impertinency CHAP. XL. Some incident cases proposed to satisfie Conscience in Sabbath-observation THe Lords holy day as it is enriched with many sweets Sicut mercatoves per cancellos vimineos transeuntibus merces è domo ostentant non propè et distinctè sed procul sic deus se nobis ostentat in hac vitâ Alap so it is encompassed with some scruples not as if there was any obscurity in the command or cloud in the day but man in this life knows onely in part 1 Cor. 13. 12. And a twi-light knowledge engenders doubts hesitations and scruples and as in other things so in Sabbath observation And therefore this Chapter shall be spent in directing conscience least it lose it self in by wayes and irregular ranges which a faint light may subject it to Several cases may serve us instead of several lights to guide us in the way of peace and security on Gods blessed day Case 1 What we must do in the non-performance or in the maleperformance of Sabbath duties Many in the close of a Sabbath Psal 137. 2. are ready to hang their harps upon the willows and to shed a shower of tears when they look back and think they have been in the Wine-cellar of Christ but they have not refreshed their souls they have sat with Christ in his banqueting house but they have enjoyed no divine or spiritual Cant. 2. 4. delight many duties they have neglected more they have formally passed over the Sabbath is run out scarce any stoopings left and yet they have not quenched the thirst of their souls the term time is gone and their cause is as it was or rather is further off then before they are very sensible though they have not filled up the spaces of a Divine Mat. 5 5 Sabbath they have dropped into the vials of divine displeasure This is their case and this is their moan and let it not Lamen 1 12. be nothing to all those who pass by Now therefore to satisfie Revel 16. 1. this case Those who have been either short or superficial in the duties of Gods blessed Sabbath Let them lie in the dust Sabbath sin should cause seri us
prayer or any other duty their thoughts look back as Lots wife did upon Sodom and so that duty is as it were turned into a pillar of salt a monument Duo contrarii amores in eodem corde locum non habent nec habere possunt Zanch. of shame And so in hearing the Word they bring the cares of the world with them and they are thorns which choak the blessed Seed of the Word Mat. 13. 22. and it becomes altogether unfruitful And again worldly thoughts do very unseasonably mix with heavenly duties we do ill to be in the vale when we should be on the mount Exod. 24. 18. with God to be supping up the dregs of the world when we should feed on the marrow Psal 63. 5. and drink of the Isa 25. 6. wine well refined in blessed Ordinances this is to powre contempt upon the provisions of the Sanctuary To say our communion is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ on a Sabbath when yet our hearts are fluttering over the John 1. 1. 3. world this is to delude not to satisfie the Soul But be it we can taste no sweetness in Sabbath duties yet we are bound to continue our diligence we must observe our duty though presently we receive not the mercy It is Job 1. 9. the badge of Mercenaries to plead no Recompence no Obedience Indeed the recompence of reward may be in our eye though it be not our end In the work we do we may have a love to the reward though the meer love of the reward doth not attract us to do the work God is our great Lord and Master and though it is not servile obedience yet it is the obedience of Servants we ow him continually and much more upon his own day Cassian observes That he Cassian l 4. c. 24. knew a young man who meerly in obedience to his Superiors command for a whole year together went two miles every day only to pour water on a withered stick We ought every Lords Angeli quomodo discurrunt medii inter deum nos Bern. day to come under Gospel waterings though our hearts remain withered and dry though we feel no softnings or comforting it is enough we have a command the duty is ours the day is Christs who is over all God above all blessed for ever It is a favour God will employ us though he Rom. 9. 5. should never reward us The Angels rejoyce that God will engage them in his business though they receive no new recompence they are chearful to increase the duty though they do not enlarge their glory The Angels saith the Apostle are Bernardus solitus est dicere Angelos secum cooperari unoquoque die dominico all ministring spirits sent forth to minister c. Heb. 1. 14. This is their property they think themselves happy in that God thinks them worthy to do his work in the world And so must we esteem our selves honoured in conversing with God in Ordinances though we do not hear the spouts run Hab. 3. 17 18. with the waters of life and though the fingers of Christ do not drop Myrrh Cant. 5. 5. nor do we taste the honey-comb in them Cant. 5. 1. For Ordinances in themselves are Jude 14. 8. as Sampsons Lion with the swarm and the honey in them they are in their own nature pots of perfume more reviving then the smoaks of incense and though our resentments be not so quick yet we must follow the scent It is a good observation Hos 6. 3. of Chrysostom As fountains saith he send out water though no pitcher be brought to fetch from them so Pastors must preach and Auditors must hear though no fruit be received For as to keep Sabbaths is indispensable for men so to bless them is arbitrary with God But if God shine not forth from between the Cherubims of holy Ordinances Psal 80. 1. yet it is incumbent upon us to wait at the door of the Sanctuary alwayes remembring that subjection is ours but benediction is his and he will have mercy on whom he will have Rom. 9. 18. mercy Suppose Sabbaths are not successful to us what peace or profit can we expect if we lay them aside Upon the same account all other times of holy duty and the exercise of Religion may be waved and left off and then what can there be but a fearful expectation of judgment Hierom upon Heb. 10. 27. that place of the Apostle Rom. 9. 16. It is not of him that willeth nor of him that runneth but of God that sheweth Hieron in Psal 107. mercy Sure then saith he It is not of him who sleepeth nor of him that idleth nor of him who neglects duty for on such the Lord will have no mercy And Chrysostom well observes upon that speech of our Saviour Mat. 16. 24. If any will Chrysost in Matth. homil 56. come after me let him deny himself c. Christ saith not as this Father observes If any man stand still or sit down for the Kingdom of God is not given to standers or to idlers but to walkers and to workers So it may be concluded the comforts of God are not given to any person who upon any pretence whatsoever shall omit or neglect his duty especially Iter monstrat Apost quo fiat ut semper gaudeamus Per orationem nimirum quae non cessat gratiarum actionem Theoph. Non erit glo riosa victoria nisi ubi fuerint laboriosa certamina Ambros upon the Lords day For any to pretend they have performed duties and waited on Ordinances and yet fail of success what good success can they expect upon the ceasing of those duties The Apostle bids us pray without ceasing 1 Thes 5. 17. So then we must pray though the blessing do not presently come we must obey the command though we do not receive the reward If men may use the means and yet miss the end surely such must miss the end who will not use the means let none think to better their souls condition by laying aside Sabbath transactions When Christians have performed Sabbath duties and do not find such comfortable and desired success in their Gospel communion Let them smite upon the thigh and reflect upon themselves The word is fire and why am I cold The Psal 6. 6. word is quickning and why am I dead Ordinances are the means of grace and why have I no grace or comfort by the Psal 43 5. means Some are at Sermons and Sacraments with their Psal 42. 4. hearts leaping and go away with their faces shining and Christi●ne fige tui cursus profectusque me tam ubi Christus posuit suam Bern. those who see them see they have been with Jesus but why go I mourning all the day Thus we should put our selves upon the search and scrutiny Skilful Physicians search into the cause of distempers and so should
Deus graviter eorum pertinaciam objurgat quòd profano contemptu legem sabbati violassent Rivet commands may be termed non-conformity but to throw the filth of scandalous practice into the lovely face of a Sabbath is an impudent opposition of the most High and as God himself accounts it the breach of all his Commandements and Laws Exod. 16. 28. And this Rivet calls the Israelites stubbornness To pollute the Sabbath with scandalous practices raises complaints in heaven and earth When God draws his endictment against Israel immediatly before he sentenced them Isa 1. 13. to the Babylonish captivity one chief part of their charge Ezek. 20. 13. was They prophaned his Sabbaths Ezek. 23. 38. And this Ezek. 22. 8. he calls prophaning of himself Ezek. 22. 26. which is a strange Ezek. 23. 38. expression And for this sin he brought wrath upon them Nehem. 13. 18. This provocation opened the sluces of divine fury There are three things God is very jealous of 1. Of his worship And of this he hath taken care in the Israelitae non sabbata sed B●alis festa observabant Alap second Commandement 2. Of his Name The glory of which he hath secured in the third Commandement 3. Of his Day Which he hath hedged about with a hedge of thornes in the fourth Commandement And when men by their prophaneness break this ●edge he makes his complaints from heaven against this prodigious evil Jer. 40 3. In the Primitive times the universal complaint of the Fathers was against prophaning of the Lords day Clemens Clem. Alexand Paedagog lib. 3. cap. 11. Alexandrinus complained in his time That the people after they were gone out of the Church they laid aside the counterfeit vizard of gravity and fell to delight and sport themselves in an impious manner with love-songs and noise of Minstrels c. Augustine called the prophanation of the Lords day by dancing Playes or rev●lling A Jewish sabbatizing to be Aug. de conser Evangel lib. 2. cap. 27. Enar. in Psal 32. de decem chor dis cap. 3. abominated by all good Christians As if it was a sin not to be named among those who did wear the livery and glory in the name of Jesus Christ who was perfection incarnate the Beauty and desire of Nations Hag. 2. 7. The Lords day is that Virgin light which must be espoused by holiness by exact and suitable carriages and not subjected to the rapes of sin Greg. Nyssen Orat 2 de resurrect carnis prophaneness as Gregory Nyssen speaks most piously Sins which are deeds of darkness John 3. 19. Ephes 5. 11. are no way becoming the Sabbath which is a day of the sweetest Opera carnis sunt opera tenebrarum Glos interlin light and therefore we may take notice that whereas the Evening and the Morning made up every day else Gen. 1. 5. Gen. 1. 8. Gen. 1. 13. Gen. 1. 19. Gen. 1. 23. Gen. 1. 31. No duskish morning or declining evening are mentioned as Si prohibetur die festo opus aliquid utile ad vitae necessitatem annon potiori jure quae non nisi c●m peccato aguntur et gravi offensione dei Cyril lib. 8. in Joan. cap. 5. the integral parts to make up the Sabbath Cyril with much reason argues If those works are forbidden upon a Sabbath which are subservient to the necessities of mans life much more those works which tend to the disgrace of mans life which cannot he done without a grievous provocation of the Lord. O let us take heed saith Primasius that we do not celebrate Gods festival in luxuries and banquets Gregory Nazianzen in an Oration of his against Julian the Apostate passionately perswades the holy observation of the Sabbath and plainly tells Christians That to keep the Sabbath in a more costly attire in a more plentiful meal in a neater dressing of our house in a more metrical dancing to the musique or in a more impudent lusting this better becomes the Gentiles custome then the Christians practice This excellent person 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Naz. thought such sinful vanities a fitter livery for Pagans whose right eye is put out by divine praeterition And Chrysostome sha●ply inveighs against Commessations and drinkings upon Gods holy day and affirms It much redounds to the dishonour of that blessed season The breathings of the heart not the banquets of the flesh the pouring out our souls in holy Prayer not the pouring out of Wine in intemperate healths to be filled with the Spirit Ephes 5. 18. and not with new Wine becomes that day which Christ is the Lord of In these latter times holy and Reverend Divines have Hisce diebus opera carnis non sunt toleranda nec profana negotia c. Bucer de regno Christi lib. 2. cap. 10. with much moan bewailed and entred their caveats against prophanation of Gods holy day Bucer writing to King Edward the sixth Our English Josiah cryes out On those days viz. the Sabbaths the works of the flesh are not to be allowed nor prophane businesses nor licentious sports nor any other vitious pleasures And this was a good Memento for a learned man to suggest to a religious King Indeed to serve Satan upon Gods day is not onely the blemish of particular persons but the bane and ruine of Kingdomes it lays a Nation open to the invasions of mans sword and to the effusions of Gods wrath King Henry the 8th who was no Nonesuch of Piety yet he strictly commanded all Bishops and Preachers diligently to teach the people That they all The institution of a Christian man A book set forth 1543. inscribed by King Henry the 8th to all his loving subjects and approv'd by both houses of Parliament offend against the fourth Commandement who will not on Gods day cease from their own carnal wills and pleasures but pass away their time in idleness ingluttony and riot in vain idle pastimes which is not according to the tenour of the fourth Commandement but after the usage and custome of the Jews So that now Nazianzen saith To prophane the Sabbath is after the custome of the Gentiles And King Henry the 8th saith it is after the usage of the Jewes So that it must be concluded to defile Gods holy day by loose and prophane practices doth better become a hardned Jew or a darkned Gentile then a holy Christian whose conversation should suit with a glorious Gospel The learned Gualter 2 Cor. 4 4. bitterly exclaims How do they sin with manifold impiety and sacriledge who attribute this day to Mammon Bacchus and Venus who can feast drink play dance whore and follow their luxury and pride and live so that they never serve the Devil more then on this day which ought to be wholly consecrated to God And it is no way to be doubted this is not the least cause of the evils and calamities of our age And because
us this fair relation of their behaviour on the Sabbath We have our Conventions saith he on the Sabbath and sit down with great silence and the people speak not a word unless it be in the praise of their Teachers one of the most grave of the Priests reads the Law and expounds it and this is done all the day long till twilight and so the people g● away more knowing in the Law of God And this relation Eusebius takes notice of in his eighth book of Evangelical preparation the second Chapter Thus then upon the credit of one of their most famous Authors it was the shutting in of the evening put a stop to their publick services besides the remains of duty to be acted at home so that their whole Sabbath was a golden thread spun out in heavenly and devout performances which may cover the faces of many Christians with shame who trifle away their precious Sabbaths in vain and flatulent impertinencies To add but a word The Jews zeal for Sabbath-observation sometimes gave so good an heat that mistaking the force of the fourth Commandment In it thou shalt do no manner of work Exod. 20. 10. they would not adventure to rost an Apple to pluck an herb to climb a tree or those things which are most harmless and inoffensive nay not to defend themselves when assaulted by the enemy on the Sabbath day and by this means they became a prey to their Joseph lib. 12. cap. 8. Adversary Antiochus Epiphanes whereupon Matthias made a Decree that it should be lawfull upon the Sabbath to resist their Enemies which Decree they understanding Joseph lib 14. cap. 8. strictly as if it gave them onely leave to resist when they were actually assaulted and not to use any stratagem on that day to prevent their enemies by raising of Rams or setting of Engines undermining c. They became a prey a second time to Pompey But afterwards they arrived at a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 better understanding of this Decree and now they have a Proverbial speech Peril of life drives away the Sabbath As the Christians use a Proverb much to the same purpose Necessity knows no holy dayes And this scruple concerning such small things as were before mentioned as likewise not Hospin de Orig. Festor cap. de Sab. warring on the Sabbath Hospinian puts a fair construction upon and thinks it rather mistake then superstition And so we have seen the fair portraicture of Sabbath-observation as it was sometimes drawn by Jewish practice when they were serious and advised and not effascinated with sensuality and idolatry and truly it was very commendable and deserves imitation and will certainly heat the furnace of eternal fire seven times hotter to Sabbath-breaking Dan. 3. 19. Christians CHAP. XLIV Holiness doth as well become the Christian as the Jewish Sabbath if we look back to the Infancy of the World IT is not unusual with many persons to look upon the strict observation of the Sabbath as a piece of servitude which onely belonged to the Jews and that Christs coming Externus dei cultus à naturae lege et jure existit cùm illud à naturâ comparatum est ut tempus aliquid iis quae ad cultum pertinent opportunè et liberaliter demiss Azor. loosned the reins and gave Christians a greater liberty Now to refute this unhappy fancy shall be the design of this and some subsequent chapters and the only way to accomplish the attempt is to shew that the Sabbath every way belongs as much to Christians as to Jews and therefore the holy keeping of it concerns as much the one as the other for holiness is the end of the Sabbaths command To cease from servile works is the Command and Sanctification is the end of that Command as the School-men speak Now to evidence this the more plainly and demonstratively we must run up the Sabbath to the fountain head to Gen. 2. 3. Septimum diem deus non accommodum putabat ad creandum sed ad quietem adaptum statuit Theodor. the primitive institution of it which we find in the very infancy of the World Gen. 2. 3. The Sabbath at first was given to the Sons of Adam and not to the Sons of Abraham and it was a Sun which did not onely shine upon the coast of Judaea but upon the whole world and so every way belongs to us as well as to the Jews This will be more clear if we canvass the words of the institution recorded in the forementioned Gen. 2. 3. And God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it because that in it he had rested from all his works which he had created and made Observatio sab bati omnino praecepta suit ante Mosen quia in primâ creatione deus eam sanxit Par. in Gen. Before I pass to a further explication of the text I shall take notice as others have done that all our translatours of the Bible in the Contents of this Chapter put in the first Sabbath instituted And therefore the apprehension of these learned men which put the sacred Scriptures into an English dress and made them speak our mother tongue might prevail much against the cavils of any of our own Nation But for the more clear explication of Gen. 2. 3. we must enquire into the meaning of these words Blessing and Sanctifying and I suppose the worthy Chrysostome may here be an authentical expositour and thus he descants on this text Gen. 2. 3. He sanctified it wbat means that word he Chrysost in Gen. sanctified it he separated it therefore the Divine Scripture teaching us the cause why he sanctified it addeth because in it he rested from all his works Now hence God would teach us from the beginning to separate and set apart one whole day in the circle of every week to the exercise of spiritual things For for this cause did the Lord finish all the fabrick of the world in six dayes and honoured the seventh day with his blessing and sanctified it because in it he rested from all his Illa sanctificatio Sabbati nihil aliud esse potest quàm mandatum de illo die sanctificando Adamo datum Dr. R. works To this worthy Father let the famous Bishop of Armagh succeed in the explanation of this text To sanctifie a Sabbath saith he is either to keep it holy or to make it holy and seeing God cannot keep any day more holy then another the meaning must be he made it holy which is as much as to command the keeping of it holy And it is observable God blessed the Sabbath not with natural blessings that the Sun should shine brighter and the weather prove fairer on Zanch. de hom Creat lib. 1. Sab. fin libr. this day rather then another but the blessings of a Sabbath are of another nature they are spiritual blessings converse with God holy and divine meditation c. which blessings proclaim
would intervene And this day of Gods resting was not only exemplary to Adam but to all his seed and so to Christians as well as Jews the seventh in number though not in order And it is further observable that Adam had on him and so should all men have a double calling the one for his body for which he was allowed six dayes and the other for his soul for which the seventh day was ordained So then this observation of the Sabbath was no way disagreeing to the state of innocency Man in that blessed condition could not conveniently attend upon two things at the same time viz. the dressing of the Garden and the solemn worship of God And as one well observes If heaven it self be a perpetual Sabbath why should it be thought incongruous for man to keep a Sabbath in Paradise And indeed it cannot be incongruous that the Sabbath should be kept in Paradise when the Sabbath it self is a kind of Paradise there is something to resemble a tree of life here the soul tasteth of Sabbath Ordinances and life nay eternal life flows from them and the pleasures of a Sabbath not a little resemble the delights of Paradise The Rev. 1. 10. soul being in the spirit upon the Lords day much resembles Adams rejoycing in Paradise and no doubt but the sweetness of Paradise did most principally consist in the intimate communion Psal 63. 2. Adam had with God and the same communion sheds the delight and prerogative upon the Sabbath or else wherein doth the Sabbath out-vy and excell other dayes And that the Sabbath was instituted from the beginning is not only most clear from Scripture but most consonant to reason The Patriarchs of old had their solemn worship Cain and Abel offered sacrifices they called upon the name of the Sanctificavit deus diem septimum i. e. sanctum celebrem haberi voluit à caeteris diebus segregavit Catharin Lord in a solemn way Gen. 4. 26. And no doubt this they learned from Adam and he from God they had their Altars Gen. 12. 8. yea their set Altars Gen. 13. 4. for ordinary worship And if they had set worship they must have stinted time for how shall we meet together to perform ordinary worship without set times And then no doubt but the seventh day was that time for we have not the least shadow of any other ordinary time And it is very unlikely Gibbons Quaest disput in Genes Quaest tertiâ that if there had been any that no mention should be made thereof in Scripture therefore seeing mention is made of this day Gen. 2. 3. before mention is made of any publick worship and no other day is noted in all story till the 16th Willet on Exod. 16. Quaest 34. Voluit deus diem septimum sibi tribui et d●cari ut caelestibus et divinis rebus intenti deo gratias agamus pro acceptis beneficiis Cathar Chapter of Exodus where again mention is made of the Sabbath Exod. 16. 25 26 30. And the fourth Commandment ratifies the same day upon the reason assigned in Gen. 2. 3. It surely must be sufficient and satisfactory to all reason that the seventh day was the ordinary day appointed for those times to perform solemn and publick worship to God And as when man hath run his race and finished his course and passed through the larger circle of his life he then returns to his eternal rest so it is contrived and ordered by divine wisdom that he shall in a special manner return unto his rest once at least within the lesser and smaller Rom. 11. 33. circle of every week and so his perfect blessedness to come might be fore-tasted every Sabbath day and so be begun here And look as man standing in his innocency hath cause thus to return from the pleasant labours of his weekly Paradise employments so man fallen from his more toilsome labours to his rest again And therefore as because all creatures were made for man and man therefore was made in the last place after them so man being made for God and his worship thence it is that the Sabbath wherein man was to draw nearer to God was appointed immediately after the Creation as learned men observe For though man is not made for the Sabbath meerly in respect of the outward rest of it yet he is made for the Sabbath in respect of God in it and the holiness of it to both which then the soul is to Dr. Field have its weekly revolution back again as unto that rest which is the end of all our lives and labours and in special of all our weekly labour and work Dr. Field professeth That to one who knows the story of the Creation it is evident by the light of Nature that one day in seven is to be consecrated to Gods service and worship There must be a time allowed to every purpose which is Inest homini naturalis inclinatio ad hoc quod cuilibet rei necessariae deputetur aliquid tempus sicut corpori somnus et refectio c. quae requirunt tempus sic animae tempus requiritur ad ejus refectionem qua mens hominis in deo reficitur Sayrus necessary and indispensable so for our bodies there must be a time to eat to drink to sleep c. For civil affairs there must be a time for work and labour trade and merchandise to promote and sustain our civil interest and shall not there be a set time for soul-refreshments when the precious soul may be recruited Shall our Estates have their seasons for their increase and our Bodies for their support and not our Souls for their delight and edification What is this but to debase the soul and degrade it from its due honour and dignity The Image of God is most lively impressed upon the soul Eternity is riveted into the very nature of the soul Jesus Christ died for the Redemption of the soul and shall only the soul want its term its appointed season for its spiritual converse Shall there be a Change time and not a Church time shall there be a time to Work and not a Naturae instinctus est ut aliquid temporis cultui divino impendatur et animus in hoc se recreat Azor. time to Pray This is a principle of Nature and therefore draws its original from the worlds beginning Nor can it be conceived but the soul stood in as much need of communion with God in divine worship in the infancy as in the old age of the world and therefore the Sabbath was as necessary to Adam and his immediate heirs as to his more remote posterity That the Sabbath was from the beginning and so belongs Sabbatum Moyses Exod. 16. 23. scriptâ lege restituit cum ejus diei cultus abi●rat Azor. properly to the Sons of Adam and not particularly to the Sons of Abraham is more evident and clear if we
Primùm quievit deus deinde benedixit hanc quietem ut seculis omni bus inter homines fancta foret septimum quemque diem quieti dicavit Calv. in Gen. the most eminent of every age and Nation hath beheld this rising Sun and rightly calculated the time of its rise even from the first week in the world The Learned without the help of Astrology have cast the Sabbaths nativity It is a worthy saying of the Learned Andrews when putting the question But is not the Sabbath a Ceremony and so abrogated by Christ He thus answers Do as Christ in the cause of divorce look whether it was so from the beginning now the beginning of the Sabbath was in Paradise before there Dies ille Sabbati stetit a creatione mundi ad domini resurrectionem quando in diem dominicum demum ab Apostolis mutatus est Bez. in Apocal. was any sin and so before there needed any Saviour and so before there was any ceremony or figure of a Saviour Bullinger Aretius and Gualter rightly observe that the Sabbath was ordained in the beginning of the world but confirmed in the giving of the Law Paradise was the place of its institution Mount Sinai the place of its more solemn promulgation of its second and fairer Edition It were endless to run over the several authentick testimonies which are copiously and dextrously given to this truth Rivet reckons no less then thirty Hoc Sabbatum primò à deo fuit observation institu●um est à creatione mundi confirmatum autem per Mosen Aret. loc com loc 30. Zanch. l. 1. part tertia de oper Creat Gual in Mat. 12. Homil. 162. Merc. in c. 2. Gen. Protestant Divines of note who give in their concurrent verdict and what place can be left for stumbling when we have so much light to walk by And therefore Franciscus Gomarus was better employed in his fervent disputes against the Arminians then in raising batteries against a truth so generally owned and so strongly supported And as for that fancy of anticipation first Midwiv'd into the world by Abulensis viz. That God should only shew us what he intended to do in after-ages when he rested on the seventh day and blessed and sanctified it Gen. 2. 3. He did not appoint the Sabbath to be presently observed but only manifested his purpose what he intended for the future when the Law should be given on Mount Sinai I say let Catharinus answer Testatus who was of the samè Religion Bertram de Polit. Judaic with him a Papist and of the same order with him a Bishop and he calls this fancy ineptum figmentum a foolish Jun●us Paraeus Zepper Martin Allsted c. figment And Catharinus speaks only as the Fore-man of the Jury for Steuchius Eugubinus Gilbertus Genebrardus Jacobus Satianus Cornelius Alapide Emmanuel Sa Ribera and Steuch Eugub in Cosinopoea c. 2. Suarez all give in their verdict with their foreman This invention of Tostatus is so ridiculous that Amesius gravely saith No man ever thought of anticipation in this place who Gilb. Genebr in Cronol was not first anticipated with some manifest prejudice And he further goes on and saith No such kind of anticipation Jacob. Satian in Annal. can be found in the whole Scripture Nay the phrases of the Sabbaths institution Gen. 2. 3. convince the contrary for Corn. Alap in Gen. 2. the blessing of the seventh day and the sanctifying it i. e. making it holy for mans observation are so plain that to Emman Sa Riber Suarez create a Prolepsis is to paint the Sun to parget over a Rose and to raise an imaginary vanity to cloud the truth And Haec prolepsis meâ sententiâ omni probabilitate caret Wal. besides it is very injurious to Scripture to force figures upon the plain words of it when there is no necessity And it is a rule among Divines That the Scripture ought to be understood according to the true property of the Oportet ●cripturam intelligere secundum verborum proprietatem ubi non cogimur evidenti absurditate Eellar de Baptis l. 1. c. 4. words when we are not diverted by some manifest absurdity It is true it is an easie thing to invent Tropes and Figures or a vain prolepsis to supply a fancy but let us observe God blessed the seventh day what is this blessing but the dispensing a peculiar favour towards it And God fanctified the seventh day what is this sanctification but a separation and consecration of it to holy worship what more plain and clear And therefore furely who ever cherisheth Nihil sacilius est quàm dicere Tropus est figura est modus quidam discendi est Aug. this fiction in his brain or patronizeth it with his pen he may justly be attached either of singularity or design Bellarmine himself lays down this rule We must not recede from the plain words of Scripture unless some other text of Scripture or some Article of faith or the general sense of the Church enforce us to it which if Nisi cogamur ab aliquâ aliâ this be true as I suppose it will be easily granted we are Scripturâ aut ab aliquo articulo fidei c. Bellar. safe enough from this figment of anticipation Object The main matter which is yet behind is to free this truth viz. of the Sabbaths original from the beginning of the world from all sieges and disturbance which will be taken up in answering that Objection that the Patriarchs did not observe the Sabbath as we find mention'd in Scripture Sol. To which is answered That they did not keep the Sabbath because we find it not mentioned in Scripture is a large and loose inconsequence for as the historical Narration of Moses speaketh Non dubium est Sabbati observantissimos esse Patres quotquot ante legem vixerunt et quorum fides Scripturâ comcommendatur Gualt nothing of the observation of the day after its institution so we may find that after it was commanded in Mount Sinai no mention is made of it or its observation in the book of Joshua nor in the book of Judges nor in Ruth nor in the first and second Books of Samuel nor in the first Book of Kings shall we therefore conclude that in all this time valiant Joshua the worthy Judges holy Samuel zealous David and others did not observe the Sabbath In all the Book of Hester no mention is made of Jehovah shall we therefore say that neither Mordecai nor Hester nor the Religious Jews worshipped the adorable Jehovah The institution of the Sabbath from Gen. 2. 3. hath been plentifully proved and so the Patriarchs ought to have observed it which if they did not it was sin in them but the Reverence we owe to those holy men of God binds us to think better thoughts of them Surely good men could not forget their solemn and set day for converse with
taken away Now to evidence the morality of the fourth Commandment and that it concerns us Christians every way as much as the Jews will be best attempted by shewing 1. Negatively it is not Ceremonial 2. Positively it is clearly Moral and binds us Christians as much as any Precept in the Decalogue nor hath the Christian more liberty to be loose on a Sabbath then he hath to cast contempt on his Parents to break the door of his neighbours house or attempt the chastity of his neighbours wife as much guilt is folded up in robbing God of his day as in robbing man of his goods the chain is as strong to bind us in the fourth as in the sixth Commandment and the sin is the same to loosen the one as well as the other Every Command in the Decalogue is of equall Authority which to resist is an equal provocation to the Legislatour The fourth Commandment that blessed command for the Sabbath is not Ceremonial And here I must reassume a notable speech of Bishop Andrews whose eminency and Bishop Andr. Pattern of Chatechist Doctr. p. 233. learning was not of an ordinary stature This learned man puts the Query But is not the Sabbath a Ceremony and then answers Do as Christ did in the cause of divorce look whether it was so from the beginning now the beginning of the Sabbath was in Paradise before there was any sin and so before there needed any Saviours and so before there was any ceremony or figure of a Saviour Thus this learned Man clears the fourth Commandment of all ceremony Ceremonies have in them aliquid oneris some thing of burden which cannot be asserted of the state of innocency in which the Sabbath Simul cum peccato introivit mors in hominem sicuti lictores intrant in bona et domos reorum Alap was first ordained Sin only layes load upon us and as it first opened the door to death Rom. 5. 12. so it first opened the gap to Ceremonies It is observed by learned men that the Evening and the morning was the first day and so the second and so every day of the six dayes But no Evening is attributed to the seventh day to shew us that no shadow of rite or ceremony first attended that blessed day The Sabbath is the first-born of Institutions and was brought into the World without any wen of ceremony upon it And though the Lord of it Mark 2. 28. in his infancy was wrapt up in the meanest swadling-cloaths suitable to the manger wherein he lay yet the Sabbath in its first production was not wrapt up in beggarly elements as ceremonies are called by the Gal. 4. 9. Apostle Nor needed that solemn preparation of a smoaking mountain of a sounding trumpet of a flaming fire to usher in a Exod. 19. 18 19. poor flying dying ceremony A transient rite did not require so much pomp and state Beggars have not their trains to Deut. 5 5. go before them We sound not the trumpet at the lighting Terrae verò et montis velut salientis ad dei praesentiam motus non sunt quaerenda in naturâ cum enim quaecunque facta sunt ad mirecula petineant observetur dei gloria cum agit immediatè c. of a candle Surely ceremonies are but a candle light which casts but a faint light and soon expires nor doth it indeed comport with the infinite and unsearchable wisdom of God to preface a ceremony with so much grandeur and solemnity a ceremony which must so soon be buried in the grave of oblivion Short Leases are written in a little paper and need no sheets of Parchment Israel trepidates and shakes to hear those noises and see those sights which prepared the publication of the fourth Commandement among the rest and thought their death should have borne the date of the Exhibition of those ten words And therefore it must needs savour of presumption to call that a Ceremony Riv. which was published with so much awful and tremendous solemnity Nor can the fourth Commandment be ceremonial because it was given by God himself Now Divines rightly distinguish between Law and Ceremony the Law comes Deut. 4. 13 14. immediately from God the Ceremonies were either instiuted by Moses or at least given by him God left those Rudiments Josh 1. 2. to his Servant But God himself wrote the fourth Commandement with his own finger and proclaimed it with his own voice nay delivered it himself with all glorious solemnity and therefore the Decalogue is called his Covenant Deut. 4. 13. to shew the stability of it God doth not draw his people into Covenant with himself upon the account of a Rite nor tye himself to them by the breaking thread of a Ceremony his Covenant of Salt doth not so easily lose its savour Let us hear the learned Andrews once more this is a principle saith he that the Decalogue is the Law of Nature revived and the Law of Nature is the Image of God now in God there is no ceremony but all must be eternal and so in this Image which is the law of Nature and so in the Decalogue And so I suppose the Bishop of Winchester hath silenced the Bishop White of the Sabbath pag. 34. Decalogus est lex naturae rediviva Bishop of Ely who wrote to a contrary purpose To what is laid down by Bishop Andrews accords Chrysostome when he calls the Law of the Sabbath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an unmoveable Law and where there is no change there can be no ceremony And reverend Sprint hath a suitable speech accommodated to this purpose The observation of the seventh day Sprint on the Sabbath pag. 34. saith he is of the Law of Nature and whatsoever is found in the fourth Commandment appertaineth to the law of Nature And so holy Master Walker The observation of the seventh Mr. Walker an the Sabbath day was established before Christ was promised and therefore it is not ceremonial but of the law of Nature and perpetual Quod naturale est puta diem septimanae quemque deo sacrum esse illud permanet quod positum est nempe illum diem qui septimus creationis est diem esse Sabbati c. Jun. Thus the suffrages of those who have been most eminent do freely concur in establishing this great truth viz. that no ceremony can be found in the fourth Commandment and let the adversaries follow the scent of a ceremony with never so much diligence and speed they can no more overtake it then the Aegyptians can find out the head of the River Nilus or the Israelites trace Moses his Grave and this is to seek the dead among the living a little to allude to the speech of the Angel Luk. 24. 5. And the usual expostulation of our Divines is How came this Ceremony among the moral Precepts How came it to shelter it self there Is not this to make the fourth
naturalis aeterna immutabilis Alap But the Sabbath went over Christs grave for Mat. 24. 20. Christ commands his Disciples to play that their visitation be not on the Sabbath day which visitation was many years after Christs Ascention to the Father So then the Sabbath survives after the decease and Funeral of all legal Ceremonies By the coming of Christ the Sabbath suffered a change but not a loss the circumstance of time was altered but the substance of the command was no way impaired the Sabbath did only slide down upon a new and most glorious occasion from the seventh day to the first The Commandment for the Sabbath hath not so much as any character of a Ceremony in it It was not typical it did not praenote any thing to be accomplished under the Gospel If that fancy of the Jewish Cabala be true that the world shall continue but 6000 Quartum praeceptum est morale quatenus praecipit ut e septem diebus unum consecremus cultui divino et quotenus tale nunquam abrogari potest Zanch. years and then the day of Judgment shall follow it might prefigure that and yet no Ceremony proved for the type must continue till the thing typified be fulfilled so this rather evinceth the duration then the abrogation of the Sabbath The Sabbath hath no particular relation to the Land of Canaan the proper place of Ceremonies nor yet to the Jews the proper subjects of Ceremonies and this hath been proved before But now if it be objected that the Sabbath was a sign between God and the Jews Exod. 31. 13 17. Ezek. 20. 12 20. It is answered the Sabbath was at that time a mark of difference and separation betwixt the Jews and the Gentiles But was it so as a seventh day No Eos à quibus deus non celebatur merito ipse neglexit Aug. de Civit. dei l. 2. c. 14. that which caused the distinction was the sanctification of them upon that day not any thing in the number seven Gods seposing of a time for them and only for their sanctification was an argument he had a more special care of them then of other Nations and they were his only people It was not imposed upon the Jews as any burden or yoak The Sabbath is a day of joy not toil our blessing not our I● praefatione quarti praecepti ita deus alloquitur Israelitas speciatim ut in eo tamen omnes gentes comprehendat Beza burden In the explanation of the fourth Commandment it is rather recited as an Ordinance of comfort and refreshing of mercy and favour and not of rigour and severity of depression and servitude The Sabbath in its own nature is a day of relaxation to the body and of reviving to the soul a day of unbending the bow to the outward man and of heavenly visits to the inward man there is no knot in the cord to hold out any sharpness in this blessed Ordinance the Sabbath is our term not our task-master On a Sabbath we are not sent out to make brick without straw we are not to perform duties without promises of assistance Rom. 8. Exod. 16. 29. 26 27. without promises of acceptance John 14. 15. If we put our selves upon meeting Christ that day he hath engaged himself Mat. 18. 20. to give us the meeting The Sabbath is not a task but a gift Ezek. 20. 12. not a symptom of servitude but a sign of love Ezek. 20. 12. The golden knot between God and a people and not the iron chain The Sabbath was not commanded in recognition of any special favour shewed to the Jews it was a memorial of Gods creating the world in six dayes and his own resting on the Gen. 2. 3. seventh But this being a benefit wherein all mankind are Per Sabbata quasi per elementa omnes discerent deum creatorem et gubernatorem omnium Alap equally concerned and enter common the Jews can claim no property therein peculiar to themselves and so yet there is no tidings of a Ceremony and so no cause of abolition One very well observes that seeing the same Authority is for the Sabbath as is for marriage one may as well conclude the Law for marriage is Ceremonial as well as the Law for the Sabbath nay we may seriously consider that whereas Mat. 19. 6. marriage is but once termed the Covenant of God Prov. 2. 17. Levit. 23. 3. because instituted by God in the beginning the Sabbath Deut. 5. 14. is every where called the Sabbath of the Lord thy God because Exod. 20. 10. ordained by God in the same beginning both of Exod. 16. 29. Time State and Perpetuity and therefore no way Ceremonial It is a truth as unmoveable as the pillars of Heaven that God hath given to all men universally a rule of life to conduct them to their end now if the whole Decalogue be Gal. 2. 20. not it what shall be The Gospel is a rule of our faith John 5. 24. but not of our spiritual life which flows from faith the Law therefore is the rule of life now if nine of these be a compleat rule without a tenth exclude that one and then who sees not an open gap made for all the rest to go out also For where will men stop if once this principle be laid that the whole Law is not our guide and conduct May not men justly say the Decalogue is not a rule of life and so a way laid open for all looseness and enormity and if the Sabbath be a Ceremony we have but nine Commandments left Nor would the Scriptures make so much ado about a Ceremony there is no part of Scripture wherein their is not something remarkable about the Sabbath The institution of it we find in Genesis where the Sabbath Gen. 2. 3. is one of the best flowers in the Garden of Eden The solemn promulgation of it we meet with in Exodus Exod. 20. 8. when the mountain smoaks fire flames trumpet sounds at Exod. 19. 17. 13. the second Edition of this perpetual statute The manner of the sanctification of it we may take notice Levit. 16. 3● of in the Book of Levitious God there turns paraphrast for Levit. 23. 3. the further dilucidation of this law The prophanation of it is vindicated in the Book of Numbers Numb 15. 3● where God builds a wall about it with the stones which stoned the man who gathered sticks upon that blessed day The pressing arguments for the sanctification of it we may Deut. 5. 14. observe at large in the Book of Deuteronomy God knowing the advantage of Sabbath-holiness presses man urgently to pursue his own interest 2 Kings 4 23. 2 Kings 11. 5 7 9. 2 Chron. 36. 21. 1 Chron. 9. 32. The historical part of the Bible hath some remembrance of it either as observed or prophaned There is in the Book of Psalms a Psalm
are forced to fly to a miserable distinction at the best that the fourth Precept is partly moral and partly ceremonial for the substance of the command is that a seventh day be consecrated to divine worship which if the day mentioned in the command be ceremonial then the whole precept is so And therefore to disintangle our souls from these intricacies of errour and absurdity we must conclude that a seventh day in proportion and not the seventh day in order is the substance and equity of the fourth Commandment and so the practice of the Church in all ages which is the best interpreter of this command hath fully shewn and declared The fourth Commandment then enjoyns one day in seven to be weekly observed and this is the reason and the substance of it Now the old seventh day which was the Jews Sabbath being antiquated and discharged what day remains for the Christian Sabbath for the Disciples of Christ to meet upon for holy and divine worship Quest Here the answer is ready It is the first day of the week the blessed day of our adored and admired Saviors Resurrection Answ But still the Query will be By what Authority is this day made the Christian Sabbath To which it is answered Not by Ecclesiastical Authority And Mr. Perkins gives us the reason The Church saith he hath no power to ordain a Sabbath or to change the present Sabbath into any other day in the week as to Tuesday Wednesday c. for time is the Lords and the disposing thereof in his hands therefore Christ saith to his Disciples it is not for you to know the times and the seasons which the Father hath kept in his own hands Now if God hath the disposing of times in his hands then it belongeth not to the Church to dispose them And it may be hence Acts 1. 7. gathered if that which is less belong not to the Church then that which is more doth not But the knowledge of times and seasons which God hath in his power belongs not to the Church much less the disposing of times and seasons I may add and far less the appointing of a weekly Sabbath And thus the Reverend and worthy Pe●k●ns And indeed to sublimate Church Authority so far what is it but to put man into Gods chair And to make him King of the Church and so take the Scepter out of Christs hand It is a worthy saying of Bishop Lake The Church hath received the Lords day not ordained it not to be liberae observationis of free observation as if man might at pleasure accept or refuse it but it is to be perpetually observed to the worlds end For as God only hath power to apportion his time so he only hath power to set out a day for his portion he is the Lord of the Sabbath the work of the day is the ground of the hallowing of the day and therefore Mark 2. 28. as no man can translate the work so no man can translate the day and this is an undoubted rule in Theology And thus this Learned Person hath both asserted the Divine Authority of the Lords day and given us good reason for it Man therefore being impotent and incapable to lay the foundation of a weekly Sabbath by some glorious work especially equivalent to the work of Creation or Redemption let him never presumptuously pretend to the appointment or institution of it Let us a little reason this case We read there is one who is Lord of the Sabbath Mark 2. 28. Now in reason who shall appoint this day but he who is Lord of it And considering Mark 2. 28. it is his holy day and it is expresly said Psal 118. 24. This is the day which the Lord hath made the whole Isa 58. ●3 stream of Interpreters expounding this text of the Lords day So then the day is of the Lords making and not of mans making and moreover there can be no cause why man should desire such a liberty for it is much to be feared if there were twenty dayes in the weak there would be twenty differences every one every Church at least would choose its own day and admire the issue of its own institution What jars and digladiations would this bring into the Church of Christ how would this tear Christs seamless coat in pieces The dissentions between the Eastern and the Western Churches about the observation of Easter day are not forgotten when Victor Bishop of Rome was ready Dr. Twisse treat on the Sab. pag. 141 to draw the Sword of Excommunication Indeed the appointing of a day for weekly worship and divine communion is a task too great for weak and unstable Man and can be only the product of an infallible spirit As Dr. Twisse happily and closely argues Christ calls himself Lord of the Sabbath and as he constituted it so none but he can abrogate it and place another in the room of it And in the Apostles dayes the first day of the week was set apart for the Christians Sabbath which could not be but by the joynt consent of the Apostles And how strange is it that the Church for 1500 years should never offer to alter it no not in the least if so be such power and liberty was put into their hands as to ordain and Praetereà generalis omnium ecclesiarum consensus in hac fessivitate divinam ejus auth●ritat●m ●vinci● et observandum est quòd in aliis observationibus ab Apostolis non receptis sed à posterà ecclesià ad tempus observatis ecclesiae à se invicem discesserunt veluti in Festo Paschatis in jejuni●s observandis Ita sine dubio in Domini●● celebrandâ contigisse● si divinâ authoritate per Apostolos acceptâ ejus observatio apud Christianos non constitua fuisset appoint it Among us nothing more usual then for one Parliament to unravel and disanul what another hath done and enacted as being unsatisfied in the thing it self or else to shew their own plenipotentiariness And no doubt had the Church been fledged with this power to ordain a Sabbath for the Church of Christ in some age or another they would have given us a cast of this power and would have attempted to pluck up a plant of their own planting and would have inoculated the Sabbath into the stock of some other day Darkness and Division there hath been enough in the Church to quarrel with institutions and appointments of former times But the perpetual silence of the Church in this particular infallibly shews the Divine right of the Lords day And the Churches are so hush because they dare not attempt such a piacular enterprise as to rase the foundation of a divine institution And in case they should put in practice such a pretended liberty what inconvemences would fall out to be bewailed with tears of bloud for this liberty must be equal in every Church and so our English Church might institute the Monday
the French Church the Tuesday the Belgick Church the Wednessday the Germans might ordain the ●●ursday the Danes the Friday and other Churches might keep the present day to be the Lords day And so so many Churches so many Sabbaths and what int●llerable scandal would this procure to the Church of Christ and what feuds would it disseminate among Christians Nay how would this confusion strike the Christian profession under the fifth rib and give it its mortal wound This Ecclesiastick power and liberty would likewise open a way to revive and reduce the Jewish Sabbath Dies dominicus nomen suum adeptus fuit propter dominicae resurrectionis memoriam ad finem usque mundi celebrandum Muscul or the solemn day of the Turks which is every Fryday nay we know not with what Heathens we might concur in their weekly solemnity And when the Pagans shall well espy our dissentions how much we disagree about our Sabbath this may re-inforce their detestation both of us and our Religion Now if the Church had power to ordain the Sabbath they have likewise power to alter and change it which we see may be the womb of irreparable mischiefs Is it not then far more rational and convictive for the prevention of those miserable disorders to take the Sabbath as marked out by God himself the institution of Christ by his Apostles which is now the first day of the week a day founded and bottomed on Christs glorious Resurrection And thus the Church of Christ his little but precious flock may keep the Luke 12. 32. Vnity of the spirit in the bond of Peace No doubt then the Eph. 4. 3. Lords day is of Divine not Ecclesiastical Authority otherwise Rom. 4. 25. mens spirits would never have been so over-awed and their hands tied from presumptuous undertakings The truth is our Christian Sabbath must be built upon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Jesus Christ by his Resurrection being the chief corner stone And because nothing can fall out in the world comparable to the Resurrection of Christ in glory and power therefore no day can be set up like unto this neither can it be changed into any other The like cause can never be offered to change this day which at first occasioned the choice of it and therefore it must remain untill the end of all things And they who ever they be who go about to raze this day must first pick out Christs mark which he hath wrought into it by the work of Redemption and so blot out the testimony of the four Evangelists concerning Christs Resurrection on the first day of the week the happy Basis of our Sabbath Moreover the observation of the Lords day being fresh and frequent in the Apostles dayes they being yet alive and excercising a superintendency over the Church who should Stab Apostolis adhuc in v●vis dies dominicus observatus fuit meritò illorum ordinationi ascribendus est Aut enim per ipsos eorum authoritatem aut per alios ecclesiae doctores sine illorum consensu institutus erat quorum posterius est valde absurdum insul●um non suit ecclesiae Apostolis leges praescribere interpose to ordain this holy day of worship but themselves If any other Governors of the Church they did it either with the consent of the Apostles and then their Authority was subordinate and so swallowed up in the power Apostolical For the Apostles were the Supream guides of the Church and had the ordering of the affairs of Christs flock the care of the Churches was in the first place committed to them 2 Cor. 11. 28. Or else this Committee of Church Governors who they were where they met or what they did could never yet be discovered did appoint the Christian Sabbath against the consent of the Apostles and surely then their presumption would have been taxed in holy writ for a perpetual reproach of the thing or else they had fallen under the Pens of Ecclesiastical Historians of all which ne quis quidem not any thing appears to the most critical Observator in their most curious searches and inquisitions But it can never be imagined any should dare to impose a day of their own invention upon the Church the Apostles those infallible Spirits being yet in the land 1 Cor. 2. 16. of the living Did the Church appoint the Christian Sabbath let her be called the Lady of it and so Christ will lose his title of Si beati Apostoli ex authoritate sibi à Ch●isto delegatâ Dominicum non instituissent sed ejus observationem liberam reliquiss●nt tum meritò diceremus ecclesiam ipsam Lord of it Mark 2. 28. which as Paraeus observes is one argument of Christs Divinity for none can be Lord of the Sabbath but he who appointed it and he whose Sabbath it is and surely such an attempt can hardly be excused of the most daring Sacriledge to rob God not of his Tythes but of his Titles and so put Christs Armes into their Scutcheons this indeed savours too much of arrogancy and it cannot be fastned on the Flock of Christ who hears his voyce and follows the accents of it And how our Sabbath should be the Lords day and yet of humane institution is such a knot I know not how to untye and am not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quod tamen praeclarum testimonium est divinitatis Christi quòd ipse per Apostolos suos diem dominicum instituit Par. over-hopeful to see the Riddle unfolded by any other That the Church should give the Sabbath a being and the Lord should give it a name is such a partage I think few will own Seyrus the Casuist hath laid down a good Rule viz. The Church can abolish holy days because she determines them and custom prevails much among men but the sanctification of a day is onely from a Divine Law Let the Church then move in its own sphere and follow the letter of its Commission but to set apart a Sabbath for the World let it not avouch any such Authority this is for the Spouse Cant. 5. 4. of Christ to disturb and awaken her beloved If the Church have any such priviledge as to appoint a Sabbath for Mankind let her shew her Charter and Commission out of the Old or New Testament But it is to be supposed she can shew none sufficient to authorize her for this transcendent act to determine the solemn and sufficient Nemo est sabbati dominus nisi qui sabbatum instituit cujus sabbatum est Par. time of Gods solemn and ordinary worship Could she have brought forth her Credentials the world should not have been kept in the dark so long and if she cannot it is not so easie to impose upon mens belief all Christians are not acted by an implicite faith nor will they lean too hard upon Ecclesiastical Authority and submit because Cant. 2 7. they say so a
bare and naked Asseveration will not salve all Cant. 3. 5. their doubts Besides God appointed the Sabbath which Cant. 8. 4. was celebrated in the times of the Law and shall not he Ecclesia non debet nec potest mutare sabbatum qui aliter dicunt falso me interpretantur Prideaux appoint the Sabbath which is celebrated in the times of the Gospel Nay is it not necessary and agreeing to natural equity that he who appoints the manner and matter of worship should also appoint the sufficient and necessary time of worship Are not all men even the Governours of the Church and the greatest Potentates obliged to render to God the homage of observing a sufficient time for worship Or shall we deny God the priviledge which every common Landlord assumes to himself to appoint the days of payment of his own homage What if the Church cannot Quando deus sanctificat sabbatum est sanctificatto constitutiva Cùm homo sanctificat sabbatum est sanctificatio invocativa Weems agree if she apostatize or grow heretical which is no new thing in the world where then shall God find his sufficient time for Sabbath-observation In a word all the power of the Church is founded on the fifth Commandement and not on the fourth and she may as well appoint the worship it self required by the second Commandement as the sufficient time of it required by the fourth And it is well observed by the learned Weemes God onely may sanctifie a Sabbath for himself for the Sabbath is not to be reckoned among private goods but it is to be reckoned among such things as are common to all as are the fire and the water therefore Tempus non est inter privata bona sed inter bona communia qualia sunt ●er aqua quod divini juris est nullius ●● bonis est Weems man cannot separate time as God doth for his service and worship and there separation is but occasional accidental and mutable Thus learnedly and rationally this worthy man argues that the Sabbath being a common good to the world the institution of it is not to be attributed to any Convention of fallible men but onely to him who is the Lord of Heaven and Earth And surely he who created the Sun the Index of time doth and must appoint the Sabbath which is the quintessence and best part of time These sublime institutions as the Sabbath Sacraments Ordinances c. which have a general concourse in the good and to the benefit of Mankind as they speak the glory so they evidence the determination of God their Author The same Authority which institutes a day may abrogate it and alter it but the Church cannot abrogate and alter Ejusdem est refigere ●ujus est fig●re the Lords day It is a Canon of the Civil Law They who can enact can repeal and this may be instanced in the Festivals and Sabbath of the Old Testament God alone ordained them and he did cancel and abrogate them Now it is the judgment of our most classick and authentical Divines That the Church cannot alter the Lords day So Certè quamvis dies dominicus sit juris canonici consuetudine tamen nunquam abroga●●tur Azor. Quid ergò An diem dominicum jure divino esse stabilitum asseremus Ego quidem Auditores sine cujusdam praejudicio lubentissimè concedo in istam sententiam Prideaux Dr. Fulk that eminent Champion of the Protestant Religion who profligated the Romish Cause in answering the Rhemists Testament he thus avers our Plea To change the Lords day saith he and keep it on a Monday or any other day the Church hath no authority for the Lords day is no matter of indifference but a necessary prescription of Christ himself delivered to us by the Apostles This is most clear and plain and let the learned Professor of Oxford the famous Prideaux give his opinion in this Cause I am not satisfied saith he with the Ordinance of the Church for the Lords day because Church-Ordinances may with the same facility be broken as they are made which absolutely to affirm of the Lords day were unadvised And besides could the Church remove the Lords day to Monday Tuesday or any other day what becomes of the day of Christs resurrection the first day of the week upon which not onely the Fathers in the primitive times but likewise our later Divines do so confidently and truly bottom and found it And will it not sound very harshly and unseemly that the Nox est tempus ante Christum plaenum tenebris infidel●tatis peccati sed dies est tempus praesens evangelii quo Sol i. e. Christus lucis suae gratiae et amoris radios toto Orbe diffundit Cyprian great and eternal Jehovah should ordain and appoint the Sabbath of the Old Testament and a company of fallible men subject to be attached by a writ of Error should institute the Sabbath of the New Testament when Religion shone with a brighter ray and scriptural ministrations were far more glorious Or to speak in the Apostles language When the Night was far spent and the Day was at hand Rom. 13. 12. That day so much rejoyced in by Abraham and his believing Posterity so much admired by the Martyrs in the primitive times Once God and Man wonderfully united in the same Person made one Saviour but God and Man strangely are Copartners to make two Sabbaths and that the old Sabbath now entombed in the Grave of Christ should have a divine Author and the Christian new Sabbath which is to endure to the worlds end should onely be fixed upon humane Authority is I suppose beyond the reach of ordinary apprehensions But the learned Prideaux wisely observes The Canon of the Church doth not Dies dominicus practicè moraliter est immutabilis Suarez give to this day any Divine Authority which before it had not but sheweth rather what they received from their Ancestors to be transmitted by them to their posterity Nay Suarez the Jesuit will acknowledge That the Lords day practically and morally is immutable and subject to no alteration and therefore it cannot be of humane Authority And indeed it is a dangerous thing to the whole Fabrick of Religion should an humane Ordinance limit the necessary Ecclesiastica disciplina Authoritas nimiâ facilitate enervatur et irrita redditur Alap time of Gods worship Or that the Church should not assemble but at the pleasure of the Clergie and then perhaps not well agreeing among themselves for what would men busied about their Farms their Yokes of Oxen and domestick affairs would not they set at naught a humane Ordinance Would not prophane men easily dispense with Nonnullum quod audivimus aut vidimus argumentum nos adhuc in contrarium flexerit quin ut nomen illud 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aequè respexerit institutionem Christi ac resurrectionem Dr. Wells their
Charity And now shall the Heathen make it an inexpiable Crime to work upon one of their holy days and shall it be venial for us to follow our works and pursue our lusts on Gods holy day Shall Saturn and Jupiter be honoured with more solenmity and served with Exod. 15. 6. more care and sedulity than Christ or Jehovah Sure this Exod. 15. 11. must needs be the dregs of prophaneness to give our heavenly Father and our dear Redeemer whom sometimes we call our Beloved less veneration on his own day then Pagan Worshippers give their Idol Gods on their Festivals How strange is it that we must go to Dagon to learn how to use the Ark and must repair to the Roman Flamins or the 1 Sam. 5. 2. Syrian Priests to know how to keep a Sabbath God sends the sluggard to the Ant and the Pismire to learn fore-sight and industry Prov. 6. 6. And he may send Sabbath-breakers to the Gentiles and Paynims to learn Sanctity and Devotion But let Christians say the solemn Devotions of Pagans shall heat our zeal but not reproach our sl●th they Psal 26. 6. shall only serve us to take aim how we may steer our Devotion with greater fervour and dexterity Argum. 6 Let us observe the zeal of holy men mentioned in Scripture who have been eminent for Sabbath-observation The Apostle gives us a good rule Heb. 6. 12. Let us be followers of them who through faith and patience inherit the promises These Patterns of Piety may be our conduct and guide in this matter take them in what age you will the Sabbath still lay near their hearts and was venerable in their practice 1. Some before the Law were remarkable for Sabbath-holiness they dreaded the pollution of Gods day before the terrours and smokes of Mount Sinai And though they were in a Wilderness they had not so l●st themselves but they knew how to meet with God on his own day And as Manasseh Ben-Israel well observes The Jews were forced Cogita in Aegypto ubi serviebas etiam ipso sabbato pe● vim te coactum ad labores Et sic sa●ientes inter Judaeos Deut. 5. 15. unanimiter applicant Manas Ben. Israel to neglect the Sabbath in Egypt by reason of the violence and cruelty of their Taskmasters but when God brought them out of that Land of bondage one of their first works was Sabbath-observation Their Delivery is historically related in the 14th Chapter of Exodus and their observation of the Sabbath in the 16th Chapter of the same Book So Exod. 16. 30. So the people rested on the seventh day which must needs be meant of an holy Rest for a naked b●re Rest is the loss not the sanctification of a Sabbath And if the people of Israel had so rested God soon would have taken notice of it and have severely threatned if not sorely punished it but no word of reproof but only of those Quieverunt Israelitae non solùm illo die frustrati fuerunt spe suâ egrediendi sed aliis diebus septimis consequentibus Riv. who went out on the Sabbath to gather Manna some few straglers Exod. 16. 27. who instead of finding Manna lost their way and met with a reproof instead of a meal Now here we meet with Gods people keeping Gods day before the fourth Commandment was proclaimed by sound of Trumpet Now shall the people of Israel without the sanction of a law rest with God on his own day and shall Christians who have not onely the force and obligation of the fourth Commandment but the alluring argument of Christs Resurrection to oblige to the sanctification of the Sabbath shall they be careless and negligent vain and frothy on Gods holy day Surely the darkness of an Heathen and the twi-light of an Israelite wandering up and down in a wilderness will bear witness against such a generation 2. Some holy men under the Law I shall only select here the rare Example of good Nehemiah an excellent pattern for Magistrates and People how carefully to observe Gods holy Sabbath And his Zeal shall be comprised in four particulars He looked upon the reforming of Sabbath-abuses as a principal part of Reformation therefore he reproves threatens and sets watch to observe the prophanation of this holy Nehem. 13 15 16. day He beareth his testimony vigorously against it Nehem. 13. 15. And here the courtesie and common civilities which are given to strangers bear no sway with him Nehem. 13. 16. He will not strain courtesie when the honour of God is concerned obedience is better then sacrifice much 1 Sam. 15. 22. more then civilities The pollution of a Sabbath that God provoking sin makes this holy man wave all fair and debonaire carriages and turns courtesie into severity and usual reception into just indignation Nehemiah thinks the cause of the Sabbath worth contending for with the Nobles themselves Nehem. 13. 17. not only with inferiour people who are soon hushed with his Authority and tremble at the Magistrates sword but with the Peers of the Realm who might enter the lists with him or hatch some conspiracy against him but holy zeal is no Nehem. 13 17. respecter of persons and in this Nehem. like the three children Dan. 3. 18 19. Is not sollicitous to pore upon his own concerns or interest duty and not safety guides him a rare pattern for Magistrates This good Governour personates the Prophet and gives in a narrative not only of those judgements which had overtaken those who had prophaned the Sabbath in former times but he fore-tells the same calamities to ensue upon Nehem. 13 18. the present Age if Gods Sabbath be defiled Nehem. 13. 18. He turns all his speech into action the true genius of piety for indeed councils and threats are both abortive untill enlivened by execution therefore Nehemiah scatters Nehem. 13. 21. strangers by force Nehem. 13. 21. and chases them away from Jerusalem that they should not come near it upon the Sabbath day Neh. 13. 21. And he lays a severe command on the Levits for Sabbath-sanctification and in the discharge of his duty he recommends himself to the mercifull and kind remembrances of the Almighty Neh. 13. 22. And here as our Saviour saith let us go and do so likewise Luke 10. 37. Let us imitate the zeal of this excellent man whose name for his love to and care of Gods Sabbath lives in the blessed Scriptures and there shall survive to all perpetuity But shall Nehemiah not permit a piece of ware to be sold on the Sabbath without the gates of the City and shall we commit a lust on Gods day within the walls of a house of a Stews or an Ale-house Shall he forbid all Merchandize and shall we traffique with Hell on the Sabbath day Surely his Zeal will turn into our flame and this will fall in with other aggravations of our sin we scribled after so fair a copy 3. Some after the Law
support of Religion and keeps it from flights or falls Every devout worshipper on the Lords day is but a lessar pillar to shoar up godliness and piety in the world While publick worship is seriously frequented and private duties are frequently performed while the sacred word of God is diligently attended the blessed Sacrament devoutly received while holy prayers with moystened eyes and melting hearts are affectionately poured forth and sent up to God on his own holy day while these things are in ure in a Nation piety and Religion are above the fears of decay Religion sails or sinks with the Sabbath when both are embarqued in the same Vessel and where this Sancta diei dominicae exercitia labascentem pietatem religionem sustinent holy day is constuprated by vanity and prophaneness profession is laid waste and desolate the sanctification of Gods day keeps up Gods fear in the Church but that being suspended the gap is made and the Church lies open to all kinds of sinful incursions A learned man tells us that Guntheram a pious King of France fighting against the Goths with unhappy success did sedulously enquire into the cause Guntheramus Francorum Rex pientissimus contra Gothos infaelici successu se pugnasse observaverat tanti mali fonte paulò altius investigato cui malo ut obviam iretur statutum est diem dominicum religiosè custodiendum per universum c. of it and taking notice of the neglect of the Bishops instructing the people as likewise observing the prophaneness of the people in dishonouring the Lord he presently concluded this was the proper source and cause of his late discomfiture and calamity and therefore he immediately commanded That the Lords day should be carefully and solemnly observed throughout his whole Dominions as being the most proper remedy and most likely Cure for those distempers which had shaken the happiness both of Church and State God usually calculating his providence according to the observation of his day smiling upon those places where it is religiously observed and evidencing his displeasure where it is slighted or contemned Arg. 9 The sanctification of the Sabbath is the discharge in a great measure of that duty pressed by the Apostle Phil. 3. 20. Let your conversation be in heaven All the duties of the Sabbath Nonne pudet te corpore coelum suspicere mentem in terrâ repere caput sursum cor deorsum habere Bern. are but transactions with Heaven Our prayers are our approach and appeal to Heaven and therefore we are said to lift up a prayer Jer. 7. 16. Our hearing the word is only hearing News from Heaven Acts 20. 27. And our Sacramental receipts are only the tasting of the fruit of the Vine which we shall drink new with Christ in his Fathers Kingdom Mat. 26. 29. The Ordinances of a Sabbath are heavenly Ordinances the end of a Sabbath is to bring us nearer to heaven and the Communion of Saints wh●ch we enjoy upon a Sabbath is a sweet resemblance of that Society the Saints shall enjoy in heaven And though we cannot pretend to 2 Cor. 12. 2. Pauls rapture into the third heaven or to Johns extasies upon this holy day yet in a conscientious use of divine administrations Rev. 1. 10. we travel fairly on towards heaven and happiness Secular works which savour of earth are to be banished this day Exod. 20. 10. Carnal hearts which rellish earth are unsutable to this day Rev. 1. 10. And pleasurous delights which are the liquorish froth of earth are to be avoided on the Sabbath day Isa 58. 13. Our Sabbath is the day-break and twilight of heaven and glory which if we improve to work our spiritual works in a little time will bring us to a perfect noon Arg. 10 Let us be exact on the Lords day in honour to Christ it is his Resurrection day On this day the Sun rose which lightens Dies dominicus Christi resurrectione declaratus est et ex illo cae●it habere festivitatem suam aeternam non solùm spiritus sed et corporis requiem praefigurat Aug de Civ dei every one which comes into a better world on this day the Conqueror shewed himself when he had laid all his enemies in the grave from whence he sprang This was the day of Mankinds restauration of the worlds wonder and of the Believers joy This day was the fresh spring of our happiness the initials of a Christians boast On this day Mosaical rites and legal Ceremonies were fully and totally routed and so put to flight and then dyed together the Synagogue and the Sanedrim Christ is the true Joseph who on this day left his prison and was promoted to honour Christ is the real Moses who breaking through death and dangers Acts 13. 31 32 saw Pharaoh and his host Satan Death and Hell and Heb. 1. 5. all spiritual wickednesses drowned in the Sea Christ is the Resurrexisti domine quàm ●●●ulatè celeritèr O fortunati lab●res O gloriosa certamina quae talem finem sortiuntur P●ssionem excepit Resurrectio mortem immortalitas ignonimiam gloria infirmitatem virtus Tempestatem serenitas Bellar. 2 Cor. 5. 1. true Mordecai who foiling Haman and all his enemies delivered the true Israel from tyranny and oppression and on this day kept his Purim Christ is the true Jonas who being cast into the Sea in a tempest of frenzy and cruelty on the third day was cast on the shore and survived to more gracious purposes In a word glorious were the conflicts happy the labours blessed the rest and most triumphant the Resurrection of our dear Redeemer Now as it is reported of Caesar when he would cry Quirites that word put new life into his Souldiers in the sorest battels So when we think our Sabbath is Christs Resurrection day this should put new life into all our duties and devotions This was the day of wonders when our blessed Samson carryed away the gates of Hell to lay our way open to the City of the New Jerusalem the City not made with hands eternal in the heavens CHAP. LIII The Resurrection of Christ is not only a real ground for the institution but a cogent Argument for the holy observation of the Lords day WHen our hearts are dead and curdled into formality upon the Lords day then every one of us should thus bespeak his soul O my soul this day is the triumph of thy Redeemer when he trod upon the Serpents head when Gen. 3. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basil in Hexam he took from death its sting from hell its standard suppose my soul thou hadst stood by the Sepulcher and seen the Sun of Righteousness covered with a cloud before now shining forth most gloriously on the morning of the Resurrection day how would this have raised and ravished thy heart How glad were the Disciples when they saw the Lord they believed not for joy John 20.
the time of the Sabbath Let us labour to get high esteemes of the Sabbath day We Praescrip 3. keep those things most charily we prize most We lock up Jewels which we value but we leave out other things which we despise and contemn One great reason why men practice Sabbaths no more is because they prize them no Apparet in S●r●p●uris hunc diem esse solennem ipse enim est primus dies seculi c. Aug. more Sabbaths fall in their opinion and therefore they sink in their observation They look upon the Sabbath as a common day a day of leisure to please themselves with carnall rest or sensual delight Only their sh●ps are shut and so they cannot follow the works of their Calling but their hearts are open to entertain any temptation and so they mind the Magistrate more then Jehovah upon his own day Dies dominicus est dies Regalis in qu● Imperator ascendit ab inferis Chrysost But serious and gracious persons have always spoken highly of Gods blessed Sabbath The Apostle John calls it the Lords day Rev. 1. 10. which is the Lord Christ his day for this name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is derived of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is appropriate to our Saviour Christ both in regard of the dignity and excellency of his person and because of the greatness and largeness of Ne ipsam quidem dominicam diem J●nctissimi festi ullâ inreverentiâ habuere c. Athanas his dominion as likewise in respect of his bounty towards the members of his mystical body Acts 4. 36. Joh. 20. 13 28. Revel 17. 14. Cap. 19. 16. Now things and persons which are named the Lords are sacred and venerable in an high degree So The grace of our Lord Rom. 16. 24. The spirit of the Lord 2 Cor. 3. 17. The beloved of the Lord Rom. 16. Is solus et unus reverâ est proprius et dominicus dies et melior est aliis innumerabilibus diebus sive qui communitèr intelliguntur sive qui a Mose c. Hier. 8. The glory of the Lord 2 Cor. 3. 18. The word of the Lord 1 Tim. 6. 3. The cup of the Lord 1 Cor. 11. 27. Et sic Convivium dominicum the Lords banquet Tertul. lib. 2. ad Vxor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril Hierosol Catech. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The body of the Lord. Athanas ad Epict. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Scripture of the Lord. Clem. Alexandr Ignatius the blessed Martyr of Christ who lived in the Apostles age and was St. Johns Disciple maketh the Lords day the Queen the Princess the Lady Paramount of all dayes Eusebius in the life of Constantine the Great lib. 4. cap. 18. stileth the Lords day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In truth and in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Ignat. very deed the principal and the first Chrysostome calleth it a Royal day And Gregory Nazianzen Orat. 43. saith it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Higher then the highest and with admiration wonderfull above all other dayes Basil calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The first fruits of dayes Chrysologus Ser. 77. saith It is the primate among days And Hierome in Marc. 16. The Lords day is better then other common dayes and then all the Festivals New Moons and Finitur septimus dies dominus est sepultus reditur ad primum dominus est resuscitatus domini resuscitatio promisit no bis aeternam diem et consecravit diem dominicam Aug. Sabbaths of Moses his Law The Lords day saith Maximus Taurinensis is venerable and a solemn day among Christians because like the Sun rising and dispelling infernal darkness Christ the Sun of Righteousness shined forth unto the world by the light of his Resurrection And the incomparable Augustine saith The Seventh day is ended the Lord was buried a return is made to the first day the Lord is raised the Lords Resurrection promised us an eternal day and it did consecrate unto us the Lords day Justin Martyr calls our Sabbath Sunday as many others after him and not without very good reason That being the Chiefest of dayes as the Sun is the most glorious of all the Planets and therefore the Civil Law calls Cod. Justin lib. 3. tit 12. our Sabbath The venerable and much honoured Sunday Our Sabbath is called Sunday to honour Christ who is the Sun of Righteousness Mal. 4. 2. Enlightning every one who Nos jure optimo diem quem Mathematici solis vocant domino ascripsimus et illius cultui totum mancipavimus quoniam nulla re magis imaginari possumus praepotentis et universim supereminentis Christi M●jestatem quàm per splendidissimum solis lumen Et Leo est solare animal Cael. Rhodig cometh into the world and who by his triumphant Resurrection caused the heavenly light of Truth and Grace to appear in full lustre to them who sate in darkness and in the shadow of death And Gaudentius Brixianus speaks fully to this purpose It behoved Christ saith he the Sun of Righteousness with the fair and pleasant light of his Resurrection to dispell the gross darkness of the Jews and melt the frozen cold of the Gentiles and so reduce all things that we reclouded with the black vail of confusion by the Prince of darkness into the state of prime tranquility And Ambrose concurs in his judgement This day is called Sunday saith he because Christ the Sun of Righteousness arose from death to life upon this day to enlighten the Children of this world Hierom tells us It is called Sunday because on that day Light rose in the world and the Sun of Righteousness appeared in whose wings healing may be found So Christ made it Sunday not only from his beams but likewise from his wings for as there was light in the one so there was Cypr. Epist 33. Orig. in Exo. Homil. 7. contr celsum cure in the other and both together gave it this Name And nothing more speaks the glory of Christ then Light and the Sun is the fountain of light and therefore our Sabbath is Tertul. de Coron Mil. called Sunday as Coelius Rhodiginus observes Nay Christ himself is called Light John 3. 19. And the Gospel is named Light Rom. 13. 12. No wonder then if that day on which Christ is worshipped and the Gospel is preached is called Sunday But in all ages our blessed Sabbath flourished in an honourable Bellarm. Tem. 1 de cult Sanctor cap. 11. lib 3. Dominica dies primatum obtmet et major est inter alios dies Durand Rational lib. 7. de Festiv esteem Bellarmine himself saith The Sabbath is a day above all other days to be esteemed And so Durand gives the Lords day all primacy and assigns it a majority for worth and honour above all dayes And it is very observable that easter-Easter-day so much cryed up by some was once the unhappy cause of much contention in
the Church But the Lords day was alwayes celebrated in the Church with joy and unanimity nor ever was the spring of controversie or contention This glorious day alwayes shone bright in the Church without the ecclipse of contempt or disuse And indeed our sweet and lovely Sabbath is a Jewel of inestimable worth a golden stream dissolving and running by us for us to make use of for our passage to a glorious eternity Man never forgets himself more then when he knows not his time and falls below the brute Creatures who understand their seasons Jer. 8. 7. How many observe not the time of Christs coming to meet his people upon his own Eccles 9. 12. blessed day David was wont to say One day in thy Courts is Psal 63. 2. better then a thousand Psal 84. 10. And the same judgement Psal 42. 4. must we pass upon the Lords day before we shall come to a Jer. 8. 7. due observation of it Sabbaths are kept as they are valued And as is our apprehension so is our observation We should look upon the Sabbath as one of the dayes of the Son of man a season put into our hands for life and salvation Luke 17. 22. Luke 19. 42 43. and this would steer our hearts to a Amos 8. 11. devout celebration of it Did we prize the Sabbath as our Rabbini docent Judaeos Sabbatum suum ideò venerasse ut illud 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 omnium dierum good wind for our Port our seasonable gale for our coast our indulgent call to our Rest surely we should spend it with God for we know not how soon the things with the day and the day with the things may be past and gone It is observed of the Jews thy so much honoured their Sabbath that they Reginam appellarunt were wont to call the whole week by the name of Sabbath Luke 18. 12. And they were used to say the first second third or fourth day of or after the Sabbath and this they 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 did as learned men observe not only 1. To discriminate themselves in calling the dayes of the week otherwise then the Gentiles who called them by the names of their Idols But Mark 16. 2. 2. To demonstrate the dignity of the Sabbath day and Luke 18. 12. Hier. ad Hed. quaest 4. Theoph. in Luke 18. that above all dayes it was with them in greatest account And ought not Christians much more hold up an high and honourable esteem of the Gospel Sabbath which is a far more glorious day Most assuredly our practice will keep pace with our repute and if we look not upon the Sabbath as the Tremel in Syriac Para phras day of God we shall never keep it as the day of God And strange it is that the Sabbath should not be precious in our eyes when eternal life is but our great Sabbath our long Sabbath which hath no evening as Ambrose and Augustine Ambros in Psal 119. observe Nay Epiphanius tells us That Christ is but our more durable Sabbath and we rest in this Sabbath when we August de Civ dei repose our hearts and hopes in him Nay a good Conscience as Augustine saith is the bed of God the Palace of Christ the Epiphan lib. 1. Heres 30. Temple of the Holy Ghost the Paradise of Delights and the Sabbatum dei est illud quo ab opere exteriori cessare dicimur et sacramentum interioris Sabbati ubi mens sancta per bonam conscientiam à peccato quiescit Hugo Rev. 2. 10. standing Sabbath of the Saints Thus holy Augustine in his tenth Sermon to his Brethren in the wildernoss A good Conscience indeed is our continual Sabbath our constant feast and rest And therefore in keeping Gods Sabbath let us be faithfull unto death and he will give us a never ceasing Sabbath when we shall wear a Crown of life In the saddest and sorest times when Kingdomes are shaking and Cities sinking nay all Gods Ordinances seem to be taking their leave in a Land yea when all externals in the world are at the worst yet then there may be an internal Sabbath in the heart and an eternal Sabbath in the heavens for all those who are here consciencious in keeping the externall Sabbath viz. the Lords day with all holiness and accurateness of observation Aquinas well observes There is a Sabbath of Sabbatum est duplex Pectoris Temporis time every first day of the week and a Sabbath in the breast inward rest and quietation Now the one leads to the other Aquin. 1m● 2dae quaest 100. Artic. 5. when we are Critical in keeping the Sabbath of time we may be confident in the enjoyment of a Sabbath and Rest in our bosoms Piety on a Sabbath will assuredly end and conclude in a Paradise in the bosom and when we have rested with Christ on his day he will certainly sup with us at night and bring grace and peace with him Rev. 3. 20. Let us keep every day as a Sabbath A good week will fore-run Praescrip 4. a good Sabbath as the Sabbath should influence the whole week so the whole week should prepare for the Sabbath And indeed the whole term of our life should be a continued Sabbath in two respects In cessation from the service of sin Sin must always be our corrosive not only on the Lords day but on our day we have no vacation for evil sin is a spot on the week though a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignat. deeper on the Sabbath as Christ is always the Saints love so sin is always the Saints load How bitterly doth Paul complain of his inbred corruption Rom. 7. 17 18 21 23 24. And so Augustine condoles his condition by reason of sin Alas saith he Sin follows I fly and yet I fall I fight and yet I am captive I run from it and yet I am drawn to it I would rest and yet I cannot be quiet one day nay not an hour Now thus to rest from sin is an every Qui cessat ab operibus se●uli spiritualibus vacat iste est qui diem festum Sabbatorum agit neque onera portat in viâ onus est omne peccatum neque ignem accendit c. Et in loco suo sistit neque recedit ab eo Quis est locus animae Justitia est locus ejus veritas sapientia sanctificatio Etomnia c. Orig. days Sabbath there is no day but sin prophanes it sin is the blemish of the shop as well as the Sanctuary and is a brand upon the week as well as the Sabbath It is observable there was no death stigmatized with a Curse but the death of the Cross but on the contrary there is no day but is stigmatized with sin and iniquity Every day must be a Sabbath to us in abstinence from sin It is rarely observed of