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A16523 The doctrine of the sabbath plainely layde forth, and soundly proued by testimonies both of holy scripture, and also of olde and new ecclesiasticall writers. Declaring first from what things God would haue vs straightly to rest vpon the Lords day, and then by what meanes we ought publikely and priuatly to sanctifie the same: together with the sundry abuses of our time in both these kindes, and how they ought to bee reformed. Diuided into two bookes, by Nicolas Bownde, Doctor of Diuinitie. Bownd, Nicholas, d. 1613. 1595 (1595) STC 3436; ESTC S113231 229,943 300

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THE DOCTRINE OF THE SABBATH Plainely layde forth and soundly proued by testimonies both of holy Scripture and also of olde and new ecclesiasticall writers Declaring first from what things God would haue vs straightly to rest vpon the Lords day and then by what meanes we ought publikely and priuatly to sanctifie the same Together with the sundry abuses of our time in both these kindes and how they ought to bee reformed Diuided into two Bookes by Nicolas Bownde Doctor of Diuinitie Hieron Prolog Galeat In the Church of God euery one doth offer that which he is able some gold siluer and pretious stones others blew silke and purple and skarlet and fine linen t is well for our part if we offer skinnes and goates haire AT LONDON Printed by the Widdow Orwin for Iohn Porter and Thomas Man 1595. HONI SOYT QVY MAL Y PENSE TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE MY VERY GOOD LORD ROBERT Deuoreux Earle of Essex Ewe Vicount of Hereford Lord Ferrers of Chartley c. Master of the Q. Maiesties horse Knight of the most noble order of the Garter and one of her Maiesties most honorable priuie Counsel the increase of all true honor and fauour with God and men RIght Honorable if there were so many good reasons to moue your Honour graciously to accept these my labours as I haue iust causes to induce me to preferre them to your Honor then I should haue good hope that as they haue most willingly come from mee so they should haue good countenaunce at your Honors hands For besides your late Honorable fauour extended vnto me requireth this and al other duties of me wherby I might shew my selfe thankefull to your Honour for the same euen so the desire also that I haue that this truth of GOD might come forth with the best credite hath moued me in the conscience of mine ovvne tenuitie to become humble sutor in the behalfe thereof for your honorable gracious protection Wherein if I haue intruded my selfe further then I ought and pressed neerer to your Honor then it becommeth mee crauing your Honorable pardon for this my boldnes I beseech your Honor to accept either my feruent desire to tender all duties vnto you or my great care to purchase best fauour for this worke or both vvhich haue compelled me hereunto And herein I am so much the more importunate vvith your Honor not for my selfe but for this part of Gods holie truth that it might be countenanced as one of your Honors fauorites because as wee be fallen into these euil daies wherin too many are readie vnaduisedly to set themselues against whatsoeuer they dislike and therfore the best causes are driuen to seeke patronage where it maie doe them most good So the Lorde hauing inlarged your honorable name aboue a great manie which as a precious ointment flowing from your selfe comfortablie refresheth and perfumeth a great number this part of Gods trueth also might enioie the common benefit of it with other to be ouershadowed thereby and by that meanes haue entertainment there where otherwise happily it should be finally regarded And so it becomming for your Honors sake a welcome guest vnto them it might deliuer vnto them in the name of God as sent by your Honor that message of his that it centaineth to the honor of his name to whom all honor is due from whō all honour commeth whome trulie to honour is the greatest honor Thus ceasing anie further to interrupt your Honor from your weightie affaires my praier vnto God is long to preserue your Honor zealous of the glorie of God faithful to her Maiestie profitable to the whole realme and comfortable to your owne soule most humblie with all dutifulnesse taking my leaue Your Honors most humble at commandement alwaies in the Lord Nicholas Bownd Norton in Suff. Iune 1595. To the Godlie and Christian Readers and namely to the reuerend wise and godly learned Fathers and brethren Ministers and Preachers of the Gospell grace and peace hee multiplied RIght reuerend and welbeloued in the Lord when as about nine yeeres since I was solicited to publish my Sermons vpon the tenne Commaundements by certaine of my godly brethren auditors then of the same I had manie reasons that preuailed to disswade me from that enterprise and especially be●ause I thought it superfluous in such great variety of learned writers of that matter especially wherein I haue been since more ●onfirmed by all those who of later times haue trauailed in that ●●nde And moreouer besides mine own vnsufficiencie for so great 〈◊〉 matter J was of opinion that hee that bendeth himselfe vnto ●riting had neede to haue some relaxation from preaching vn●esse hee bee of great gifts and meruailously fitted for both and ●herefore being necessarilie tyed vnto the one I durst not vnder●ake the other yet their importunitie preuailed thus farre with ●●ne as to make triall what I could doe in this commaundement which I had then in hand whereunto also I was the rather indu●●ed because it contained that argument which as it is of all o●her most excellent so it was least of all dealt in by anie largely ●●nd of purpose Hauing then within a fewe moneths at my best ●●asure finished this treatise as diuers of my fellowe Ministers ●●n whose hands it hath bin are sufficient witnesses and by them further encouraged to communicate it vnto all men I yeelded thereunto slowly indeede because I knewe a reuerend godly M. Robert Greenchā and learned father who for the most part of his life time greatly trauailing in this matter by his own reading meditation and conference with sundrie learned men had long before finished a great volume and wayted but his opportunity to furnish it to the presse though I neuer read one leafe of that booke whome I did for iust cause so highly reuerence that I was vnwilling to preiudice any of his godly proceedings especially in this thing wherein I knewe he had trauailed aboue most of his time and thereupon suspending my purpose for a time when I had imparted vnto him what I had done he gaue me this aduise to take his booke and to compare it with mine owne and to make one of them both which I refusing as being vnmeete for such a purpose and not knowing how I should well sorte out to the Reader such varietie of matter as was like to arise out of them both nor cunningly to fit the one to the other as it were to put a new piece of cloth to an old garment determined wholly to suppresse mine own expecting the comming foorth of his in time whereunto also I solicited him by writing and that also was my iust defence to those that still called vpon me for the comming foorth of mine owne In which expectation I continued vntill most vntimely I vnderstoode to my great grief and to the vnspeakable losse of the Church of God that hee was fallen a sleepe in the Lord And then I reuiued my former purpose and
to rest but that euen to rest frō labour though it be a meere worldly thing in it owne nature yet is a singular part of our obedience to God vpon that day when it is so many times required so often vrged and as it is neere pressed vpon vs with words doubled and tripled yea and that by God himselfe who is not flowing with words in a barren cause but sheweth vnto vs the waightines of his Commandement by the force of his words and the seueritie of his lawes by his most significant and patheticall speeches The reason why the Lord would haue men to rest vpon this day is manifold The chiefest cause of resting is that we might wholly attend vpon Gods worship the first and principall is that which was from the beginning that men might be the more fit to sanctifie it in the holy seruice of God which because they could not doe with all the powers of their soule and bodie as the worship of God requireth so long as they are about their worldly businesse because they must needes take vp their wits and their willes the vnderstanding and the heart either in whole or in part so long as they bee conuersant in them therefore that wee might so doe as hee requireth hee would haue vs rest from that which might hinder vs from it and because the affayres of this world and his worship are two distinct things he would haue vs rest from the one that we might bee occupied in the other Thus speaketh S. Augustine August de tēp serm 251. Sciendum est fratres charissimi We must vnderstand dearly beloued brethren that it was therefore commanded not onely of our holie fathers as he saith there but of God that we should rest especially on the Lords day that ceasing from all worldly busines we might be more prompt and readie for the worship of God when we should haue no let to hinder vs from it For as wee haue seene alreadie our nature is not onely ●o now but was so in Adam that he could not doe both these at once and therefore as he was willed by God to sanctifie the seuenth day so he willed him therefore to rest from dressing the garden in that he called it a Sabbath day that is a day of rest and this reason as it did straightly binde Adam to rest vpon it so doth it all his posteritie much more Afterwards there were other causes adioyned vnto this which made this necessitie of resting a great deale stronger A lesse princip●ll cause is the retayning of our bodily strength and by name for because that through sinne the bodie of man is weakened all the naturall humours of it being corrupted and hauing lost the first vigor and strength of it and therefore is now subiect to paine to wearisomnes to sicknes and to death and so standeth in neede of ease and craueth rest as that without the which it cannot long continue therfore in respect of this men had need to rest so much the more that by the rest of the seuenth day they being refeshed might bee more enabled euen in the strength of their bodies to do the works of their calling cheerefully Adam and his posteritie if they had continued in their first estate should haue labored vpon the sixe daies but their labour should haue bin no labour vnto them I meane they should not haue laboured with wearisomnes and with payne for these are the punishments of sinne and the forerunners of death threatning a dissollution of the bodie in time but then there should haue been no death yet they were bound to this rest for the forenamed cause but now when as besides that labour is through Gods iust punishment become so laboursome vnto vs and work is so full of paine and trauaile maketh wearie according as it is sayd In the sweate of thy face thou shalt eate bread Gen. 3.19 then wee see there is greater cause we should rest on this day and we are as it were with a double chaine bound vnto it Therefore in th● 5 of Deut. where Moses repeateth the law shewing h●● great cause there is why they should rest vpon the Sabbath he alleadgeth this in the end of the 14. verse that thy manseruant and thy mayd may rest as well as thou speaking of them who as they are most subiect to labor so therefore doe most of all stand in need of this benefite of rest Afterwards when this law was giuen to the Iewes by the hand of Moses as in the obseruation of it they had many Ceremonies proper to themselues so in the ende and cause of this rest there was something ioyned vnto it which bound them vnto it most straightly and yet appertaining to no other people but them and though all the people in the world were equally bound to rest vpon the Sabbath day and there was great reason to binde euery one of them vnto it yet the Iewes had moe reasons then any other and in their rest was some speciall consideration which could not enforce or compell any other but themselues And of this nature is that whereof Moses speaketh in the next verse of this very chapter Deut. 5.15 Remember that thou wast a seruant in the Land of Aegypt and that the Lorde thy God brought thee out thence by a mightie hand and stretched out arme therefore the Lord thy God commanded thee to observe the sabbath day The Iewes were bound to it more specially for a memorial of their deliuerance out of Egypt and a seale of their deliuerāce by Christ In which place he maketh the day of rest to bee a memoriall to the Iewes of their resting from their heauie burthens and intolerable labours in the land of Egypt when the Lorde ridde them out of the cruell hands of Pharaoh and so because that benefite was a pledge vnto them of their eternall deliuerie and redemption by Christ from sinne and the miserable thraldome of it euen the Lord did assure them of it by this miraculous deliuerance according to the manner of teaching in those times wherein the truth of this doctrine was not so plainely reuealed therefore this rest also vpon the sabbath was vnto them a type and figure of that eternall rest from sinne which they should haue by the Messiah and the one was most liuely shadowed out vnto them in the other for these causes also were they bound to rest vpon the sabbath which bound none but them because they onely were partakers of the redemption from Egypt wherein they onely were in bondage and so to rest vpon it that in resting they might both thankefully remember the happie and often desired rest from the endles worke in Egypt that oppressed them which none other could doe but they and also with faith to meditate vpon the hoped and eternall rest from the deadly workes of sinne in themselues by Christ and to behold the performance of the one in the other euen the bodie in
haue done amisse in this we shall not be able to abide it or to answer one worde for a thousand so great cause haue wee to be humbled before God and to repent vs not onely for our sinnes generallie but particularlie for breaking the Sabbath that so we might see how greatlie we do stand in neede of Christ Iesus without whom we should haue perished so many thousand times and how vnspeakable the loue of God is towards vs in him in deliuering from so endlesse miserie so many times deserued by the testimonie of our owne conscience more by the iudgement of him who is greater then our conscience 1. Iohn 3.20 and knoweth all things And thus we truely vnderstanding and rightly applying the lawe it shall be indeed as it is most properlie called our schoolemaster vnto Christ Gal. 3.24 that wee might bee made righteous by faith and leade vs by the hand vnto our Sauiour when it letteth vs set as in a glasse how in our selues we are more then lost and that none can saue vs but onely he who is truelie called Matth. 1.21 Iesus because hee saueth his people from their sinnes Of whose saluation then may we bee assured that we are truelie partakers when besides the perswasion of the forgiuenes of our sinnes we haue power from him to dye vnto sinne and liue vnto righteousnes as well in this commandement as in any other seeing that he hath not onely borne the punishment of sinne but also tooke it away and as he became a sacrifice for sinne 1. Iohn 3.8 Ephes 4.8 Coloss 2.15 so he came to destroy the workes of the diuell and hauing ascended vp on high hath led captiuitie captiue and spoyled the prince of darkenes who is throwne out and hath giuen rich giftes vnto men not onely vnto his church generallie but particularlie to euery member of the same so that now if any man be in Chrst Iesus he is a new creature 2. Cor. 5.17 and he himselfe now liueth no more but Christ Iesus liueth in him Galat. 2.20 But if we be the olde men wee had wont to bee and bee no more carefull to obserue the rest of the sabbath then we haue been in times past then are we not as yet partakers of the benefite of Christ and so are vnder the curse of the lawe which one daye will sease vpon vs to our endlesse confusion 2. Pet. 1.10 Therefore let vs labour to make sure our election and calling by Gods workes and let vs striue to be perswaded that the Lord hath passed ouer the faultes of our youth wherby we haue infinitelie broken the holy rest of the Sabbath in thought worde and deed in the blindenes of poperie and light of the Gospell openlie and secretlie at home and abroad alone by our selues and with others and that the Lord hath receiued the sacrifice of his sonne as a ful recompence for them by that same second grace which wee haue receiued from the strength of his sacrifice that we doe giue our selues whollie to serue him in all holy obedience vnto this commandement more carefullie in all time to come and that by his grace wee are inabled thereunto and to desire continually to growe in it all which wee know can come from none other then from him who hath obtained it of his father for vs. And thus the lawe shall keepe vs also with Christ that we fall not away from him when it teacheth vs daylie to growe in humilitie for our sinnes past and maketh vs to be carefull of dueties to come Phil. 2.12 labouring to finish out our saluation in feare and in trembling The second booke declaring the seuerall parts of Gods worship whereby we ought publikely and priuately to sanctifie and keepe holy the Lords Day with other and by our selues Deut. 5.12 Keepe the Sabbath day to sanctifie it as the Lord thy God hath commanded thee 13. Sixe dayes thou shalt labour and doe all thy worke 14. But the seuenth day is the sabbath of the Lord thy God thou shalt not do any worke therein thou nor thy sonne nor thy daughter nor thy manseruant nor thy mayde nor thine oxe nor thine asse neither any of thy cattell nor the stranger that is within thy gates that thy manseruant and thy mayde may rest as well as thou 15. For remember that thou wast a seruant in the land● of Egypt and that the Lord thy God brought thee out thence by a mightie hand and a stretched out arme therefore the Lord thy God commanded thee to obserue the Sabbath day THe second and last part of this Commandement is The second part of the Commandement is to sanctifie the daye of Rest that wee carefullie spend the day of Rest vpon the holy seruice of God alone which though it be last in order yet is the chiefe and principall thing in the Commandement and that whereunto the ceasing from labour is to be referred and without which the other is vnperfect and as it were a shadowe without the bodie Which that it is so indeede do appeareth by the very wordes of the Lord and the order of them pronounced from heauen as we haue alreadie seene Remember the Sabbath daye to keepe it holy which also Moses preciselie commandeth in repeating the Law to the Israelites before his death Deut. 5.12 Obserue the Sabbath day to sanctifie it ●s the Lord thy God hath commanded thee which daye wee are then rightlie said to sanctifie or keepe holy when we bestowe it vpon the seruice of God which is most holy and so by making it proper vnto that which is holy both we and the daye are hallowed thereby Iohn 10.36 Zanc. de tribus Eloh pan 2. lib. 3. cap. 9. That great learned man Master Zanchius the diuinitie reader at Heidelberge entreating vpon that place of Iohn whom the father hath sanctified saith that to be sanctified signifieth to bee consecrated vnto God and to bee put apart from other things vnto an holy vse and so is God said to haue sanctified vnto himselfe the Sabbath daye that is to haue selected it from the other dayes and to haue consecrated it to himselfe And this significatiō is very common in the scripture wherupon the people also of God are said to be sanctified vnto God and in this sense Christ taketh where when he saith that he was sanctified of the father for he alone of all the three persons and of all other creatures was ordained vnto the office of the mediator and to be the head of the Church euen before he tooke vpon him our flesh Chrysost in Gen. 2. Homil. 10. Whereunto agreeth that of Chrysostome Quid est What is the meaning of this He hath sanctified it he hath distinguished it from other dayes and we see to what end For as M. Bullinger saith God hath sanctified the Sabbath not that one day in it owne nature Bulling in Rom. 14.5 is better then another or because he delighteth
the Sabbath was first of al ordained For as when Dauid sayth Psal 40.6 Sacrifice and burnt offering thou diddest not desire but mine eares hast thou prepared burnt offering and sinne offering hast thou not required then sayd I loe I come to doe thy will O my God as it is written of me in the roule of thy booke for thy law is within my heart He doth not say that the Lord required no sacrifice and burnt offering at all for he had commaunded them in his word but he testifieth that all sacrifice and all the outward worship is nothing accepted when it is seuered from obedience and when wee thereby are not made more fit to obey God in all other dueties euen as it is expounded in another place 1. Sam. 15.22 Hath the Lord as great pleasure in burnt offerings and sacrifices as when the voyce of the Lord is obeyed Behold to obey is better then sacrifice and to hearken is better then the fat of rammes So the Prophet Esay in the place aboue mentioned expounding the lawe as it was the chiefest office of a Prophet preacheth vnto them the true interpretation of it that though all Gods seruice bee obserued in euery outward poynt vpon the Sabbath yet all is ceremoniall without these fruites appearing in vs afterwards neither is it done in that manner that GOD alloweth or that they thereby could looke to inherite that promise which in the same place hee maketh to them that shall truely keepe holie the Sabbath And thus are all other places to bee vnderstood which are of the like nature in this Prophet and others neither doe they proue that to rest from sinne is a proper duetie of this Commandement more then any other to which purpose they are alleadged of some that I may speake it with their fauour but onely shewe what should bee the fruite of these exercises both vpon that day and all other besides And therefore in like manner the same Prophet exhorting the Iewes to vnfained repentantance for their sinne and a diligent care to please God framing their liues according to his word in all dueties to his maiestie and to their brethren and then promiseth all manner of blessings vnto them so doing in the midst of this exhortation once or twise speaketh of sanctifying the Sabbath day as a chiefe meanes to bring them to this saying He that keepeth the Sabbath and polluteth it not and keepeth his hand from doing any ill And verse Esay 56.2 4. He that keepeth my sabbaths and chooseth the thing that pleaseth me and taketh hold of my couenant Wherein as he declareth vnto them that this is the way to come to this faith and repentance which hath those promises annexed vnto them euen to serue God in all parts of his worship vpon the Sabbath so he there requireth this at their hands that they would in such wise sanctifie the day that they may be thus altered and chaunged thereby Whereunto agreeth that which is in the Prophet Ezekiell where he telleth the Iewes how many meanes the Lord had bestowed vpon them to doe them good and yet how vnprofitable they were vnder them and therefore that their sinne was so much the greater and their punishment so much the more due speaking of their forefathers I gaue them my statutes Ezek. 20.11.12 and declared my iudgements vnto them which if a man doe hee shall liue in them Moreouer also I gaue them my sabbaths to bee a signe betweene mee and them that they might knowe that I am the Lord that sanctifie them Which mercie of his he continued with their posteritie for he said vnto their children in the wildernes verse 19. Walke in my statutes and keepe my iudgements and doe them 20. And sanctifie my Sabbaths and they shall be a signe betweene me and you that yee may knowe that I am the Lord your God c. His meaning is that hee offered vnto them life euerlasting in his holy worde hee gaue them also the Sabbaths wherein they being wholly and profitably occupyed in all the exercises of religion might thereby knowe that the Lorde their God would by his holy spirite worke in them all that faith and obedience which he required of them that they might come to life euerlasting So then he required of them so to behaue themselues on the Sabbaths as that thereby they might attaine vnto that for which he especially gaue them vnto them But this may bee sufficient to let vs see into so playne and easie a matter as this namely that though we come to the Churche all our life euery Sabbath and remaine there from the beginning to the ending yet onely so many dayes no more haue we kept holy as we ought by how many wee haue been bettered and furthered I meane in the waies of our saluation and made more fit to serue God and our brethren thereby Here we haue cause to repent vs of our vnprofitable cō ming to the Church what shall wee say then to all our vnprofitable wandrings to the Church and home againe And how shall we giue an account to the Lord for them And if the case stand so betwixt the Lord vs that many times when we thought our selues best occupied euen that is turned into sin vnto vs what great cause haue we to be truely humbled before him by repentance for our sinnes that so wee might bee exalted of him in due time And in deede this is so great an euill that wee cannot tell where to make an ende of it For letting passe all the dayes of our vanitie and ignorance spent either in poperie or in the light of the Gospell wherein wee were alwaies vnprofitable in the seruice of God wee may with heauie hearts remember how many times since our calling we haue met in the Church with the least profit that may be or rather none at all in respect of the meanes that did offer vnto vs so great profite in so much that though our profiting in worldly things haue been so great that it may be seene a farre off yet our increase in heauenly things is so small or rather none at all that it cannot bee descryed come as nere as you will And when as in all other things we doe reioyce at the greatnes of our gayne whether wee looke within the doores or without in the house or the fieldes to our cattell or to our goods onely in spirituall matters I will not say our gayne is so small but our decaye and losse is so great that wee haue great cause to be ashamed of it And though from the markets and fayres we come not without some prouision yet vpon the Sabbath which is the market day for our soules we come home many times and carrie nothing whereby we might liue the better the whole weeke following To be short though from a common person we haue not many times departed without some profit yet from the minister of Gods word euen
way and when thou liest downe and when thou risest vp In both which places although he doth lay this onely vpon the fathers and children by name yet his purpose is not so to restraine it vnto thē as though others might think themselues free from it especially seeing it is made generall in other places of the scripture but because they are vsually together in one familie he sheweth in their persons what should bee the talke of men in their common meetings as also because by this meanes the feare and seruice of God might bee planted in their ofspring being conueyned as it were by hand from father to son he declareth in them what should be the exercises of all sortes of men that religion might not dye with themselues but might bee established with their posteritie The Prophet speaketh more generally of it in the Psalm With my lippes haue I declared all the iudgements of thy mouth confessing thus much of himselfe Psal 119. part 2. that he vsed to speake of the word of God to others not thereby commending himself vnto men but as the Prophet of God shewing in his owne person what should be the exercise of all the faithfull For when as he had sayd in the former verse that he diligētly sought the Lord in his word wherein especially he is to be found and therefore gaue himselfe to the reading and hearing of it and in both he prayed to him for the direction of his holie spirit that he might not wander from the true meaning and practise of it and that which had thus learned by the blessing of Gods spirit he layd vp in his heart then he sayth He talked of it with others for their benefite and his owne further good And indeede the Prophet Malachie noteth out the godly in his time by this marke that they conferred one with another of the scripture which they had heard whō he thus writeth Malac. 3.16 Then spake they that feared the Lord euery one to his neighbour c. where though it be not precisely named of what they conferred yet in the context and words of the Prophet it is easily gathered For wheras hee prophecieth of the preaching of the Gospell by Iohn the Baptist and our Sauiour Christ wherein saluation is offered to the obedient and destruction threatned to the rebellious the Prophet setteth downe what was the fruite of this preaching namely that the vngodly made a mocke of it whose words are first of al set down and reproued vers 13. Your words haue been stout against me sayth the Lord of hosts c. Afterwards hee declareth what was wrought in the godly namely that they conferred of those things diligently among themselues both of the iudgements denounced that fearing they might auoyd them and of the promises that beleeuing them they might comforted ouer them incourage themselues to waite vpon God for the accomplishment of them Which we know to be so not only by the opposition of them and the wicked whose words must needs bee contrarie but especially for that which followeth where it is sayd that the Lord listened to their conference that is allowed of it and promised to blesse them for it vers 16 And the Lord hearkened and heard it and a booke of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord and that thought vpon his name 17. And they shal be to me sayth the Lord of hosts in that day that I shall doe this for a flocke and I will spare them as a man spareth his owne sonne that serueth him Thus we may easily perceiue that it is the duetie of all the true worshippers of God to conferre of his worde which as they ought to doe at other times so most of all Especially vpon the Lords day when they haue lately heard it and so thereby haue some greater occasion to doe it and are thereby as it were the rather prouoked vnto it if they will not doe it then it is to be feared that at other times they will more neglect it and if whensoeuer we heare the word wee ought to talke of it vnlesse we will lose a great part of the fruite of it thē most of all vpon the Sabbath when we haue the word after an especiall manner and besides haue ceased to talke of other worldly matters that wee might attend vpon this the better And this is the chiefe cause why we should leaue talking of worldly maters that neither our mouthes nor eares being filled with them wee might haue all the partes of soule and body taken vp with the seruice of God euen our mouths with speaking of it our eares with listning vnto the worde of God Which as it is a thing of rare profit so it is smally practised of men for how fewe shall you finde that will vpon the Sabbath prouoke themselues Which yet in greatly neglected and stirre vp others to speake of that which they haue heard or that will either offer any occasion of such speech vnto others or take it when it is offered by them Nay wee shall finde that our nature is so wholly corrupt in this thing that wee had rather speake of and listen vnto the things of the world many houres then vnto heauenly things the least moment of time yea euen vpon the Lordes day in so much that some haue tounge at will and words enough till their mouth runne ouer and you shall neuer finde them but they will haue something to say so long as you talke not onely of the lawfull commodities and pleasures of this life but of vaine and friuolous matters yea let any begin to speake of any part of Gods worship then they will either interrupt it by returning to their old matters vnlesse some be as constant in pursuing of it as they will be obstinate in crossing it or else they are sodainely striken into their dumpes and haue not a word to say Psal 19. part 2. The Prophet in the forenamed place first sayth I haue hid thy promise in my heart What is the cause that there is no more talke and conferēce about the word of God that I might not sinne against thee and then addeth with my lips haue I declared all the iudgment of thy mouth By ioyning of which two together in this order he telleth vs that if we wil speak profitably vnto others we must first haue the word within vs that not lightly sloating in our braine but deeply setled and hidden in our hearts Whereunto agreeth that exhortation which the Apostle maketh vnto the whole Church of God at Colossa Colos 30.16 Let the worde of Christ dwell in you plentuously in all wisedome teaching and admonishing your selues mutuallie in Psalmes and hymnes and spirituall songes In which as hee willeth them to conferre of the scriptures to the profit one another so be sheweth them how they shall come vnto it euen that they are filled with it before hand without which a
whereof there are so many kinds as appeareth by the diuers words hee vseth in this place Whereunto agreeth that which hee write●h vnto the Ephesians Bee not drunke with wine Ephe. 5.18 wherein is excesse but bee filled with the spirite 19. Speaking vnto your selues in Psalmes and hymnes and spirituall songs singing and making melody to the Lorde in your hearts 20. Giuing thanks alwaies for all things vnto God euen the Father in the name of our Lorde Iesus Christ Where in like manner hee sheweth them howe they should behaue themselues in the aboundance of al Gods blessings that whereas the wicked are ready to abuse them and by ouercharging themselues with them doe fall into an immoderate profusion and laughter they should in the middes of these thinges being guided by Gods spirite burst forth into the prayses of God through Iesus Christ and testifie their holy mirth not of the flesh but of the spirite by singing Psalmes whereof there are so many sundry kinds that for euery time wee shall bee fitted with some one or other Let vs not therefore deny so manifest a trueth but acknowledge as the word doth teach vs that the Lorde requireth of vs in our priuate meetings vpon the Lordes day and when we are alone by our selues to sing Psalmes as well as in the Church And though I doe not binde men vnto this for bee it farre from me that I should lay any heauier burden vpon any then the worde of God it self doth bind them I say vnto this that in all their mirth they should sing Psalmes as it might seeme the places alledged doe import Yet this the Lorde requireth of vs that in all our lawfull pleasures we should looke vp vnto him and so reioyce in them that wee especially reioyce in him and so from them to be led to him and by them to be made fitter to serue him And whereas it falleth out thus with the wicked that all pleasures draw them away from God take away from them the remembrance of him and driue them into sinne we contrariwise should by all of them come neerer vnto God set him before our eyes and make our selues fitter to serue him praise him For as that is a godly sorrow that driueth vs to prayer a blessed heauinesse that maketh vs seeke vnto the Lord so that is a godly mirth that endeth with singing with Psalmes and an heauenly ioy that at least wise maketh vs more fit to serue God And otherwise as we may suspect our sorow to be but worldly so our ioy to bee but fleshly and carnall And this is that whereunto the Apostle Saint Iames hath respect saying Is any amōg you afflicted let him pray Is any merry Iam. 5.13 let him sing Where he telleth the dispersed Iewes how they should behaue themselues priuately in all estates namely that though the vngodly in their affliction doe murmure impatiently and breake out into blasphemous othes they should not onely abstaine from those things but in all humilitie should go to prayer that they might obtaine mercy at Gods hande and then being deliuered of him that they should auoyd the prophane carelessenes of the wicked and stirre vp themselues to sing prayses vnto God and so both commendeth this duetie vnto vs and sheweth whereunto all our mirth should leade vs. In which place though he doth not tye the singing of the Psalmes to the time of prosperity for there are songs of mourning no more then he doth prayer vnto the time of affliction 2. Chro. 35.25 yet he sheweth which are the fittest times for both and besides that as no man can truely pray without the feeling of his wants so no man can sing from his heart vnlesse hee haue some perswasion of Gods fauour and so as affliction driueth him to pray so mirth mooueth him to sing Therefore when the Lorde dealeth so fatherly with his children that hee tempereth their afflictions with the ioy of the spirit then he giueth vnto thē iust occasion both to pray sing vnto him Thus we reade that Paul and Sylas being in prison ioyned them together Acts 15.25 At midnight Paul and Sylas prayed and sang a Psalme vnto God Being first of all beaten very sore and then cast into a dungeon with their feete in the stocks it was then time to pray but considering the goodnes of their cause for which they suffered all these things and finding the Lord present with them by his fauour assuring them of his defence there was iust cause of ioy and in ioy to sing as they did So then seeing to sing Psalmes is a part of Gods seruice as we haue seene it in so many places of the word commended vnto vs it must needes be put in practise vpon that day which is dedicated to his seruice and especially when we consider that the fittest time for it is the time of ioy and there is no ioy comparable to that which we haue in Christ Iesus and we neuer inioy that so fully as by the meanes whereby he conueyeth it vnto vs and we neuer haue all the meanes so plentifully and so continually as vpon the Sabbath Therefore as the Lord then offereth himself wholly vnto vs and his sonne Christ Iesus to be made ours with all his merits in the worde the Sacraments and prayer and so thereby doth fill our hearts with the ioye of the holy Ghost euen that ioy that is vnspeakable and most glorious so then especially we ought to sing for ioye of the Lord if euer wee will doe it And not onely in the Church which we ought to doe especially where the greatest ioy is bestowed vpon vs but also because by the forenamed priuate exercises this ioye is renued and sometimes increased wee must priuately renue our thanksgiuing Singing of Psalmes testifieth and increaseth spirituall songs and sing vnto God againe especially when wee haue seene that these places of scripture doe commend vnto vs the priuat exercise of singing Psalmes And that we might doe it the more cheerefully let vs knowe for a suretie that though wee cannot sing at all where there is no whit of ioy so let this ioy bee neuer so little by singing we shal increase it For euen as al knowledge is increased especially by hearing reading and conferring about the scripture so all affections are most of all stirred vp by meditation prayer and singing of Psalmes And because vpon the Lords day we must labour to build vp our selues in both wee must neglect no meanes whereby we might attaine vnto our full growth in either Therefore euen then are wee iustly punished with deadnes and dulnes vpon the Sabbath because we neglect al those meanes or els doe not ioyne them together So then we haue great cause to be sorrie that wee haue so many times neglected this seruice of God vpon the Sabbath day and though wee had not spent away the time in a prophane mirth as many times wee haue done yet there is
exhorting and encouraging one another thereunto Euen as the Prophet Esay also foretelleth that this shall bee the zeale of Gods people in the time of the Gospell that they shall goe together to serue God and therefore call vpon one another for the same purpose saying It shall be in the last daies Esay 2.2.3 that the mountaine of the house of the Lord shall bee prepared in the top of the mountaines shall be exalted aboue the hils al nations shall flow vnto it many people shall go and say Come and let vs goe vp to the mountaine of the Lorde to the house of the God of Iacob And truely this want of zeale in vs to Gods worship and loue to the saluation of our brethren bewraying it selfe in the neglect of this duetie to call vpon one another is the cause of this slownes For the man he going first out of the doores sayth to his wife make hast and come as soone as you can shee comming at her leasure giues the same charge to her seruants dispatch and tarry not long behind but here is no saying Come let vs go let vs goe together and if it be once sayd it is not pursued that it might be performed In going to a market and to a feast what earnest calling vpon will there bee of one another and it would seeme strange to beholde the houshold goe deuided and it were a thing that would much bee marked and euery one that knewe vs and whither we were going it shuld be the first question they would aske vs How chanceth this that you come alone where is your husband your wife or your children why come you not together So no doubt the dispersed and broken comming of housholds to the Church is a thing greatly obserued of the Lorde God and of his Angels which are present at their assemblies 1. Cor. 11.10 and it is that which grieueth the rest of the Church and as soone as they see one come in alone they are ready with griefe to aske where are the rest what meaneth this partie to come alone Therefore let all gouernours bee perswaded that it is their bounden duetie thus to looke to their families and to be sure that they sanctifie the day as well as thēselues and therefore that they not onely thus bring them to the publike ministerie but also looke vnto them that they spend the rest of the day in all holy exercises so much as may be examining them in that which they haue heard and causing them to conferre about it themselues and to appoint some to reade the scripture vnto them and al of them to sing Psalmes and generally whatsoeuer you haue seene before you ought to doe your selues to call vpon them for the same and to take such order that you be sure they doe it And let them be sorie that they haue neglected this dutie so long heretofore and therby haue charged so many sinnes of their houshould vpon themselues and nowe at the last in Gods holy feare let them begin to put this in practise least they doe further prouoke the most patient Lord to their endlesse destruction And though it be a thing so rare in the world as it is and men altogether so vnacquainted with it as they bee nay so lothsome and tedious to flesh and bloud that they are affraide once to begin with it yet let the bare commandement of God preuaile more with vs to take in hande and to continue in it then that all that can bee saide or thought against it should way with vs either to keepe vs from it at the first or afterwardes cause vs to giue it ouer And that all men might doe it so much the rather The want of this care in housholds is the cause of much wickednes rebellion and disorder in their families let them bee assured that the want of this especially is the cause of so many wicked and rebellious children vntrustie and disobedient seruants nay vnfaithfull and vnkind wiues euery where euē for that their husbands their fathers and their maisters do not call vpon them to serue God and see them sanctifie the Sabbath It is a common and iust complaint in all places in the mouth of euerie man that seruants and children will not bee ruled that they cannot tell where to find a good seruant they know not whom to trust but they see not the greatest cause of it to bee in themselues and so goe not about to remedy it for whiles they labour not to make their children the sonnes and daughters of God by adoption and to bring their seruants within the houshould of God that they might be his seruants by grace and to make their wiues the chast spouses of Iesus Christ and so all of them to serue him the Lord iustly punisheth them that they are disobedient vnto them For how can they doe duties vnto men if they haue not learned to doe duties vnto God and so of conscience for Gods sake to doe dueties vnto men nay must not the Lord needes punish them with disobedience against themselues that by their owne experience they might know how grieuous the neglect of his seruice is vnto himself when he iustly measureth out vnto them with the same measure that they haue mette vnto him before Obiection And whereas men are readie to imagine and I know it is that which many do obiect against this that to deale so straitelie with their household were the next way to ridde themselues of all good seruants and that then they might soone be master and man themselues They must againe on the contrarie vnderstand Answer that it is a great wickednes in them once to thinke that the Lord should require that of them which would necessarilie driue them to such inconueniences nay rather they must bee assuredlie perswaded 1. Tim. 4.8 that godlines hath the promises of this life as well as of the life to come if we first seeke the kingdome of God and his righteousnes in our selues and others Matth. 6.33 that all needefull things should be cast vnto vs Euen as it is said of Abraham Gen. 18.19 I know that he will commaund his sonnes and his household after him that they keepe the waye of the Lord to doe righteousnes and iudgement that the Lord may bring vpon Abraham that he hath spoken vnto him So that thus to doe is the very high way not to keep vs from but to bring vs vnto the performance of al the promises if we giue credit vnto him who as he only maketh them in the beginning of mere mercie so must onely accomplish thē in the end by his constant veritie and truth I confesse in deede if he be an ill seruant this is the readiest way to bee rid of him whose roome is better thē his cōpanie For he thinketh himself to be in a prison nay in hel al the while but in the end he shall perceiue that he is gone from the
by his word and by his works and therefore made him but am Idoll they by their practise in obseruing that seuenth day did shewe that they did know him aright and so made him knowne vnto others the glorie of which worke had beene obscured and darkened if they had changed the number of that day which the Lord in wisedome left to his Church to bee obserucd in the policie and discipline of it when hee might haue appointed some other that so the benefit of our creation might alwaies with praise be remembred in the Church according as it is said in the words of the commaundement In sixe daies the Lord made the heauen and the earth Exod. 20.11 the Sea and all that in them is and rested the seuenth day therefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day and hallowed it which in the verse going before hee calleth the seuenth day Thus we learne that God did not onely blesse it but blesse it for this cause and so wee see that the Sabbath must needs be still vpon the seuenth day as it alwaies hath beene But now concerning this very speciall seuenth day Why we keep another seuenth day and not that which was from the beginning that now we keepe in the time of the Gospell that is well knowne that it is not the same it was from the beginning which God himselfe did sanctifie and whereof hee speaketh in this Commandement for it was the day going before ours which in latine retaineth his ancient name and is called the Sabbath which we also grant Dies Sabbathi but so that we confesse it must alwaies remaine neuer to be changed any more and that all men must keepe holy this seuenth day and none other which was vnto them not the seuenth but the first day of the weeke as it is so called many times in the new Testament and so it still standeth in force that we are bound vnto the seuenth day though not vnto that very seuenth Concerning the time and persons by whom and when the day was changed it appeareth in the new Testament that it was done in the time of the Apostles by the Apostles themselues and that together with the day the name was changed and was in the beginning called the first day of the weeke afterwards the Lords day It was changed in the Apostles time Acts 20.7 Now that it was changed in the Apostles time it appeareth by that which we reade in the Acts. The first day of the weeke the disciples being come together to breake bread Paul preached vnto them ready to depart on the morrow and continued the preaching vnto midnight In which Scripture we see that now at this time the Churches in some places vsed to haue their publique assemblies vpon this day and that all the parts of Gods worship proper to the Sabbath were exercised vpon this day as the preaching of the word receiuing the sacraments and common prayer and that the Apostles consented to the practise of this for Paul preached at this generall meeting And it appeareth by the circumstance of the story that this was then ordinarie though not in all places at the first for this meeting was not vpon this speciall presence of Paul for hee had taryed there now seuen dayes in all but they met to receiue the sacrament as it may bee gathered that it was an vsuall thing in the Church to receiue it euery sabbath and vpon this occasion Paul preached and because hee was to depart on the next daye and so they knew not when they should heare him againe therefore hee continued preaching so long as hee did Vnto which may be adioyned that which he writeth to the Corinthians 1. Cor. 16.2 Euery first daye of the weeke let euery one of you put aside by himselfe and lay vp as God hath prospered him that there be no gathering when I come where he willeth them to do that vpon this day which is most agreeable to the sabbath Namely to gather for the poore which is the fittest day for that purpose and therefore no doubt chosen out by the Apostle both for that reason he alleageth that the weeke being ended and a man seeing how God hath blessed him in it hee might accordingly extend his liberalitie and chiefly because it ought to be then when wen heare the word that by it they might be most of all stirred vp vnto it and are made partakers of the Sacraments and prayers of the Church and so thereby receiue most mercies at Gods hand that out of their abundance they might supply the necessitie of others Seeing then in the wisedome of the spirite it seemed good vnto the Apostle that there should bee a common gathering among the Corinthians as well as among others for the persecuted Saints we must needes presume of him that hee did chuse out the fittest time to further so waightie a matter and wee haue heard that that is the most conuenient time when the Church being met together they are ocupied in so many parts of Gods seruice which might moue their hearts to greatest pity and liberalitie and seeing hee appointeth this collection to be made the first day of the week we may be most assured that this day was allotted out vnto all the forenamed things among them also though they bee not here specefied in expresse words especially when wee haue the like alreadie in the place of the Acts aboue mentioned And vnto this practise of theirs the Apostle consenteth and as it were giueth his voice for hee willeth them to doe it vpon the day All which doe shewe at least wise thus much that this alteration and change was made in the time of the Apostles and while they liued the Sabbath day of the Iewes by little and little wearing away with the rest of the Iewish worship Neither could so great a matter be done all at once anl generally be practised in euery Church together seeing the Magistrates were not then Christians and so they could not haue the help of ciuill authoritie for the establishing of this constitution by lawe compelling all men thereunto but as the Gospell did enlarge it selfe further spread abroad men did willingly giue their names vnto it so they did consent vnto this exchange as vnto other decrees of the Church M. Fox in Apoc 1.10 Vnto this agree all the learned Master Foxe that worthie historiographer and diuine as hee alleadgeth it out of Saint Augustine sayth Hereby wee doe vnderstand that the first institution of the Lords day Vel ab ipsis Apostolorum temporibus c. Is deriued euen from the very Apostles time vnto vs. Sozom. eccles hist lib. 1. cap. 8. Therefore whereas Sozomene in his ecclesiasticall historie reporteth that the first Christian Emperour Constantine the great did by law establish the Lords day which was of the Gentiles called Sunday as he saith Master Bullinger saith it is to be vnderstood that he Bulling in Apoc concio 4.
sabbath is ordayned of God not for rest in it selfe for he no where alloweth idlenes therefore the rest of the sabbath is commanded for another end namely for the diligent studie of religion for it is therefore commanded to rest from handy labours vt hoc totum tempus impendamus that wee might bestowe this whole time in the exercise of Religion And this wee doe see that as to rest vpon that day is the first thing required so for what cause it was appoynted which as it did bind men from the beginning so we can neuer looke to be exempted from it And that we might yet bee the more throughly persuaded of this one point From what things particularly wee are commanded to rest and more cleerely see into the trueth of it let vs vnto all this that hath beene spoken adde that for a further proofe which we find in the scripture that the Lorde doth not onely thus often require that men should rest that they should doe no worke doubling the word Rest in many places and going ouer it againe and againe that if it were possible we might conceiue it and yeeld vnto it though not at the first yet at the last but also more largely and fully descendeth into particulars forbidding them by name to worke in such and such things and at such times as might carrie with them the greatest probabilitie of being exempted and might make the greatest shew of giuing priuiledge to worke that all excuse might bee taken from them who in the pride of their wittes cannot conceiue nor in the stubbornnes of their harts will yeelde vnto this commandement of so precise a rest neither will haue their handes and their feete so shortly tyed vp but will needes breake out vpon that day most vngodlily to the doing of that which seemeth good in their owne eyes 1 From gathering and preparing Manna Exod. 16.23 This is that which is spoken Exod. 16. concerning the gathering and preparing of Manna which was their dayly food that vpon the seuenth day they should rest from both To morrowe is the rest of the holy Sabbath of the Lord bake that to day which you will bake and seeth that which you will seeth and all that remaineth lay it vp to bee kept till the morning for you And afterward verse 26. Sixe daies shall ye gather it but in the seuenth day is the Sabbath in it shall be none Here you see that hee would not haue them worke about the prouision of their foode when it might bee done the day before and that now when they were fed from hand to mouth as it were because they were not made to feede themselues but to liue to Gods glorie he would haue them so to eate and so to prouide for their eating that the rest vpon the Sabbath might not be interrupted and therefore not to gather or prouide vpon that day which would haue taken vp a great part of it and so they could not haue sanctified it as they ought Whereunto wee may adioyne that which is spoken concerning the making of the Tabernacle 2 From doing any thing about building the Tabe●nacle Exod. 31.13 first by the Lord himselfe vnto Moses in many words Speake then also vnto the children of Israell and say notwithstanding keepe you my Sabbath vers 14 Whosoeuer worketh therein the same person shall be euen cut off from among his people vers 15. Sixe daies shall men worke but in the seuenth day is the Sabbath of the holy rest vnto the Lord whosoeuer doth any worke in the Sabbath day shall dye the death vers 16. Wherefore the children of Israell shall keepe the Sabbath that they may rest throughout their generations for an euerlasting couenant Where the Lord doth teach thē that the rest of the Sabbath was of such importance that hee would haue the making of the Tabernacle to giue place vnto it and though it was the place wherein the Lord should be worshipped and therefore much might haue been sayd for the defence of those that should haue wrought vpon the Sabbath about it yet because it was not alreadie sanctified to that end and so was not holy and therefore the working about it in it owne nature meerely ciuill and worldly therefore he would not haue it hinder them from that which was aboue all worldly things euen his owne seruice which that they might performe in such wise as they should he willeth them to rest from all other worke yea from working about the Tabernacle And afterward when Moses commeth to speake vnto the people of the same matter hee forgetteth not this charge but placeth it in the beginning of his speech vnto them as a thing most waightie as appeareth in the same booke Exod. 35.1 These are the wordes which the Lorde hath commanded that you should doe them 2. Sixe daies thou shalt worke but the seuenth day shall bee vnto you the holy Sabbath of Rest vnto the Lorde whosoeuer doth any worke therein shall die 3. You shall kindle no fire throughout all your habitations vpon the Sabbath day and so goeth on to the declaration of that which appertained to the Tabernacle as followeth in that chapter As though he should haue sayd notwithstanding all this which you are to do about the rearing of the Tabernacle you must obserue the rest vpon the Sabbath as you had wont to do the sixe daies are appointed for it but vpon the seuenth doe nothing no not so much as make a fire to heate any tooles or to prepare and dresse any thing that belongeth vnto it And though I am not ignorant that some doe otherwise expound this last verse whom I doe esteeme in the Lord as I ought yet considering the place that it occupieth and that it goeth immediately before his speech concerning the Tabernacle I am persuaded that this is the true and natiue sense of it Must we not needes then think that to rest vpō the sabbath is a thing that the Lord highly regardeth when hee would haue it kept yea to the delaying as it were of the building of the Tabernacle And what excuses shall men haue before God for their needlesse working and superfluous trauailes when so excellent a worke as this might not be excused And here we may not let that passe which is so worthy remembrance concerning this matter spokē by the Lord himselfe as it is by Moses set downe Sixe daies shalt thou worke Exod. 34.21 and in the seuenth day thou shalt rest both in earing time and haruest thou shalt rest Where besides that in so few words 3 In the time of sowing and haruest he doth twise vse this word rest it is to be marked that to rest vpon the seuenth day is so necessarie that hee of purpose chuseth out the fittest times for men to worke in and those that might seeme most to be excepted as seed time and haruest and forbiddeth them by name to worke vpon the Sabbath yea in these times
yoke of bondage lieth still vpon our neckes that was vpon them and the freedome purchased by Christ is of none account the libertie proper to a Christian man nothing worth the Gospell hath no preferment aboue the lawe Answer We are not bound to rest for those ends and purposes for which they did For answere vnto the which we must consider that first of all wee are deliuered from that manner of keeping the Sabbath which the Iewes were tyed vnto at that it might put thē in remembrance of that great rest which the Lord bestowed vpon them from the continuall and intolerable worke in Egypt by the hand of Moses and that thereby their hope might bee nourished of the Messiah to come by whom they should haue a perpetuall Sabbath and rest from sinne in the kingdome of heauen begun hereupon earth vnto the which ends they were bound to haue a principall respect and so to keepe the Sabbath as they might most profite in these euen in thankfulnes for the benefit receiued and in hope of that that was promised neither of which because they can appertaine vnto vs for we haue not been in Egypt and therefore cannot remember our deliuerie from thence and Christ Iesus is alreadie come and hath entered into his rest and therefore we neede not to hope for it that though we be bound to the same rest with the Iewes yet our condition is more easie and tolerable in that we bee freed from these appertenances and these other burthens are not layd vpon vs. The which we shall be so much the rather perswaded of if we looke into that libertie 2 We haue also more libertie then they in the manner of sanctifying the day which is brought vnto vs by Christ concerning the sanctifying also of the day of rest which consisteth in such a multitude of purificatiōs washings and clensings and in such a great number of sacrifices and oblations al which were doubled vpon the Sabbath and therefore the obseruation of the Sabbath was more laborious and painfull vnto them and sooner might they offend in it in stead of which we haue fewer things to doe and they be more simple plaine and easie as the hearing of the word receiuing of the Sacraments and prayer And generally as our estate is better then of the Iewes in regard of the whole worship of God which is now more euident shorter not so compound more significant and with lesse difficultie so vpon the Sabbath because the whole worship is to be performed in consideration of that also great are our priuiledges aboue theirs as in all other things so in the obseruation of the Sabbath Hebr. 1.1 Moreouer whereas God in old times spake sundrie times and in diuers manners vnto them and therefore their knowledge of the law was not so great as ours in these last daies wherein he hath spoken vnto vs once by his sonne neither were their graces and gifts so many and excellent ordinarily Act. 2.20 as they be now when God hath powred out his spirit vpon all flesh and therefore they being like vnto children 3 And we are set free from al the childish rudimēts annexed vnto this day and we vnto men growne they stoode in need of many moe helpes to further them in the obseruation of this commandement then we doe and which though they were bound vnto yet we are freed from As they were commanded to let their ground rest euery seuenth yeare and that is called her Sabbath with many other such like things Therefore as we haue great freedome in all other commandements aboue them so in this For must wee not needes confesse that though wee are still bound as the Iewes were Psalm 1.2 to meditate vpon the law of God day and night yet for so much as we are not commanded to carrie it about in the skirts of our garments Deut. 6.8 and vpon other bracelets as they were and though we be not exempted from teaching our children no more then they yet because we are not charged with the writing of it vpon our gates vers 9. and the posts of our doores as they were must wee not acknowledge I say that euen in those things that we are bound vnto in common with the Iewes wee haue more libertie then euer they had So is it in the Sabbath though wee be bound to keepe the rest yet because we are freed from many rudiments of it which as childish instructions to further them in it they were bound vnto as wee haue seene in the former part of this treatise wee must thankfully professe that the Lord hath dealt more liberally with vs then with them Therefore euen as the childe which is set to reade must name euery letter apart and distinctly by it selfe and spell euery sillable that so he might bee holpen forward to reading which when hee hath attained vnto though still he be bound to reade yet he is freed spelling naming euery letter as he had wont to doe and that were a great bondage and wearisomnes to binde him vnto it still nay it were altogether ridiculous and childish in him indeede So now though we bee charged to rest vpon the Sabbath yet when wee are not ouercharged with those Iewish ceremonies which they being children had giuen them as furtherances vnto thē let vs not complaine before we haue cause Galat. 4.3 neither murmure against God because we cannot bee so licentious as we would seeing we bee at such libertie as we be and as it pleaseth the Lord to bestow vpon vs and let vs be so much the more carefull to rest by how much we haue but this one thing to attend vpon and are made free from many other which might hinder vs. Vnto all which if I shall adde this in the last place I will make an ende of this matter that besides these great priuiledges which we haue spoken of Christ Iesus in the Gospel hath offered vnto vs somewhat more euen in this commandement that we haue now in hand 4 And from the obseruation of many other Sabbaths which they had That though wee bee restrained vpon this day from worke both hand and foot as the Iewes were yet haue we libertie to work vpon many other For they were bound vnto a great many of other dayes which had the nature of the Sabbath and therefore are so called many times and vpon the which they might not worke which as it appeareth in many other places of the scripture so especially in Leuit. the 23. where they are reckoned vp in order beginning with the Sabbath vnto which is adioyned the Passeouer the feast of the first fruites of trumpets and of tabernacles and euery one of these had more daies then one proper vnto them as appeareth in that chapter most largely besides the first day of euery new Moone from all which wee are now freed as appeareth by the Apostle Coloss 2.16 Let no man condemne you in respect of
honour of his name and dedicated vnto his seruice And as he giueth vs libertie to worke our owne worke vpon the sixe dayes so he commaundeth vs straightly to cease from them vpon the seuenth that we might worke for the Lord seeing it is appointed to bee a day of resting from all other affaires for the Lords busines sake And last of all hee addeth that whereas the Lorde did create the worlde in sixe daies hee himselfe entered into a new worke distinct from the former vpon the seuenth and therefore bestowed an especiall blessing vpon that day which all the rest haue not euen the blessing of sanctification that it might be kept holy to himselfe For as Master Caluin sayth Benedixit sanctificauit Caluin in Gen. 2.3 secundum verbum est exegeticum prioris Of these two words the Lord blessed and sanctified the latter doth expound the former Pet. Mart. in Gen. 2. Whereunto agreeeth Peter Martyr To blesse is to giue and bestow something this did he chiefly giue vnto it that therein wee should rest and apply our selues to the seruice of God which so many words aboundantly testifie that the waightiest thing in this commandement is that the day of rest should bee bestowed vpon Gods seruice in so much that if we had attained vnto the perfect obseruing of the rest yet we are not come to the end and goale as it were of this commandement no not vnto the midde way of it which is so much the more diligently to be taken heed vnto because many through a grosse and palpable ignorance and want of religion as they cannot be persuaded of that precise rest which we haue seene here commanded so more prophanely dreame that though not all yet the greatest part of obedience vnto this commandement consisteth in abstaining from al worldly busines and therefore they that haue some care of this yet neuer or very seldome thinke of the other and making some conscience of working that day thinke it to bee a veniall or no sinne at all to neglecte the seruice of God which is most especially required or at least wise not to be throughly occupied about it Cal in Exod. 20.12 as the Lord on that day doth require For as Master Caluin sayth God was not delighted with the idlenes of his people but when hee bad them rest vpon the seuenth day there was relation to an other end For as the same man saith in another place This were a very bare and naked thing Idem vpon Deut. 5. ser 34. that our hands onely and our feete should rest and that nothing else should bee done What must we doe then wee ought to apply this rest vnto a more high and excellent thing And a little after he shewes it more particularly saying When our shop windowes are shut in on the sunday when wee trauaile not after the common order and fashion of men this is to the ende wee should haue more liberty and leasure to attend on that which God commandeth that is to wit to be taught by his word to assemble our selues together to make confession of our faith to call on his name to exercise our selues in the vse of his sacraments Therefore the seruant of God Moses to meete with this grosse corruption in the 5. of Deuteronomie doth not onely vse the forenamed word of sanctifying the day but further addeth in the same place As the Lord thy God hath commanded thee Deut. 5.12 making the greatest part of the commandement to consist in hallowing of the day For when God sanctified the day Iunij praelect in Gen. 2.3 he commanded man to sanctifie it that is to bestowe it in holy exercises So then looke howe many reasons there were before for the establishing of the day of rest so many more are there for the keeping it holy seeing this is the principall end of resting that it might be hallowed which because it cannot be in that manner that it should vnlesse we doe rest for we cannot wholly bestow it vpon Gods seruice if wee bestowe it vpon our busines in whole or in part therefore that this principall might haue his due roome al other things must giue place vnto it And though there were many other causes of ordaining the day of rest as we haue alreadie seene yet none so chiefe and principall as this For Adam being in paradise whiles he had not yet sinned though he was therefore exempted from many causes of resting which his posteritie did stande in need of yet for this cause was bound vnto it as much as any that resting from the works of the garden he might sanctifie it according to the commandement which otherwise he could not doe And therefore in the wordes of the commandement we are willed to remember the Sabbath day to keepe it holy Therefore we ought to remember the Sabbath to this end especially not so much remembring that we rest vpon it as that we sanctifie the time of our rest and therfore remember to rest before hand that nothing might hinder vs from the worship of God vpon the day of rest but therfore rest and therefore remember to rest that the seruice of God might bee taken in hand And as it is a sin not to be carefull of the Sabbath that we might rest vpon it so it is a greater sinne not to obserue it that it might be a Sabbath vnto the Lorde by sanctifying of it and if for want of heedfulnes any thing do compell vs to worke vpon the day of rest it is our sinne in not marking the Sabbath day so if by our negligence we cannot sanctifie the day of rest vnto the Lorde it is a greater sinne of not remēbring to keepe it holy which is the first greatest thing in this commandement Master Musculus sayth Polluitur Sabbathum cum cuius gratia instituitur Muscul in Math. 12.11 à plerisque plane non curatur The Sabbath is broken of many when they consider not to what end it was ordained How many in the world can and do remember well enough the Sabbath day to rest vpon it but how fewe doe remember to imploy that time about the Lords busines and so to keepe it holy One maketh account of the Sabbath day for this ende another reckoneth of it for that and euery one remembreth it for some purpose but the Lord would haue vs to remember it that wee might altogether bestowe it vpon his worship yet none almost looketh vnto that Therefore it was the wisdome of God to meet with this blockishnes of our who remember euery thing sauing that that we should and those good things which we doe remember wee thinke of them to farre other ends then wee ought to doe and to tell vs plainly that this is the chiefest ende of marking the Sabbath that we might keepe it holy which if we doe not as we cannot so well marke it as we should so wee doe marke it to a wrong ende and doe
teach vs that these are the meanes to sanctifie it by and that they are proper vnto the day Now though prayer be not here named yet we are to presume that neither the word nor sacraments were ministred withouth it seeing the fruite of both dependeth vpon the blessing of God which is obtained by prayer and seeing that in other places they are ioyned together And that the ministrie of the word is so vnseparably ioyned to the Sabbath and hath alwaies beene further appeareth by that which is most plainely in many words set downe in the 13. Acts 13.14 chapter of the same storie where it is thus written When Paul and Barnabas departed from Perga they came to Antiochia a citie of Pisidia and went into the Synagogue on the Sabbath day and sate downe 15. And after the lecture of the law and Prophets the rulers of the synagogue sent vnto them saying Ye men and brethren if yee haue any worde of exhortation for the people say on 16. Then Paul stood vp and beckened with the hande and sayd Men of Israell c. as followeth in that chapter to the 42. verse where againe it is written that when they were come out of the Synagogue of the Iewes the Gentiles besought that they would preach these wordes to them the next Sabbath day 44. And the next Sabbath day came almost the whole citie to heare the world of GOD which words doe sufficiently shew that it hath alwaies beene diligently obserued of the Church to sanctifie the Sabbath day in the publike reading and preaching of the word as in the most singular part of Gods seruice For Paul came and founde the Church alreadie met together vpon the Sabbath and reading the lawe and the Prophets and then was desired to preach and afterwards being desired to preach againe they came and heard him vpon the Sabbath And in the 15. chapter wee haue heard alreadie That Moses hath of old time Acts 15.21 in euery citie them that preach him seeing he is read euery Sabbath day in the Synagogues Besides that which is written of Paul in the 17. Chap 17.1.2.3 chapter that he comming to Thessalonica where was a Synagogue of the Iewes as his manner was went in vnto them and three Sabbath daies disputed with them by the scriptures opening and alledging that Christ must haue suffered and risen againe from the dead and this is Iesus Christ whom sayd he I preach vnto you But it were an endlesse labour though profitable in order to reckon vp all the seuerall places which shewe that these are the holy works of the Sabbath which the Lord requiteth all men to bee occupied in if they will sanctifie the day according to his commandement and as the practise of the Church giueth vs example And vpon these considerations it seemeth it was enacted in a councell held in Germanie vnder Charles the great for the maintaining of the publike preaching euery Lords day Concil Mogūt cap. 25. that Si forte Episcopus If the Bishop be not at home or be sicke or vpon any other vrgent cause be not able himselfe Nunquam tamen desit diebus Dominicis qui verbum Dei praedicet Yet let it bee so prouided that there neuer want one to preach the worde of God vnto the people on the Lords daies Phil. Melanct. in praecept 3. Master Melancthon reckoning vp many parts of sanctifying the Sabbath sayth Piè fungi ministerio where he makes this not onely one but the principall thing for a man well to discharge his ministerie in which answer he includeth the preaching of the word because a little before he sayth that the Prophets when they lament the desolation of the Sabbath they complaine Abolitum esse ministerium docendi That the ministerie of teaching was abolished and that the priests lips did not keepe knowledge But as themselues say they were dumme dogs and delighted in sleeping Bucer in Mat. 12.11 And Master Bucer in this argument writing of the practise of that Church wherein himselfe liued sayth Dominicis diebus in singulis Parochijs ad minimum duae si non tres habentur conciones Vpon the Lords dayes in euery parish there are two sermons at the least if not three Which also as it may be truely sayd of a great number of Churches in England for the space of these many yeares vnder the most happy raigne of her maiestie to the great glory of God her singular renowne and the saluation of many soules so in that respect we are to bow our knees vnto God day and night for the preseruation of her royal maiestie that it may be so by her meanes for euer as also that in those places where it is yet wanting it might be brought in in Gods most blessed time if our vnthankfulnes doe not hinder vs euen as that zealous and good King Iehosaphat could not doe all things in his time that he would for the reformation of the Church because the people then had not prepared their hearts to serue the GOD of their fathers 2. Chron. 20.33 Therefore to be short let vs looke vnto that which is in the chapter immediatly following Chap. 18.4 That Paul abiding at Corinth disputed in the Synagogue euery Sabbath day and exhorted the Iewes and the Grecians Here the holy Ghost witnesseth of him that hee did openly teach the scriptures euery Sabbath day and in the forenamed place that it was his manner so to doe then it must needs be the custome of the Church to come to the publike ministrie of the word vpon those dayes Al men ought to resort to those places where the word is preached and it must be a common manner with them which is spoken to this end that we might not be of that brutish mind that some are of that know no other thing to do vpon the Sabbath but to rest and take their ease and therfore lye many times at home sleeping most prophanely and so their oxe and their asse in ceasing from their worke keepe as good a Sabbath as they neither to be so ignorant as others are who content thēselues with their owne priuate readings at home or with the bare reading of the word in the Church neglecting the preaching of it not labouring to procure it to themselues nor repairing to those places in the meane season where it is though it be the chiefest part of Gods seruice and therefore the most especiall meanes whereby the Sabbath is sanctified and without the which all other things in the seruice of God are lesse accepted of God and more vnprofitable to our owne selues Therefore how many places of scripture haue wee seene before commanding vs so straightly to sanctifie the Sabbath so many are there binding all men of what estate and cōdition soeuer to listen after the preaching of the word and to be at it euery Sabbath if they haue any care to discharge themselues of that obedience vnto God which he
so straightly requireth at their hands As we may see in the scriptures how they that feared God liuing in the corrupt times of the Church and so not hauing their ordinarie teachers haue vpon the Sabbath day frequented those places though farre off where by the doctrine of the word they might sanctifie the day in some good acceptable manner In which consideration the Shunamite as it is recorded in the second booke of the Kings when his wife tolde him that she was going to the Prophet 2 King 4.23 but concealed the cause from him which was for the restoring of her sonne to life which she had obtained by his meanes before he demaundeth of her why she should goe that day seeing that it was neither new moone nor the Sabbath day as though he had sayd if it had been any of these daies which the Lord had commanded to be kept holy then no maruaile if she hastened thitherward so fast For so it ought to be and so it appeareth she vsed to doe that by hearing of his doctrine she might keepe holie the day and so thereby bee furthered in all other holie dueties In this respect I would to God wee might say of our time Iustin Martyr Apol●g 2. as Iustine Martyr doth of his Die qui solis dicitur omnes qui in oppidis vel agris morantur in vnum locum conueniunt Vpon the day that is called Sunday all that dwell in the townes or villages doe meete in one place and for the space of an houre the canonical scriptures of the Prophets Apostles are read It is a Canon in the prouincial Councell of Malisgon That if any man haue a Church neere them they should goe together and there vpon the Lords day to bee occupied in prayer c. Where their meaning was not to dispense with them that were further off but to inioyne all to goe to their next Churches And in another Councell this is the maine reason why they should giue ouer all worldly affayres Quo facilius ad ecclesiam venientes Concil Alater 3. cap. 27. That they might the more easily come to the Church and pray c. And vnto this doth that learned father and Bishop Augustine exhort his auditors in a sermon which I haue often alleadged which is worthie of all men for this purpose to be read ouer August de tēp sermon 251. Let no man separate himselfe from diuine seruice Neque otiosus quis domi remaneat neither let any man tarrie idling at home Idle when other are gone to the Church Which also as it is very Christianly prouided for vnder her most excellent Maiestie both by statute and also by her Iniunctions Q. Iniunct articl 46. that all should resort vnto their parishes vpon all Sundaies and there to continue the whole time of godly seruice vnder the paine of penaltie So it had been happie for this land if in all places it had been executed but with halfe that care that it was first meant But I may complaine of it with Master Caluin Caluin vpon Deut. 5. Ser. 34 rather thē amend it That whereas if we were so feruent in the loue of God as wee should all would morning and euening assemble themselues together to the end they might be edified more and more in the seruice of God we see that with much adoe men will assemble themselues on the Sunday and that many are to bee holden to this order by force and violence and a little after it sufficeth not that euery one withdraw himself to his owne house either to reade the holie scriptures or to pray vnto God but it behoueth that we come into the companie of the faithfull and there declare the concord and agreement we haue with the whole bodie of the Church and celebrate in such wise this order as the Lord hath commaunded So then as wee haue seene heretofore that it is lawfull vpon these occasions to trauaile vpon the day of rest now we learne that it is necessarie not only tolerated but inioyned vnto vs because it is the day that must be sanctified and therefore all labours commanded whereby wee may hallowe it in the best manner Therefore let vs in all conscience and care to serue God cast away such vaine pretences as that the weather is too hot or too cold the wayes are too foule the iourney too long and a thousand more which might hinder vs at any time frō the preaching of the word and common prayer in which consisteth the head and the foote of keeping holie the Sabbath day For these are so necessarie and haue been so continually practised of the Church by succession as it were from hand to hand deliuered to the posteritie that wee should too much degenerate from them if wee should debarre our selues from these holie things The Apostle writing to the Corinthians where he had before taught euery Sabbath day and so by his example and doctrine shewed them the right manner of keeping holie the day when afterwards some great abuses were crept into the Church he writeth vnto them and correcteth the faults that were in their solemne assemblies vpon the Lords day as appeareth most plainly in the processe of the whole chapter but more especially when he so many times repeateth their generall comming together Corin. 11.17.18.20 seeing then he findeth fault with the corruptions in prayer prophecying or preaching and the Sacrament it is most euident and must needes bee granted that these were the holie exercises vpon that day vsually in their common meetings whereby the day was made holie vnto the Lord and most glorious to them If thē it be so as it cannot be denyed vnles we will denye the cleere light of the Sunne at midday that the chiefest poynt of hallowing the Sabbath day consisteth in comming to Gods house where he offereth vnto vs the speciall parts of his seruice to be occupied in and no where so much as there Where the word is not prea●hed or men come not to it this day cannot be hallowed as it ought then it must needes bee subscribed vnto that in Poperie and al false religion there is nothing els but a meere prophaning of the day by abominable idolatrie and superstition and so many daies as we were vnder that intolerable bondage we were set free from Gods seruice and so long liued wee in a continuall breach of this Commandement And not onely so but wheresoeuer the preaching of the word is not or where men haue it and come not to it there can they not sanctifie the day in that manner that they should because they want the principall part of Gods seruice and that which should direct them in all others and make them most profitable vnto them Which if it be so as wee cannot with the least shew of reason deny it then what cause haue wee to be sorrie for our selues and others Which haue so many times broken this law by wilfull absenting
our selues from the Church without any iust cause or by not seeking to the Prophets to teach vs when wee had not them at home and which doe so continuallie see our brethren in many places for want of teaching willingly to breake this law and which must needes foresee ours and their posteritie to fall into the same sinne nay to continue and dye in it vnles by establishing a preaching ministrie euery where which all are commanded publikely to pray the disease be now cured and so to be preuented in time to come In our English Letanie And if this be the estate of the poore people The ministers that cannot or wil not preach are special causes of vnhallowing this day that haue not the preaching of the word among thē that by breaking the Sabbath continually they must needes prouoke the most patient Lordes wrath at the last and endanger their owne soules health what can bee saide or thought sufficiently and answerably vnto the sinne of them who being called the ministers of God as they that should be the chiefe in his seruice and goe before others in it by preaching vnto them are able and willing to do nothing lesse in the world then that For partlie they are ignorant and cannot doe it partlie they are giuen to ease and will not doe it and partly they haue so many charges to looke vnto that they know not where to begin to doe it And so doe not onely vnhallow euery Sabbath daye that the liue and doe bestow no daye in the weeke so ill as that which they should bestow best of all because they neglect that which God requireth most of all at their hands but also are the onely chiefe causes euerie where of vnhallowing the Sabbath and doe compell the people to breake it whether they will or no which sinne is yet so much the greater in them because it is not accounted of and so there is no care to amend it But let them bee assured that all the charges giuen concerning the sanctifying of the Sabbath in the scripture must bee double charged vpon them for themselues their people and looke how earnestlie this is by the Lord commanded so seuerely will it one day bee required at their hands when they shall haue no bodie to speake for them nay they shall pleade against themselues and better were it for them a thousand times to begge in the meane season then to eate vp and to liue vpon as it were their owne sinnes and the sinnes of their people and to carry about with them their owne bayne not by slipping into of humaine frailty but stubbornely falling into and more wilfullie lying in so manifest a breach of so great a commandement and that in the highest poynte of it Psalm 95.7.8 2. Thes 2.10.11 Therefore to daye if we will heare Gods voyce let vs not harden our hearts against it but let vs receiue the trueth in loue least he giue vs vp to strong illusions effectuallie to be deceiued and to beleeue a lye and let vs confesse as the trueth is that the Lord would haue euerie Sabbath to bee sanctified by the Minister and the people and that in the Church he ought to preach the word and they to heare it euery Sabbath daye And though we bee not so grosselie blinded to imagine that it is not necessarie one whit vpon that day we must not also be deceiued to thinke that now and then is sufficient once a moneth or twise a quarter and so sometime both Minister and people should be exempted from it as though they could sanctifie the daye after some other manner And though I haue iustly stood vpon the preaching of the worde especially because it is the greatest parte of Gods seruice and yet that which is most neglected my meaning is not to exclude the other as though they appertained not vnto vs for it wholly and euery parte of it doth concerne vs and is to bee practised vpon this daye Therefore wee must also come to the reading of the worde We must be present also at the reading of the worde common prayer and administration of the Sacraments from the beginning to the ende and common prayer and receiue the Sacrament so oft as it is administred yea though we receiued it the Lords day immediatlie before and be present at the Baptisme of others For wee haue in the forenamed places seene all these practised together seeing they be parts of Gods publike worship we must leaue no holy worke of his vndone whereby the day might be sanctified vnto him So we must bee present at the whole action and continue at the diuine seruice from the beginning to the ending as it is prouided by the lawe of the realme which is grounded vpon Gods worde neither foreslowing to come at the beginning nor hastening to depart at the ending which is so much the more diligently to bee taken heede of on euery side because herein many doe offend carelesselie and yet the danger of it is very great Some vnder the pretence of comming to the Sermon tarrie at home a great part of the seruice and so neither are they at the confession of sinnes with Gods people nor are made partakers of the prayers of the Church for the forgiuenes of their sinnes neither doe euer heare much of the scripture read other vnder the colour of being at all these departe away before the blessing is pronounced vpon them and so many times lose the fruite of all as Iudas did or else tarie not the ministring of the Sacrament as though it were a thing impertinent vnto them Therefore it is in expresse wordes set downe by the Prophet Ezekiel cap. 46. Where hee speaketh of Gods worship vpon the Sabbath daye that the prince shall be in the temple in the middest of the people he shall goe in Ezek. 46.10 when they goe in and when they goe forth they shall goe forth together where we see he requireth that all should be present from the beginning to the ending euen the very chiefest in euery congregation as well as the meanest and no priuiledge is to be giuen to any one more then to another for comming vnto abiding at and departing from the seruice of GOD which concerneth them all like in the whole and in euery parte of it then the which nothing can be spoken more truely nor more plainely which the Prophet Dauid as he knew very well so laboured to perswade the people of it Psalm 84.10 when in the Psal 84. He accounteth the dore keepers of Gods house blessed who were first and last in the temple so partakers of the whole worship Wherefore whensoeuer wee doe voluntarilie bereaue our selues of any part of the publike Ministerie we cannot sanctifie the daye so in euery portion of Gods worke as he would haue vs to doe Hereunto it seemeth they had respect in that councell Concil Malisgon 2. cap. 1. wherein they say Si quis whosoeuer
he be let him goe to the Church vpon the Lords daye And they bring their reason For it is iust that wee all celebrate this daye vnanimiter with one consent or all together in which we are made that which wee were not before for wee were the seruants of sinne but by it we are made the children of righteousnes August de temp serm 251 S. Augustine complaineth in his time of this abuse in one kinde Adhuc quoque quod valde dolendum est conqueri vobiscum volo I will further complaine vnto you of one thing for which there is great cause to bee grieued that there are some especially the great mightie men of this world who when they come to the church haue no deuotion to praise God but compell the Minister to curtall the seruice and to saye it accordiog to their pleasure and will not permit him to follow the order of the Church for their bellies sake and coueteousnes as though but one little parte of the daye were appoynted for Gods seruice and all the rest of the daye together with the night were ordained for their pleasures See how truelie hee setteth out as it were in their colours the manner of a great many in our time So that how many times soeuer we haue made vnnecessarie delayes and haue been afraide as it were least wee should come too soon though in al worldly matters we suspect that wee should come too late and wee are loath to lose the least part of that which might make for our profite we haue hindered our selues from dooing some parte of Gods seruice which the rest of our bretheren haue been occupied in and so haue not done vnto him all that same seruice which he required of vs vpon that daye which must be dedicated vnto him alone And least that we might imagine that the Lorde doth not so strictly require this seruice at our hands besides that wee must remember that it hath been proued vnto vs out of the word and declared how the practise of the Church in all times hath yeelded vnto it if wee doe further consider the reasons why the Lord would be thus openly and together of all his seruants worshipped wee shall easilie perceiue that they stand still in force and binde vs as much as euer any before so that wee cannot iustly say it is true in deed it was thus once God would haue vs to serue him publikely in the Church but now it is not so necessarie we haue more libertie then others and so discharge our selues of our obedience to God at least wise of some part of it For first of all the Lorde would haue such solemne assemblies of his people in one place worshipping him together in those principall partes of his seruice which otherwise cannot bee done and hath not left it to euery mans discretion alone in some corner to serue him when it pleaseth himselfe though hee require that of euery one also M●tth 6.6 euen that entring into his chamber hee should shut the dore and there praye vnto him in secret which will rewarde him openly but would haue all resorte to the common meetings and there ioyntlie to agree in his seruice praysing him in the assemblies Psal 107.31.32 and declaring his name vnto our brethren in the middest of the congregation that thereby his Church might be knowne and discerned in this world from the synagogues of the idolaters and conuenticles of the Schismatickes that so it being as a citie set vpon an hill which cannot bee hid Matth 15.14 and the mountaine of the house of the Lorde being prepared in the top of the mountaines and exalted aboue the hils Esay 2.2 all nations might slow vnto it and they descrying it a farre off might repayre vnto it as the Eagles doe resorte thither where the dead carcas is Luk. 17.37 And so not onely the godlie might incourage one another saying Come and let vs go vp to the mountain of the Lord Esay 2.3 to the house of the God of Iacob and hee will teach vs his waies and wee will walke in his pathes For the law shall goe forth of Sion and the word of the Lord from Ierusalem but also that all the wicked which should by apostasie forsake it and reuolt from it or through contempt not ioyne themselues vnto it as too many haue and doe still in our time might iustly be condemned and left without all excuse where it should be so visible and as it were palpable vnto them Gualt in Marc. 3. Homil. 23. And therefore as Master Gualter sayth They that vse the Sabbath day rightly Sacros coetus adeunt goe to the publike assemblies to heare the word of God and pray and the same man in another place Idem in Act. 17 Homil. 108. It is euident that it was the ancient custome of the people of God to frequent the holy meetings for which cause we doe reade that holy daies and holy places in time past were ordayned of God Whereupon he inferreth in the same place that their peruersnes is to be detested who doe prophanely scoffe at the publike meetings of Christians wherein they manifestly bewray that they are not touched with any desire of wholesome doctrine or true religion For there the Lord doth offer vnto his Church those most notable and singular meanes of their saluation A commendation of the preaching of the worde which there is to be had Rom. 1.16 which as they cannot want so they can find no where but there for there is the preaching of the word which is Gods owne arme and power to saue all them that beleeue in so much that without the ministerie and preaching of those Rom. 1.16 that haue the publike authoritie and callings of the Church most ordinarily men are not saued Rom 10.14 as the Apostle saith How can they beleeue without a Preacher And how can they preach vnlesse they bee sent 1. Pet. 1.23 For indeede this is the incorruptible seede whereby we are borne againe without which we cannot enter into the kingdome of heauen Chap. 2.2 and this is that syncere milke whereby as new borne babes we are nourished and grow vnto eternall life A●●s 8.31 euen that word that is preached in so much that wee cannot vnderstand what is read vnderstande I meane to saluation except we haue a guide to preach vnto vs who may giue the sence Nehem. 8.8 and cause vs to vnderstand the reading For our Lord Iesus Christ when he ascended vp an hye and led captiuitie captiue Ephe. 4.8 vnto 17. gaue rich and plentiful giftes vnto men pastors and teachers for the gathering together of the Saints for the worke of the ministerie and for the building vp of the body of Christ til we al meet together in the vnitie of faith and knowledge of the sonne of God vnto a perfect man and vnto the ful measure of the age of Christ that we
in that place where he hath the greatest blessing of being profitable to others that any can haue in the world and none so great as hee wee haue departed and that vpon the Sabbath without any profite at all wherein our sinne is so much the greater that for the most parte men doe not see it and so cannot be grieued for it And what is the cause of all this S. Augustine in his time complaineth of many great abuses in the Churche which hinder men from profiting all which and many more are true in our time when hauing spoken before of them that are ranging in the fieldes when they should be at Church addeth Adhuc quod detestabilius est August de tēp serm 251. Besides which is worste some comming to the Church doores enter not in or tarrie not there with silence to the ende but when there is diuine reading within then they abroade are talking either of other matters or quarelling one with another or playing To whom he saith afterwardes Do not giue your selues to playing abroade but to praying and singing within And afterwardes in the same place he speaketh to them that are in the Church saying Doe not talke one with another while you are at Church but bee quiet for there are many especially certaine women Quae ita in ecclesia garriunt who so chat in the Church and are so full of words that neither themselues heare that which is read nor suffer others to heare and then hee concludeth Should there bee such meetings in the house of God in such an order or should they so behaue themselues in the sight of God and of his holy Angels It is prouided by publike authoritie That no man woman Q. Iniunct articl 38. or childe should be otherwise occupyed in the time of seruice then in quiet attendance to heare marke and vnderstand that that is read preached and ministred but how pitifully the execution of this is neglected in many places it is too lamentable to consider And if this were all wee might holde our peace The Ministers in many places are the cause why the people doe not profit but this mischiefe stretcheth it selfe out further for alas many of Gods people liue vnder such vnprofitable Ministers that it is not so much as to be hope for ordinarily that any profit should come from them at all for besides that that many cannot so much as distinctly read so that they may profitably be vnderstood I would to God it were not so there are many that can but reade and what is the profit of that though I confesse it is great in it selfe vnto the endlesse profit that commeth by preaching And let them but one shew vs the spirit of God who must be the onely iudge in this matter euer speaking so magnificenlty of the one as of the other Others that doe preach had as good almost holde their peace for they cannot deuide the word of God aright 2. Tim. 2.5 neither are they the mise dispensers of Gods mysteries Matth. 24.45 and stewardes of his house who should giue to euery one of his people their owne meate in due season Zach. 11.15 but haue taken vnto themselues the instruments of a foolish shepheard whose right armes is dryed vp and their right eye is cleane put out that they haue no skill to discharge their dueties in any profitable measure neither doe they make it part of their care and studie to speake most profitably to their people but either care not what they saye or else seeke their credit and estimation in that which they doe say What shall wee saye then to these vnprofitable men which cause so many of Gods people to bee vnprofitable and euen in those things from whence greatest profite should redound vnto them and vpon that very day which is especially appoynted for their profit How will they wash their hands of so many vnprofitable assembles whereof they haue been the very cause themselues nay they haue brought vp a vile slander vpon the house of God which is the most beautifull and fruitfull place in the world because they haue shut out the profitable preaching of the word which maketh all other things more profitable In so much that many say what good shall I get by going to the Church what can I heare there which I may not heare or read at home Haue I not the Bible and booke of common preyer at home which saying of theirs though I doe not allow of yet you see whence it ensueth and woe bee to them by whom such offences come but this one thing will require a seuerall treatise and I must remember my purpose though I haue well remembred it all this time I meane I must bee as briefe in euery thing as the time doth require the waightines of the matter wit permit There are yet other holy dueties publikely to bee performed vpon the Sabbath day whereby it is sanctified but I haue stood the longer vpon these because they are most principall most common vnto all least regarded of all I will bee shorter in them which followe Vpon the Lords day the poore ought publikely to prouided for To make common prouision for such poore as be in euery congregation or if they bee able to haue a care of others adioyning vnto them is a worke most acceptable vnto God profitable to our brethren commanded to be done and practised of the Church most of all vpon the Sabbath For this is that order which the Apostle established in the Churches of Galatia and at Corinth for the relieuing of the poore saintes at Ierusalem much more then did they it for those that were amongst themselues Euerie first day of the weeke let euery one of you put aside and lay vp as God hath prospered him 1. Cor. 16.2 that then there bee no gatherring when I come When men haue beene prospered the whole weeke before and they come vpon the Lords day to acknowledge it and to giue tha thanks vnto God for the same the lord would haue thē declare their faith namely that they haue receiued all from him by bestowing vpon them who are in great neede the which that they might doe the rather they haue the worde that might prouoke them vnto it wherein are many goodly promises concerning the fatherly prouidence of God watching ouer them for good in this life that serue him and that he hath prouided for them a kingdome in heauen that he will requite it them double whatsoeuer they giue vnto the poore in his name and for his sake in so much that the giuing of a cup of cold water shall not be lost Math. 10.42 for he that hath pitie vpon the poore Prou. 19.17 lendeth vnto the Lord and looke whatsoeuer he layeth out it shall be repayed For the Lorde Iesus Christ will account Math. 25.40 whatsoeuer wee haue done vnto the least of his brethren as though we had done it vnto
so I conclude with P. Martyr Of euery seuen daies one must be reserued to God P. Martyr in Gen. 2. he meaneth one whole day not a peece of it Therefore there must needes be certaine other holie dueties and parts of Gods worship which wee must walke in the rest of the day when the congregation is dissolued and when wee are alone by our selues which are the priuate religious exercises of a Christian man in which he sanctifieth the rest of the Sabbath and they are all such parts of Gods seruice which a man can doe by himselfe alone or with others of his houshold or neighbours whereby he might prepare himselfe or them for the publike ministerie which is the chiefest or afterwards make it most profitable to himselfe or them Vnto which it seemeth Master Bucer had respect whē as he speaking of such things as are to be done vpon the Sabbath and hauing named those that are publike Bucer in Matth. 12.11 as to heare the word to receiue the Sacraments to prouide for the poore vnto them addeth In the first part of the day wee ought to prepare our selues for the publike assemblies Instituere ad pietatem familiam to instruct a mans houshold vnto goldines In the former part of the day therefore euery one must prepare himselfe for the Church that hee might come thither with profite for if in all worldly things that bee of any moment we doe prepare our selues then much more ought we to doe it in heauenly whereunto wee are most vnfit as they in themselues are the greatest especially when the benefit of them is so great if we be prepared and the daunger is so perilous if we be vnprepared for the preaching of the word is the sauour of life vnto life 2. Cor. 2.15 or the sauour of death vnto death And in the Sacramēt is offered vnto vs the bodie and bloud of Christ 1. Cor. 11.24 to nourish vs vp vnto euerlasting life but if we eate and drinke vnworthily we procure Gods iudgement against our selues 29 The Lord in speaking to his people from heauen in an extraordinarie manner Exod. 19. did command them to be prepared extraordinarily by which practise of his he declared that in the ordinarie ministerie of the word there ought to bee some ordinarie preparation if wee will bee partakers of it with profite The ground is prepared for the seede the stomacke for meate the whole bodie for phisicke this is the immortall seed 1. Pet. 1.23 whereby we are begotten into an assured hope of a farre better life This is the food and phisick of our soules whereby our life is preserued and we kept from eternall death therefore we must bee prepared for it The want of which preparation is the cause that the word is so vnprofitablie heard of a great many And this is so much the more diligently to be marked because it is so little known lesse practised in the world For if the daye were as long againe as the longest in the middest of Sommer a great many would spend away the time I know not how and neither at home nor in the way nor at the Church thinke to prepare themselues one whitte And if they haue made a few prayers at their first comming in then if seruice bee not begunne they are as ready to talke of any worldly matter with any that will giue them the hearing as euer they were if it were halfe an hower together yea though the minister be there vntil he begin the first word for want of which preparation either they can receiue nothing or it dooth them no good which is the very chiefe cause of so much fruitlesse hearing of so many good sermons as is euery where that they which otherwise haue good wits and great affections here are both senselesse and without feeling so that they sit more be like stockes then men conceiuing no more then the very stooles they sit vpon carrying away no more then they brought with them And if it be not so what is the cause that many reasonable men hearing one man at one time speaking one and the same worde of God so plainly that if it were possible young children might vnderstand it some shal so greatly profit by it Matth. 11.19 that wisedome should be iustified of her children others shall so meerely not conceiue one word as though they had been deaffe a sleepe or in a trance or starke dead all the while And that it is so indeed let the intolerable ignorance of men euery where after this long preaching of the word Vnder the most happie raigne of her gracious Maiestie whome God still long preserue to that ende and ad as many happie yeares vnto he raigne as may be speake for it and see whether wee complaine before wee haue cause Nay let mens owne wofull experience tell themselues that when they haue most prepared themselues they haue most profited by the publicke ministerie and contrariwise then haue they been most vnprofitable at it when they haue come most vnreuerently and vprepared to it In so much that a man of meaner giftes shall some times bee more profitable to them when they are thus prepared then another that hath more excellent graces at whom they may well wonder but receiue no profit by him when they be not propared for it I know the Lord is mercifull and he doth not alwayes deale with men according to their deserts therefore many times when they come vnprepared he blesseth his owne ordinance vnto thē Matth. 28.20 that he might performe the trueth of that promise which hee hath annexed vnto it and his mercie is aboue al our sinnes but how can men looke for any such thing ordinarilie And doth he not it vnto them to teach them that he would bestow vpon thē greater mercie by these meanes if they would prepare themselues for it How wee out to prepare our selues before wee come to the Church But how shall men prepare themselues Surely first of all let them bee perswaded that they ought to prepare themselues and this is the beginning of their preparation then let them examine themselues not onely how they haue spent the weeke past and euery daye in it calling themselues to an account before God what sinnes they haue committed day or night to bee humbled for them what benefites receiued that they might bee thankefull and what dueties they haue done that they might bee comforted therein all which though they bee shortlie spoken they are not so soone done here is not so much neede of a good capacitie to conceiue as a good conscience to practise but also generally what is their estate what graces they want what bee their sinnes past what their infirmities present and because the Lorde hath appoynted his worship to comfort vs ouer these let vs pray vnto God before hand that the prayers of the Church might be directed the Minister of the word so
disposed and euery thing in the Church so gouerned and so blessed vnto vs by his spirit as might make not onely for our good in generall and the good of others but in these speciall things that we stand in most neede of 2. There is great cause to pray before we come to the Ministerie of the word And so let vs pray for our selues and others and that we might be holpen by them but especially let vs praye for the Minister of Gods word that to it might bee ioyned the ministerie of his spirit which when we doe the Lorde that heareth our prayers that knoweth our wants will cause vs to heare that which we most of all desired and that which is spoken generally the spirit will applie vnto vs particularlie euen as many eating of one meate receiue sundrie kindes of nourishments from it and he will cause the steward of his house to giue vnto vs that meat which he most of all knoweth wee stand in neede and then we shall heare him speake as though he were in our bosome 1. Cor. 14.22 and the secrets of our hearts shall bee made manifest not that he knoweth what is within vs but the Lord knoweth whose minister he is for our good and the holy Ghost dooth which accompanieth Gods ordinance and in the word doth which is preached Heb. 4.12.13 For the word of God is liuelie and mightie in operation and sharper then any two edged sworde and entereth thorough euen vnto the diuiding asunder of the soule and the spirit and of he ioynts and the marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and the intents of the heart neither is there any creature that is not manifest in his sight but all things are naked and open vnto is eyes with whom we haue to doe And that we might the rather be perswaded that wee ought thus in the feeling of our wants praye vnto God wee must remember that wee cannot so much as vnderstand the word vnlesse Gods spirit doe teach vs Ephes 5.8 For wee are darkenes it selfe And the naturall man perceiueth not things of the spirit of God for they are foolishnes vnto him neither can he know them because they are spirituallie discerned and besides the word of God is high and there are many mysteries contained in it and a wisedome that is hid which many princes of this world doe not know Vers 7.8 as it in the same chapter and all the articles of our faith are aboue our reason nay we account them foolishnes Therefore both in the inward seeing of our own blindnes and in a reuerent estimation of Gods holy word we had neede pray for the inlightening of his holy spirit which searcheth all things yea the deepe things of God Vers 10.11 and no man knoweth the things of God but the spirit of God as it is most liuely set forth vnto vs in this very chapter And so let vs praye with the Prophet in the 119. Psalme in a great many places O Lord teach me thy statutes and open mine eyes that I might see the wonders of thy law and make me to vnderstand the way of thy precepts and teach mee good iudgement and knowledge and giue me vnderstanding that I may learne thy commandements 16. and deale with thy seruant according to thy mercie and teach me thy statutes And when wee doe vnderstand thorow the blessing of God obtained by prayer we must pray further that our affections might be framed according to our knowledge which we had need to doe so much the more because it is harder then the other and yet our affections doe more ouercome vs then our knowledge in so much that wee doe not many times that we know to be best but which wee like best and so at some other time fo the daye wee must praye that these things might be called into our remēbrance and that we might be transformed into not onely the knowledge but obedience of them which is the end of all and generallie that the fruite of all things might appeare in our liues to our owne vnspeakeable comfort the benefite of others and Gods glorie most of all which without the especiall assistance of his holie spirite wee cannot obtaine by the most excellent giftes and most painefull endeauors of his best seruants 2 Cor. 3.5 For who is Paul and who is Apollo but the ministers by whom yee beleeued and as the Lord gaue to euery man I haue planted Appolos watered but God gaue the increase so then neither is hee that planteth any thing neither hee that watereth but God that giueth the increase saith the Apostle Therefore as the Ministers pray much for his people if euer hee will doe any to them euen as it is said of the prince of pastours Luke 21.37 Marc. 14.23 that in the day time hee taught in the temple and at night went vp into the mountaine to praye so the people must pray much more for the ministers and themselues both before and after both that they might bee prepared obtaine and continue in that good which they haue gotten Many doe wrongfully complaine that their minister is vnprofitable vnto them hee dooth them no good they cannot conceaue him I doe not say but that the complaintes of some are iust yet let them consider whether some great part of the fault be not in themsleues We ought to read the Scriptures priuatly at home namely the want of prayer before and their negligence afterward vnto priuat prayer must be adioyned priuat reading of the Scriptures at such times of the daye as they shall finde it most conuenient both that they might generally bee acquainted with the bodie of the Scripture and also that they might haue some more speciall vse of certaine partes as they shall stand in neede either to bee confirmed in any poynte of doctrine publikely taught or might thereby receiue any speciall comfort humiliation or increase of such graces as they labour most for or might be quickened vp vnto prayer And hereunto may bee referred that saying of Theophylacte Theoph. in Marc. 1.21 The lawe hath commanded men to rest vpon the Sabbath vt lectioni vacent homines that men might attend vpon reading which is true not onely of the publike reading in the Church especially but also of priuate reading at home For so it is that in most places the people doe heare the scriptures seldome in the Church and then but certaine portions of them and not the whole worde reade ouer whereby it commeth to passe that they are vtterlie ignorant in and neuer so much as haue hard before of many textes that are alleaged in the sermons for proofe of any doctrine whereby they are not onely not furthered but hindered wondering at such strange and seldome hard things so the thing is more obscure vnto them thē it was before being proued by that which they vnderstand not Nay the cōmon stories of the bible they are
man either can say do thing at all or that which hee doth shall bee very colde and vnprofitable and it may easily bee perceiued that it commeth but from the teeth outward as we say neither hath it that power of the spirite which ought to bee and no doubt is in the communication of many of Gods children And here is that common prouerbe verified that our Sauiour Christ alledgeth in the Gospell Math. 12 34. Out of the aboundance of the heart the mouth speaketh men are not most vsually speaking of that which they know best but vpon which their heart is most set and they take greatest pleasure in or are most afraid of c. Then if wee will by this most certaine rule of truth measure what is in the hearts of men and how they are there mooued at the hearing and reading of the worde either one way or other we shall find that the most part of men if they bee not voyde of the knowledge of it altogether yet they haue no sence or feeling of it in their hearts neither doth it affect them one whit but are benummed as it were that waye seeing that they are no more often in speaking of it And let vs cease maruailing why they are so prodigall of their tongue in all other matters and in these are more niggardly and sparing of it then they should seeing that they are so stuffed with the one but they like vnto vessels filled with new wine which will breake if they haue no vent and of the other they haue so little or rather nothing in them at all that you can scarsely wring out any thing from them Which as it is a great sinne in men an especial neglecting of a notable part of Gods worship vpon this holy day What fruit we might get by such conferences and what we lose by neglecting thē so it is most assuredly a cause why all that which they haue receiued in the publike ministerie is either so soone lost or remayneth so vprofitably with them For what if men heare and read neuer so diligently if he neuer speak of it afterwardes is it possible that he should remember it so fruitefully in time to come as otherwise he might Doth not experience teach all men that those schollers are like to proue best learned which will conferre one with another about that which the master hath read vnto them before And they that doe studie hard thēselues if they doe not conferre with others besides that they shal stick fast many times can goe no further whereas they might be holpen out by others euē that also which they haue gotten cannot bee so deepelie setled in them as otherwise it might So it must needes bee that if wee talke not of the Scriptures wee shall forget much of that which we haue learned neither shall we be so profitable vnto others as the Lord would haue vs. There bee many that complaine they haue ill memories and when they bee iustly founde faulte with for not profiting as they should say they cannot remember it and it is true but in the meane season they marke not how the fault is in themselues that they might amend it for they are not carefull to speak of that which they haue heard and so to remember it to themselues and others but as soone as they are out of the Church doores they fall into other matters and so put the other cleane out especiallie when they continue in the former the rest of the daye and will not giue that time vnto these that they should For presuppose they haue the best memories in the world yet hearing a strange thing if they will neuer tell it vnto others or make reporte of it any more how can they long remember it Nay must they not needes soone forget it On the contrarie we shall finde it to be most true by sufficient trial that they which haue but weake naturall giftes yet through age all are now more weakened and decayed shall notwithstanding be able to tell you along tale with all the circumstances of time place persons c. which they neuer heard but once in their liues and that it may be twentie or fortie yeares since but of the stories of the Bible which they haue that very day read and besides haue heard them twentie times before they shall bee able to say very little or nothing to the purpose And what can we iudge to be the cause of this but that they haue told the one so many times to their neighbours and haue gone it ouer and ouer againe which maketh them so cunning in it and of the other they haue scarce once opened their mouthes to speake and therfore all is so cleane forgotten Thus men may complaine as long as they wil make excuses to blinde the eyes of others and to deceiue their owne hearts but God is not deceiued who seeth the fruitelesse talking vnnecessarie iangling about al other matters euen vpon his own holy day when they haue said little or nothing of those which did most of all concerne them Therefore let vs vnfainedly sorrowfull that wee haue not heretofore so carefullie sanctified the Lords day in this part of his worship as he required of vs and let vs confesse that we haue been iustly punished therein that we haue lost a great part of that fruite which otherwise we might haue reaped our selues from Gods worship and bestowed vpon others let vs hereafter be more carefull to spend some part of the daye in such holy conferences as maybe profitable both to our selues and we discharged of our dueties to God thereby And whereas wee haue a thousand things within vs and without vs to hinder vs from it let vs cast them away and seeing the duetie is so necessarie the commoditie thereof so great also let vs endeauour our selues and call vpon others most earnestly to performe it Some are ashamed to talke of the Scriptures For why should wee bee ashamed of it And seeing that the shame of the worlde hath not kept vs heretofore from vngodly communications vnto which shame iustly belongth why should it hold vs back from all christian conferences of which we shal neuer haue cause to be ashamed Nay why should wee not haue our mouthes filled full of all good words out eares open to heare them from others that it might appeare wee are now ashamed that wee haue spent so much heretofore in speaking and hearing those things whereof there came nothing but hurt to our selues and others And that wee may not bee so ignorant as to imagine Others thinke that it belongs onely to the Minister and not to the common people that to conferre of the Scriptures is proper to the ministers and not belonging to the common people which once to dreame of is a thing more meete for the darke night of poperie wherein it was defended them of the midday of the Gospel which doth so manifestlie gainesay
admit no conference with their people at all whereupon many of Gods people are driuen to omit this part of Gods seruice whether they will or no to their owne great hinderance But to make an end of this matter we haue seene that it is the duetie of all men to conferre one with another and therefore no man can say I would faine doe it but I haue none that will conferre with me for hee may finde our some one or other that will ioyne with him in it and if not in that manner that hee desireth yet let him begin and it may bee that he may prouoke some that were vnwilling before and if not that if yet he shall finde that the very vttering of that which was taught before with his mouth vnto others shall be a singular helpe to confirme himselfe in it neither let any be so vntowarde Which they may doe though they can say but I or no or aske a question as altogether to drawe backe because they cannot speake so fruitfully of the word as they desire and it may bee they see some others before them doe For if they doe but listen diligently vnto that which is spoken in a desire to learne and will but giue their consent vnto it and seeme to like of it saying I or no they shall draw on the speaker and so continue that conference which may be profitable to them both which I knowe by experience the Lord hath so blessed in some that he hath nowe rewarded their obedience in the kingdome of heauen And we must remember that the Communion of Saints consisteth as well in receiuing as giuing euen in receiuing good from others as wel as in doing it vnto thē And therefore as wee must alwaies carrie about with vs these mindes that our desire is to further our selues or others in godlines so we may be assured wee haue spent the time well when wee haue attayned vnto either of both For as a Prophet must goe in the name of a Prophet to doe the dutie of a Prophet Math. 10.41 so the people that receiue him in the name of a Prophet that is to heare his doctrine to be made partakers of his prayer and to profit by both shall not lose their reward For this cause the Apostle writing to the Romaines sayth Rom. 1.11 He was desirous to come among them for the common good of both saying For I long to see you that I might bestowe among you some spirituall gift to strengthen you 11. that is that I might he comforted together with you through our mutuall faith both yours and mine Thus wee haue seene how we ought to meditate and conferre about the scriptures But wee must further know that though our meditations and conferences must alwaies be kept within the compasse of the worde least they bee wandring and so not onely friuolous and vaine but wicked and vngodly yet they are not so tyed vnto that but wee both may and ought fruitfully to meditate vpon and soberly to conferre about the workes of God that so wee might bee taught not onely by the worde but also by experience seeing that the inuisible things of God are seene by the creation and gouernement of the worlde Rom. 1.20 being considered in his workes We ought to meditate vpon and conferre about the works of God by which he manifesteth himselfe vnto vs. Which without the word I confesse is so litle because of our blindnes that it doth but leaue vs without excuse as the Apostle sayth in the same verse yet being holpen by the benefit of the worde as the dim sight of an olde man is holpen by the benefit of a paire of spectacles we are guided aright and see more cleerely into euery thing thereby especially when we are gouerned by Gods spirite herein For then we shall perceiue the infinite wisedome of God his great mercy and power his iustice and trueth c. which are so plentifully spoken of in the scripture not onely by his iudgements vpon the wicked and his benefites bestowed vpon his children in our owne times and in the dayes of our forefathers but also in all other the dumme and insensible creatures euen in the day and in the night winter and summer heate and cold c. whereby hee doth exercise his iudgements vpon the one or hee brings his blessings vpon the other Euen as the same Apostle testifieth vnto the mē of Lystra saying That God which made heauen and earth the sea Acts. 14.15 and all things that in them are in times past suffered all the Gentiles to walke in their owne waies neuerthelesse hee left not himselfe without witnesse in that he did good and gaue them raine from heauen and fruitfull seasons filling their hearts with food and gladnes For by those thinges they might haue seene how he in great wisedome and mercy gouerneth the world for their good so that thereby they shuld haue beene made more carefull to serue him which because they did not they were left without excuse and had nothing to say for themselues before Gods iudgement seate for the things should witnes against them and by the testimonie of their owne conscience they should confesse that the Lorde had by all his creatures sensibly allured and prouoked them to good And if the heathen were iustly condemned because they did not so profite by the view of the worlde as they should how much more shall we be without all shewe of excuse that we doe not labour to behold the inuisible things of God in his works euen his wisedome goodnes and truth and so forth which are so apparant in them and as it were written in great capitall letters to bee reade of the whole world seeing vnto them we haue the light of his word adioyned to helpe the blindnes of our eyes in this behalfe Psalm 92. That Psalme which was specially made to he sung vpon the Sabbath daye as appeareth by the title of it doth sufficiently declare how we ought then to be occupied in meditating vpon Gods goodnes and praysing him for it yea how wee ought to conferre and talke of the same And indeed this is the right vse of the creatures for which they were first made namely to set foorth the glorie of God and to serue man that hee thereby might bee made more fit to serue God therefore then doe wee vse them aright when they leade vs vnto God then are they abused when wee stay in them and so are thereby either turned away from God or at least wise kept from comming vnto him So then let vs account this one part of our duetie and seruice to Iesus Christ vpon his holie day to consider aduisedly of his workes who is now the heire of the whole world and gouerneth euery thing in it for the good of his people that he hath redeemed seeing all power is giuen vnto him in heauen and in earth that wee thereby might be more cōfirmed in
great cause of humiliation for not stirring vp our selues by singing Psalmes vnto that spirituall mirth whereby we might haue been more cheerefully occupied in Gods seruice and comfortably to our owne soules And let vs not hereafter continue to prouoke the Lord and bereaue our selues of much comfort by neglecting to sing But when I so earnestly request this vpon the Sabbath my meaning is not to exclude it from other dayes no more then priuat prayer reading c. and the former places of scripture haue proued the contrarie but my purpose is to shew that if at any other time it is to bee practised then especially vpon the Lords day And truelie I am so much the longer in this thing would faine be as importunate in it as I might because as I knowe it to bee a thing of great moment The singing of Psalmes is greatly decaied in all places and amongst al sorts of men so I haue obserued it to be greatly neglected in our time aboue that which had wont to bee at the first restoring of the Gospell and is like to bee lesse regarded in time to come For besides that there bee too many which are of great yeares that neuer sung Psalme in their liues neither can do nor haue any care to learne though they can sing some other vain songs very perfectly and though they cannot reade themselues nor any of theirs yet will haue many Ballades set vp in their houses that so they might learne them as they shall haue occasion but as for the booke of Psalmes it commeth not once into their thought to make prouision for it Besides these men I say of whom it is a lamentable thing to thinke we may finde that the neglect of this duetie hath ouer spread it selfe farre and neere for euen amongst them which are giuen most to sing this is the least thing that they doe and indeed many of the common Singing men are so vngodly that it were better for them to haue their mouthes stopped then once to open them to pollute such holy and sacred songs And as for others though they haue al varietie of Musick both vpon Instruments and with the voyce and that euery day yet many of them very seldome or scarsely once a yeare doe heare a Psalme sauing in the Church I doe not finde fault with this kinde of Musicke but doe esteeme of it as I ought euen of the most exquisite that may be I confesse it to be the especiall gift of God in any I knowe it very well to bee commended in the scripture and that it hath had wonderfull effects in time past as in Saul and Elizeus 1. Sam. 16.23 2. King 3.15 and that men might stil haue great commoditie by it if it were rightly vsed only this I complaine of with griefe that the best Musicke is not cared for and that the singing of other things hath cleane shut out in a great many of places the singing of Psalmes And that you might vnderstand the complaint to be iust you must not onely looke into the houses of great personages where this musick hath ioystled out the singing of Psalmes or rather kept it from euer entring in but also in the shops of Artificers and cottages of poore husbandmen where you shall sooner see one of these newe Ballades which are made only to keepe them occupied that otherwise knowe not what to doe then any of the Psalmes and may perceiue them to bee cunninger in singing the one then the other And indeed I know not how it commeth to passe but you may obserue it that the singing of ballades is very lately renewed and commeth on a fresh againe so that in euery Faire and Market almost you shall haue one or two singing and selling of ballades they are brought vp a pace which though it may seeme to bee a small thing at the first yet I am greatly afrayd of it For as when the light of the Gospell came first in the singing of ballades that was rife in Poperie began to cease and in time was cleane banished away in many places so now the sudden renewing of them and hastie receiuing of them euery where maketh me to suspect least they should driue away the singing of Psalmes againe seeing they can so hardly stand together of which I am so much the more iealous because I see that in other places also where these be not receiued in What is the cause why singing of Psalmes is so decayed yet the singing of Psalmes is greatly left ouer that it had wont to be But if we would search out the cause of this euil disease in our selues and others that so it might bee cured wee shall easily finde it in those places of scripture where this duetie hath been commended vnto vs before For the Apostle sayth to the Ephesians Ephes 5.18 Be not drunke with wine wherein is excesse but be filled with the spirit 19. Speaking one vnto another in Psalmes and hymnes and spirituall songs singing and making melodie to the Lord in your hearts Coloss 3.16 And to the Colossians Let the worde of Christ dwell in you plentiously in all wisedome teaching and admonishing one another in Psalmes and hymnes and spirituall songs singing with a grace vnto the Lord in your hearts In which places he first of all forewarneth vs vnder one kinde that we bee not ouerfilled with the pleasures of this world but vse them as though wee were readie to leaue them otherwise wee being wholly giuen to our bellies and to our backes shall haue pleasure in nothing but such as will serue them al heauenly mirth shal be sorrow vnto vs as to be called to the word and prayer it shall be a vexation vnto vs and then shall we bee most merrie when we are furthest off from God and then he sayth our mirth shall be excessiue and beastly Secondly he would haue the word of Christ dwel in them plentiously that being perswaded of Gods fauour their harts might not bee vainly merrie but thereby moued to sing vnto him Lastly that they should bee filled with the spirit that should prepare them to spirituall songs for in our flesh dwelleth no good for as the flesh hath no taste of spirituall things so the spirit hath no taste of carnall things and therefore being filled with the spirit it will stirre vs vp to all spirituall exercises Therefore it is no maruell that men are so barren in this thing seeing that they are so drowned with the pleasures of this life that they haue no pleasure but in them and being too ful of them there is no roome in their hearts for the word of God and for his spirit of which they are emptie and therefore can take no delight in the exercises of the word and of the spirit So then howsoeuer the neglect of this duetie may seeme small in our eyes yet it must needs be great when it bewrayeth that we are voyd of Gods word and
the promises of this life and the life to come So then by all this it may most euidently appeare both by the words of the commandement and by the practise of the best men in the old and new Testament that this duetie is layd vpon all householders diligently to ouersee the wayes of their familie that they serue God as in all other dueties so especially in sanctifying the Sabbath as they will answere to the contrarie at their perill to him that hath put them in authoritie and as they will giue an account for their soules which otherwise might perish through their default Which though it bee so seuerely inioyned in all men But in our time it is for the most part wholly neglected and vnder so great a paine layd vpon them yet it is so generally neglected of the greatest part that we may rather complaine of it iustly with griefe then haue any hope of the speedie reforming of it For besides that a great many haue no care to sanctifie the day themselues and therefore cannot with any conscience require it of their seruants and children but either set them to worke or to play and to do any thing vpon that day sauing that which they should and doe encourage them thereunto by their owne ill example and words there be others also who though they seeme to haue some care to keepe holie the day themselues and haue indeede yet either through ignorance or negligence do not once looke to their housholde whether they come to Church or no and sit there attentiuely and continue there with profit to the ending nor how they spend the rest of the day but being demaunded where their seruants were how chance they came not to Church c. they answere securely and as they thinke sufficiently as though it were a thing meerely impertinēt vnto them that they cannot tell they do not hinder them from the Church they may come if they will and they are of age to looke to themselues and they are past boyes now and I cannot tell what But they must consider besides that which hath been alreadie spoken concerning this matter that they do too foolishly and grosly imagine to stoppe as it were the mouth of the Lord with that simple answere in his busines which they will not receiue at their seruants hands in their owne For in the sixe dayes when their seruants are in their owne busines they will not let them come and goe at their owne pleasure and content themselues with a bare imagination that they be at their workes but will be sure of it and therfore set them to it looke vpon them in the doing of it call them to an account for it which if it bee well done in themselues because they knowe otherwise they will be negligent how must it not needes then bee a great vnthankfulnes in them vnto God that vpon his day which is but one among seuen his seruice should be so slenderly looked vnto that there is no such diligence vsed towards their seruants that they might performe it And how must it not needes be a great iniurie to their seruants who are naturally for the most part more negligent and carelesse in Gods seruice by reason of their corruption then they can be in the seruice of men to bee depriued of that benefit of their gouernours which is the chiefest and for which cause especially they are committed to their gouernment namely to be furthered by thē in the seruice of God but vse them more like beasts then men euen that they might be seruiceable vnto them and then care not whether they serue God or the diuell We know that seruants looke to be preferred by their masters and so there is good reason when they haue serued them faithfully but what kinde of rewarde is this that when they haue bestowed some earthly benefit vpon them by hauing no care to make them serue the Lord and sanctifie his Sabbaths doe in the ende not onely make them lose the euerlasting reward but preserue them to eternall destruction Moreouer there are a companie of idle seruing men who being brought vp idly all the sixe dayes and in thē hauing nothing at all to doe and are neuer almost looked after vpon the seuenth day are as idle Especially in great households where there are many seruants and as little regarded as vpon the other and as they neuer almost doe any good dayes worke to their masters for they haue nothing to doe so much lesse doe they spend any Sabbath in the Lords seruice but they especially are left to goe and come at their will Others that haue any office of great charge and attendance as the Cookes and Butlers such like in great houses seldome or neuer come to the Church and that but by peeces either when halfe is done or els they are readie to depart before halfe bee ended and so both hinder the Lord from that seruice which he should haue by them and them from that blessing which they should inherit this way and both cause the name of God to be ill spoken of and pul vpon themselues and them that curse which belongeth to the continual polluting of the Sabbath And how can they looke that that seruice and that meate and drinke should doe them good which is thus prepared and bought as it were with the continuall daunger of the soules of their seruants besides the dishonour of the name of God When Dauid had inconsideratly desired to drinke of the water of Bethleem three mightie men brake into the hoste of the Philistines and drew water and brought it to him but he would not drinke thereof but powred it for an offring to the Lord and sayd 2. Sam. 23.15.16 O Lord be it farre from me that I should doe thus is not this the bloud of the men that went in ieopardie of their liues How much lesse then ought men to eate and drinke that for which their seruants doe venture the liues of their soules And besides if we doe iustly finde fault with them who doe neuer or seldome preach to the people committed to their charge and so cause their soules to starue and dye eternally how can they be blameles who seldome or neuer bring their seruants to the preaching of the word And must they not needes be culpable of the same iudgement before God seeing it is all one with the seruants whether they liue in the places where the word of God is not preached at al or if it be yet they come not vnto it Obiection But where as men are readie to obiect that in a great familie many must needs be absent Answer I grant it to be true in some part that is at some time and vpon some occasion but so ordinarily and so continually as they themselues in their owne consciences are priuie of who make this obiection I know no necessitie that can excuse that Nay I am sure that the Lord hath layd no
such calling vpon any man that should keepe him in a continuall breach of the Sabbath and therefore both master and seruant may suspect that he is in such a calling as is not agreeable to Gods word or that he vseth it not aright when it maketh him if not wholly yet for the most part to neglect the seruice of God vpon the Sabbath day And I know where there is a great care to serue please God by prayer the Lord will giue to them such wisedome that they shal be able to redeeme if not the whole yet at least a great parte of the daye which otherwise will be mispent namely by letting passe many needlesse things preparing so much before as conueniently may be rising so much the more early in the morning and by the interchangeable helpe of other seruants especiallie when they will for these causes bee contented with so much the lesse though not in quantitie for the reliefe of others yet lesse exquisite and curious dressing which especially taketh vp the time and so I am sure and they that will trie it in the feare of God and in a care to serue him and in a loue to the soules of their brethren shall find it to be true by experience that many might keepe holy the Sabbath which do not now at all others might keepe it more then they doe Which if yet it be thought vnpossible because we goe not about to practise it let vs but obserue that which we shall see done in the house when the seruant is very desirous to goe to a faire and the maister is as willing to let him goe you would wonder to see how things shall be dispatcht vp sodainely and in good order they shall be absent many houres and yet not greatly missed if any thing be otherwise then is vsuall it is borne with because it is a day of making prouisios for themselues and that day is not euery day So then if the maisters were perswaded of the Lords day as they ought to be euen that it is the time of making prouision for the soule and were as carefull for the soules of their seruants as they are for their bodies and did esteeme it more for their worship and credite that their seruantes were religious then that they were costly and well set out in apparell they would be better contented to spare them during the time of that market where they may buy without money all the graces of Gods spirite and the riches of the kingdome of heauen whereby they should not onely saue their owne soules but bee made more fit to doe dueties to their maisters of conscience The gouernours of families should take order that they and their whole houshold might come to church together Therfore to make an end of this matter it is the duty of al houshold gouernors to cause the whole family to be in a readines to attend vpon them to and fro the Church and that it bee not left at euery mans discretion to come when hee will but that they should goe together And indeed this hath beene the orderly comming of Gods people in times past to the place of his worship that they haue not come scattered and alone but many together and by companies whereof the Prophet speaketh Psalm 42.4 When I remembred these things I poured out my very heart because I had gone with the multitude and led them into the house of God with the voyce of singing and praise as a multitude that keepeth a feast In which place the man of God complaining that he was banished from the holy assemblies sayth that h●s griefe was increased by remembring his former estate when he vsed to goe with a great many to the Temple euen as to a feast whereby hee declareth what was the manner of their going euen as men go to a market or to a feast not onely with ioye but also by companies and so many of one house as goe will goe together so they did not onely goe to the house of God cheerefully but many of them together euen as to the market feast of their soules By which practise of theirs as the doings of many are condemned so it appeareth that the men of our time are led by another spirite then they were and are otherwise perswaded of the worship and place they goe vnto For all the people nay the seuerall housholds come not together but scattered and one dropping after another in a confused manner First comes the man then a quarter of an houre after his wife and after her I cannot tell how long especially the maid-seruants who must needes bee as long after her as the menseruants are after him Wherby it commeth to passe that either halfe the seruice of God is done before all be met or else if the minister tarrie till there be a sufficient congregation the first commers may bee wearie and sometimes cold with tarrying before the other shall bee warme in their seates Nowe if it bee demaunded of the maisters why they alone make such hast and leaue all the rest behind them and they answer truely because the time is come wherin vsually publike prayer beginneth can they bee perswaded that it is time for themselues to come as it is indeed and yet no time for the rest to come with him Hath he no longer time to tarrie and haue they time to tarry so long after him as though there were one lawe for him and another for them or rather that the same law of the Sabbath which mooueth him of conscience to doe that which he doth did not as forcibly bind them all as himselfe nay did not binde him to looke to them that they should keepe holy the day as well as himselfe which if he grant to be true and yet is not able to bring it to passe where the Lord hath giuen him so great authoritie for his owne sake partly through the frowardnes of his wife and partly through the of obstinacy of the rest in the familie his case is to be pitied and he is rather to bee gouerned then to gouerne 1. Cor. 6.4 and he might doe well to set vp one of them in his steed seeing hee doth suffer himselfe wilfully so be abused and is contented to be ouer ruled by them in the chiefest thing Therefore that he might bring this matter happily to passe as he must goe before them by his owne example and be ready betimes euen first of all so he must earnestly call vpon them for this duetie and exhort them vnto it and the slower that they are and the more they drawe backe the more forward must he be and by his practise and words draw them forwards also For this is that readines which Dauid obserued in the people of his time I reioyced when they sayd vnto me Psalm 122.1 we will goe into the house of the Lord or let vs goe into the house of the Lorde for they are words of
couenant betweene the Lord and the King and the people that they should be the Lords people likewise betweene the King and the people Where we see there was a plaine law established by the consent of the chief Rulers in the Church and Common-wealth both for the abolishing of al idolatrie and planting of true religion that so the King and the people might be Gods people the execution whereof is set down in the sequent of that chapter and the next immediatly following and also for the loyall subiection of the people vnto their new King and of his defence ouer them that so they might bee his liege people and he their soueraigne Lord and King And indeed this is the chiefest end of al gouernment that men might not professe what religion they list and serue God after what manner it pleaseth them best but that the parts of Gods true worship might be set vp euery where and all men compelled to stoope vnto it and make profession of it at leastwise in the outward discipline of the Church that so thereby we might liue more peaceably our selues and doe more dueties vnto men Euen as the Apostle writeth vnto Timothie in his former Epistle willing him and so in him all Ministers to make supplications 1. Tim. 2.1.2 prayers intercessions and giuing of thankes for Kings and for al that are in authoritie that we by them might leade a quiet and peaceable life in all godlinesse and honestie In which words as he sheweth the people what they may looke for at the hands of their rulers thereby to moue them the rather to pray for them so he sheweth the rulers what they should procure vnto the people namely that they might liue in the profession of Gods true religion honest dealing one with another maintaining the common peace for these ends both at home and abroad Euseb de vita Const. lib. 4. cap. 18. 19. And this is that good report which Eusebius giueth of Constantine the Emperour that he made lawes compelling all men to the publike seruice of God vpon the Lords day exempting no man there from no not the souldiers in warre so farre forth as they might who prescribed to them for that purpose formes of prayer and commanded them to be occupied in other parts of Gods worship Therefore it ought to bee prouided that the preaching of the word be euery where established for in that especially the sanctifying of the Sabbath consisteth as being the greatest part of Gods worke and which must direct the people in all other parts of his holie seruice and without the which the day cannot be hallowed in the least measure of that which the Lord requireth of vs and all other parts of true religion ought so in all places to bee ordained that none might haue iust cause to complaine that for want of meanes though they rest vpon the Sabbath from their worldly busines yet they cannot sanctifie it as they are commanded Which if it be true then much lesse ought there to be any toleration for the Masse in a Christian Common-wealth or any bearing with such kinde of Idolatrie For beside the plaine Commaundement of God concerning this matter so many times repeated in the word to destroy all remnants of them and cleane to put out the monument of thē as abominable which ought to bee a light and a direction vnto vs wee haue the examples also of many godly kings in the most flourishing Common-wealth of Iudah going before vs and as it were leading vs by the hand thereunto Hezekiah tooke away the hye places and brake the Images 2. King 18.4 and cut downe the groues and brake in peeces the brasen Serpent that Moses had made because the people did burne incense to it But that is most worthie of remembrance which the Holy ghost speaketh concerning King Asa that he tooke away the Sodomites out of the land 1. King 15.12 and put away all the Idols that his father had made and he put downe Maachah his mother from her estate because she had made an Idoll in a groue and he destroyed her Idols and burnt thē by the brook Kidron for which he is highly cōmēded euen for that he would not giue libertie to any no not to his mother to dishonour the name of God by a false shorship and to draw others thereunto by her example Last of all wee haue a most excellent paterne to followe both in abolishing al superstition and planting the true religion in that rare and thrise renowned king Iosiah of happie memorie as it is at large described in the second booke of the Kings 2. King 23. P. Martyr in Iud. cap. 1. Whereunto I may adioyne the iudgement of P. Martyr concerning this matter who sayth Magistratus non potest non damnari c. The Magistrate must needes bee condemned who maintaineth Idolatrie seeing hee hath the sword to punish sinne And a little after he alleadgeth S. Augustine vpon these words of the Psalme Be wise now ye Kings c. They are admonished sayth he in that they are Kings Psal 2.10 to vse the sworde committed vnto them of God for the defence of the Christian faith and for the repressing of the wicked Igitur principibus minime licet vt impuros cultus concedant c. Therefore it is not lawfull for Princes to grant immunitie vnto any false worship yea it doth especially concerne them seuerely to compell all vnto the true doctrine and such rites of the Church as are agreeable vnto the word In which zeale her most excellent Maiestie hath not been behind these worthie paternes of goodnes before named when as besides the vtter abolishing of all idolatrie in one day to the great perill of her estate and life by cutting off the head and taile of it at once she hath since of the like princely goodnesse sundrie times prouided by statute against all such as should in secret corners presume to sing Masse or to be present at it But the aboue named examples are so much the more diligently of vs to bee considered because in them wee haue not only lawes made for the sanctifying of the Sabbath but the execution of them for that which was done then was done by law and though it be a great mercie mercy of God to liue where good lawes bee yet it is greater where they bee well practised in so much that though there be neuer so many good lawes made for the inlarging of the Gospell in any kingdome it is to no great purpose except they be well looked vnto Therefore as wee haue seene that true religion by law ought to be established so that it might by all men bee publikely obserued all magistrates must haue an especiall care of that Of the want of which I am perswaded there is more cause to complaine then of the former For though there bee many things wanting to the perfection of the Church because of our sinnes yet all things
that superstition of the Iewes which that graue father singularly wel deseruing of al the Church of God Beza in Cantic Solō Homil. 30. Master Beza speaketh of When it is counted such a great sinne to open a shop windowe Non item si lusum si potatum si scortatum fuerit But not so great if a man vpon this day giue himselfe to gaming to swilling and to playing the harlot Yea as another learned diuine sayth Gualt in Act. 13. Homil. 88. Hodie eò res deuenit In our time things are so come to passe that amongst Christians they may be accounted very good men who breake the Sabbath by their handie labor when they most doe prophane it with horrible wickednes neither at any time doe they more offend in pride and disdaine in drunkennes ryot lust then vpon that day which should be wholly consecrated vnto God and to the meditation of his workes and of our eternall rest And seeing these thinges are done openly and commonly sayth hee doe we yet maruaile what is the cause of the calamities of our time And Master Bucer complaineth yet a great deale more Bucer in Psal 92. I am nihil ferè scelerum est Now there is almost no wickednes which is not especially committed vpon the Lords holy day there is op●●●●ying drinking filthy dauncing harlotting fighting and quarrelling and I would to God greater things then these were not committed I will not say as he sayth Et nusquam ferè licentiùs quam in ipsis principum Episcoporum aulis For I hope better things of them and such as accompanie saluation but in too many places of towne and countrie So that I may say of them as father Chrysostome doth Chrysost de Lazar. conci● pri Thou hast receiued the Sabbath day of God to clense thy soule from sinne and thou vpon that day dost most of all ●ommit sinne Whereupon it comes to passe that all the weeke following they are so much the more wicked b● how much that which was appointed for their good they haue turned into sin vnto themselues so that as the Gospell which in it selfe is the sauour of life vnto li●e by mens abuse is turned into the sauour of death a●d the bread of the Lords table which is the food of life is turned into poyson when men doe not rightly therein discerne of the Lords body and so by eating it and dri●king the Lords cuppe 1. Cor. 11.29 they procure his iudgement against ●hemselues so this day of the Lords resurrection which is therefore the day of life vnto vs is by their wickednes ●ade vnto them the day of euerlasting death Euen as Master Caluin sayth Caluin vpon Deut. 5. ser 34. When the Sunday is spent not onely in games and pastimes full of vanitie but in things which are altogether contrary vnto God that men thinke they haue n●t celebrated the Sunday except GOD therein be by many and sundrie waies offended when men I say vnhallow in such sort this holy day which God hath instituted to leade vs vnto himselfe is it any maruaile if wee become brutish and beastlie in our doings all the rest of the weeke But to reserue all such prophane beasts vnto the iudgement of God whose holy daye of rest as they doe despise so vnlesse they repent and amend GOD hath sworne long agoe Heb. 3.18 that they shall neuer enter into his heauēly rest There are others of whom in the same place he speaketh Caluin ibid. Who glut themselues by ryotting and are shut vp in their houses because they dare not shew a manifest contempt of their duetie in the open streetes so that the Sunday is to them a retreat to withdraw themselues from the congregation of God whereby one may see what affection they haue to all Christianitie and the seruice of God when by this which was giuen vs for an aide and helpe to drawe neerer vnto God they take occasion to withdraw themselues the further from him For as he sayth a little before if we imploy the Sunday to make good cheere to sport our selues to goe to games and pastimes shall God in this bee honoured Is not this a mockery Is not this an vnhallowing of his name But let vs that be Christians be of another minde and let vs as Saint Augustine sayth shewe our selues Christians by keeping holy the Lords day August ad Casul ●pist 86. vnto whom so manie as feare God let me say as they did at the Councell of Paris Concil Paris lib. 3. cap. 5. Salubriter admonemus We do admonish all the faithfull for the saluation good of their soules that they would giue due honour and reuerence vnto the Lords day because the dishonour of it is both contrarie vnto Christian religion and doth without all doubt bring destruction to the soules of all that continue it And there is great reason of it For seeing that daye is appointed for all the partes of Gods worship Bulling in Ier. c●ncio 65. He that despiseth the Sabbath makes no great account of the true religion as master Bullinger very wisely noteth and therefore the Sabbath is many times put for the practise of all religion and the Prophets when they complaine of the decay of all religion say that the Sabbaths are polluted as hee also obserueth in the same place according to which rule if wee will iudge of the religiō of men we shall find that amongst a great many it is very little or none at all because they haue not that due care of the Sabbath that they should And thus saith Master Caluin Caluin vpon Deut. 5. ser 34. that the Prophet Ieremie in many places rebuking the Iewes for breaking of the Sabbath speakes vnto them as if they had in generall broken the whole law and not without cause for he which setteth at naught the Sabbath daye hath cast vnder foote all Gods seruice as much as is in him and if the Sabbath daye be not obserued all the rest shall be worth nothing Now besides seeing the end of all is that the fruit of Gods worship might appeare in our godly conuersation to the glorie of his name and our eternall saluation euen as it was ordayned of God at the first to keepe Adam in his integritie if we by the grace of God escape all these horrible prophanations of this daye and haue attained vnto some tolerable care of keeping holy the day then let vs see what we are bettered thereby and what is the fruite of our profession thereon For then may wee haue comfort that we vse it aright when there proceeds that good of it thereby for which God ordained it and which wee see it bringeth forth in many others And therefore I may say with Master Bucer Bucer in Mat. 12.11 if we do truely and religiously serue God vpon the Lords day aboue all others Declarent hoc mores Let our manners shewe it let the holinesse