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A27514 A threefold treatise of the Sabbath distinctly divided into the patriarchall, mosaicall, Christian Sabbath : for the better clearing and manifestation of the truth ... / by Richard Bernard ... Bernard, Richard, 1568-1641. 1641 (1641) Wing B2037; ESTC R34406 149,622 232

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Archbishop Daroberniae in a Synod Anno 747 with the rest decreed that the Lords day should bee celebrated with the reverence most meet and to be dedicated only to the service of God Our last Archbishop Doctor Abbot so honoured the Lords day as he by his Chaplains licensed divers Treatises for observation of the Lords day and when a Minister presented him with a book to bee licensed which was made for liberty on that day he took it of him and before his face burnt it in the fire For Bishops S. Ambrose telleth us it is well knowne saith he how carefully the Bishops doe restraine all toying light and filthy Dances if at other times then on the Lords day Bishop Babington on Exod. 16. saith that Drinkings Dances Wakes Wantonnesse Beare-baiting and Bull-baiting were wicked prophanation of the Lords day Bishop Downham on the Commandements saith They that keep the day for idle rest make it Sabbatum Boum or Asinorum They that defile it with drunkennesse and the like make it Sabbatum Diaboli and they that prophane it with sports make it Sabbatum aurei vituli Bishop Hooper that Godly Martyr On the ten Commandements saith The Lord sanctified the Sabbath day not that wee should give our selves to illnesse or to such Ethnicall pastimes as is now used amongst Ethnicall people c. Bishop Bayly in his Practice of Piety saith We are this day to abstaine from the works of our callings carrying burdens Faires and Markets studying any Book but Scripture and Divinity all recreations and sports grosse feeding liberall drinking and talking about worldly things Bishop White hath uttered an Against Brab holy speech who saith that all kinde of recreations which are of evill quality in respect of their object or are attended with evill and vicious circumstances are unlawfull and if used on the Lords day are sacrilegious for they rob God of his honour to whose worship and service the holy day is devoted and they defile the soules of men for the clensing and edifying whereof the holy day is appointed 3. Learned Divines NIcho de Clemangiis de novis celebritatibus non instituendis tells us that especially the Lords day and solemne Festivalls should be wholy and onely consecrated to more speciall worship and spent in duties of Devotion in lauding and blessing him for his more speciall favours Doctor Pocklington In his Serm pag. 13. hath a right speech howsoever it be that a little after he varieth saying If the first day of the week be the Lords day as he in another place yeelds it we must look to do the Lords work on it and not trench upon him by doing our own worke thereon yea he cyteth Saint Augustine for this Page 5. that men should leave all worldly businesses on Saints dayes Et maximè Diebus Dominicis especially on the Lords dayes that they betake themselves wholly to the Lords service Reverend Hooker saith that the voluntary scandalous contempt In Eccl. Pol. ca. 5. pag. 385. of the rest from labour wherewith God is publickly served wee cannot too severely correct and bridle Master Dow teacheth a cessation from ordinary labours and holds them In his d●scourse of the Sab. pag. 28. unlawfull on this day as they hinder a man from applying himselfe to divine duties and therein are contrary to the divine precept and the morality thereof He requireth first A morning preparation in private Secondly Warneth men that they doe not by improvidence or negligence or forgetfulnesse draw upon themselves a necessity to omit or hinder the dutyes to which this day is consecrated Thirdly that the hindrances and our defects bee supplied by private Devotions and Meditations Fourthly that it is good and commendable to spend the rest of the day in holy meditations private prayer reading and calling to minde what we have read or heard Vincentius Bellovecensis and Bellarmine have condemned Specul morale lib. 3. Concio 6. de Dominic 3. advent Stage-playes Enterludes Masques mixt-Dancing which they call lascivious to be especially on the Lords day most execrable Alex. Fabricius in his destructorium vitiorum pars 4 saith That the Sabbath by dancing is prophaned So did the godly Albigenses and Waldenses who also in a short In the History of the Walden part 3. b. 2. Catechisme upon the Commandments would have the Christians keep the Sabbath in ceasing from worldly labours from sinne and idlenesse and to doe things as might be for the good and benefit of their soules It were tedious to recite the learned in the later times teaching the holy observation of this our Lords day I will Sect. 16. cap. 24. end only with the harmonie of Confessions where it is said that the Lords day ever since the Apostles time was consecrated to religious exercises and unto holy rest CHAP. XXIII God would have our Lords day religiously observed and not to be prophaned GOd doth informe us by his word by which wee finde his institution of one day in a week from the creation as in the first Treatife have beene proved to bee sanctified to holy uses wee finde also the same established by his Law given on Mount Sinai as is manifested in the former Treatise And from the word in the New Testament we finde one day the first day of the week to have been observed and the observation continued now this 1600 yeeres So that one day in a week hath beene given to God as sacred and holy for holy rest in his worship and for holy duties to be performed publickly privately now above five thousand five hundred fourescore yeers some count 6000 a time long enough to settle this truth to observe such a day and as the holy people in the former times before Christ kept their day holily morally so should wee our day too But as God inctrusteth by his word so doth hee also by his works he is said to speak by the work of his providence Geness 24. 50. 51. And when his judgements are in the Esai 26. 10. earth the inhabitants of the world are to learne righteousnesse thereby and even in this for not observing his holy day for as before he punished his people for the prophanation of their Sabbath as the Scripture witnesseth in many places So hath the Lord punished the prophanation of our Christian Sabbath dedicated to his honour and service and hath pleaded by his punishments for the sanctification thereof and to deterre men from the prophaning of it This we must know that there is no evill in a City but the Lord doth it to wit the evill of punishment and the same commeth for sin of what nature or kinde soever the judgements be which are three fold 1 Immediate judgements wherein Gods hand is clearely seene which all will easily acknowledge with feare Such a judgement was the drowning of the old world the burning of Sodome and Gomorrah with fire from heaven So that of Nadab and Abihu with
1 Pet. 4. 17. it is used for any kinde of punishment which God infflicts upon men for sin In this later sense the evill befalling the Sabbath-breakers is a judgement and a due deserved punishment as the word is expounded by the learned in Gal. 5. 10. Shall not fire from heaven thundering and lightning by which some have been killed be held a judgement was not the fall of Paris-gardens Scaffold which hurt and kild so many a judgement These and other evils hapning such as be before mentioned have been held to be judgements and why any should deny them to be so now they give no reason nor indeed can they if they take the word judgement aright as in this case some Opposites doe who affirme that irreligious contempt of Gods ordinances appointed on this day by the Church and law of the Land may pull down Gods judgements yea that if this day were changed into another there would be as exemplarie judgments of God from heaven against this kinde of ungodlinesse of men as ever were in any ages upon the Lords day It is no shame we see to call them judgements And we may without shame say that these evils befell them for prophaning the Lords day and not keeping it holy Our Church in the Homily and in the fore-mentioned exhortation the Fathers in that Synod and learned men have averred as much whose affirmation may be opposed to any private mans negation if we had no reason to strengthen the assertion But is it not granted that the prophanation of the day is a grievous sin And doth not the fourth Commandement impose a morall dutie which is to keep holy the day of rest The sanctification of the day is imposed upon us and this are we pressed to remember Let the day be what it will appointed by divine authoritie as our Lords day is acknowledged to be wee are to keep it holy To keep the day set apart by a divine institution holy is the maine substance of the fourth Commandement and a morall dutie And therefore the not keeping holy the Lords day but polluting it is a sinne against the fourth Commandement and the breach of a morall dutie and therefore for this did the evills befall those that prophaned the day But some will peradventure say that it was the prophanation and irreligious contempt of Gods ordinances appointed upon this day by our Church and the lawes of ●he land sinnes highly provoking Gods wrath 〈◊〉 brought such evils upon them It may be so for vaine and prophane enough are 〈◊〉 persons with whom the Lord is displeased who may adde one sinne to another to the prophaning of the day an irreligious dis-regard of holy duties with dis●bedience to Authoritie but this sinne maketh not the other to ●● no cause of the evills hapning to them but serveth rather the more to aggravate the other sinne and so more speedi●y to hasten their judgement And to this some it may be will adde an other cause to wit the licentiousnesse of such as have bin punished swarving from those dirrections limitation prescribed to them I will not deny this neither for certaine it is that almost all the instances which lately have beene given are of those which have runne out beyond their bounds in the Declaration and no marvell for such as care not for Gods Commandements will easily transgresse the limits prescribed by man But yet here is no discord in the assignment of the cause of their punishment the prophanation of the day for in one and the same action where God is dis-obeyed the Church dis-regared and authority neglected and for all this together the parties punished yet the principall cause is the sinne against God as in this cause it is cleare enough Neverthelesse some cannot peradventure be satisfied with all this that it is lawfull to apply these judgements to particular persons except certaine rules be observed herein such as themselves lay downe for guidance in the same These rules I will write downe and then give answer to them as I may The rules which I finde laid downe for this purpose are these following 1 Rule We must have either extraordinary revelation of the punishments for the sinne of which now there is no expectation in the wise or immediately by the word wee must find those particular sins threatned with those particular judgements which we see to be executed upon them Sometime we finde in Scripture particular judgements threatned for some particular sinnes which some have committed and beene punished for But there be above a thousand sinnes mentioned in Scripture and five hundred of them without any particular threatning added This rule is not alwayes observable Wee see severall kindes of punishments inflicted for some particular sinnes which were not threatned before to light upon the offenders Uzziah for attempting to offer incense was smitten with an incuble Leprosie Nadab and Abihu were burnt with fire from heaven for their sinne Ananias and Saphira for their lying to the Holy Ghost kild immediately in the place Jeroboams arme withered for stretching it out against the Prophet Amaziah for silencing a Prophet given over to seck his owne overthrow Judas for betraying Christ left to be his owne executioner Herod eaten with wormes for his finne yet none of these particular judgements were threatned for these particular sinnes What therefore though we have no threatning that God would punish prophanesse on this day with such particular judgements as have befallen them must we not think those evills to have happened to them for that sinne A sinne deserves punishment but what way and how God will punish that hee reserves to himselfe and seldome hath revealed it though sometimes as we see by Nathan to David 2 Sam. 12. 11 12. and by Moses to the Israelites against Korah and his company Numb 16. 30. 2 Rule That which we suppose to be punished must bee truly and indeed a sinne and not a point disputable but recreations on the Lords day whether lawfull or unlawfull are disputable and therefore without unsufferable arrogancy we cannot apply the evils happening as judgements for sin No truth is so cleare but by agitation siding and exercise of wit may become disputable This might bee shewed in many things evident enough till they come into question The morality of the fourth Commandement was heretofore very manifest and the keeping holy the Sabbath day was of the morality and the not-keeping holy the Sabbath day but polluting it was a sinne The Lord in the old Testament threatned to punish and did severely punish the breach of that Law and the same sinne hee yet punisheth in some though not in all that prophane the Lords day observed of us Christians as our Christian Sabbath as hath been proved If these judgements come not for the prophanation of the day as before I shewed it hath been acknowledged wherefore hath God so long and so often laid his hand on many If God be not provoked to anger hee
Constitutions This therefore may bee used without offence nor is it fit that any scoffe at such who constantly call it so as being the most ancient name and the most common and usuall religious appellation at the first in the Primitive time This day hath also had another name given it and hath beene called Sunday this appellation is very ancient for Justine Martyr in his second Apologie cals it diem Sol●s Lib. 4. cap. 22. Lib. 5. cap. 21. So doth Tertullian in his Apologie cap. 16. This name we may also finde in Eusebius his Ecclesiasticall History and in Socrates in the Edicts of Emperours Constantine Valentinian Valens Gratian Honorius Arcadius and Theodosius S. Augustine telleth us how it may be used in a tolerable Contra Faust 18. 5. on Ps 93. sense This name hath beene kept in the ancient Lawes of our Land in King Edgar and Canutus his raigne Thus it is called commonly in our Statute Lawes Ecclesiasticall Lawes in our Homilies and in our Common Prayer Book and in the most usuall and common vulgar speech And though it hath had a note of dislike even by S. Augustine and of later time by Beza Doctor Fulke and Doctor Anot. 1 Cor. 16. 1 In Rhem. Test Apoc. 1. Synops controvers 9. quest 8. Willet neverthelesse scruple is not to bee made of it no more than to call a place Areopagus Mars-Hill Act. 17. or the signe of the Ship Castor and Pollux Act. 28. 11. Nor more than our week dayes to call them Munday Tuesday nor our Months Ianuary February March c. which are names from the Heathen So be it that none so call the day purposely with contempt and derision of those who use the first title nameing it the Lords day as some have done not many yeers ago how ever now it passeth for currant without check CHAP. III. Of the name Sabbath given to this our Lords day or Sunday GReat offence is taken of late by some at this title Sabbath first as a new upstart name of Knox and Whitingham as also for that it is not a bare name but supposed to have in it a mystery of iniquity both which a learned man hath been pleased to utter in a D. Pocklington in his Sunday no Sabbath Sermon preached at a visitation Master Christopher Dow moderately handling this controversie in his discourse of the Sabbath and Lords day acknowledgeth to have in his reading found it to be sometime called the Sabbath or Sabbath of Christians A very reverend Learned and judicious Divine in his Antidote against Sabbatarian errours saith That to call Sunday by the name of Sabbath day rebus sic stantibus may for some respects be allowed in the Christian Church without any great inconvenience And that therefore men otherwise sober and moderate ought not to be censured with too much severity nor charged with Iudaisme if sometimes they so use it Before the dayes of Kings Henry the eighth In Pupilla oc●li psa 10. ca. 11. Diem Sabbati ab ●psa di● Saturni hora pomeridiana tertia ●sque in lunaris di●i diluculum ●es●um agitari In Emenda temp lib. 7. Synops sol 5●● Iohn de Burgo Chancellour of the University of Cambridge held that the Lords day might be intituled the Sabbath day King Edgar in his edict for keeping the Lords day doth there call it the Sabbath and this was in Anno. 959. almost seven hundred yeers ago before Knox was born hundreds of yeers Scaliger that man of Learning telleth us that the Habassines or Ethiopian Christians call both Saturday and the Lords day by the name of Sabbaths the one Christs Sabbath and the other the Jews Sabbath Doctor Willet citeth Damascene saying Sacratum est Deo Sabbatum speaking of the Lords day Saint Augustine calleth it the Christian Sabbath in 152 Tract de temp Ps 32. The Albigenses and Waldenses in a Catechisme of theirs give it this name In the fourteenth Session of the Synod at Dort consisting of many Learned Divines it is called the Sabbath day Doctor Heylin in his Historicall Search telleth us that the first he cap. 5. part 2. pag. 258. found was one Petrus Alfonsus who called the Lords day our Christian Sabbath who lived about the time of Rupertus many yeers before Knox and Whitingham took breath But come we neerer home it is called the Sabbath day in King Iames his proclamation 1603. In all our Letters patente till very lately in our Churches Ecclesiasticall Constitutions Canon 70 in our Homilies very often Doctor Rainolds in the Conference at Hampton Court made a motion for the preservation of the Lords day from prophanesse under the name of the Sabbath day without offence then or any exception taken against it The learned Doctor and reverend Bishop Bishop Andrewes in his speech against Trask● calleth it our new Sabbath some Bishops heretofore in their Articles of Visitation have called it the Sabbath day Learned men in our Church of all degrees and sorts have in their writings allowed by authority expressed the Lords day by this name without any dislike ever since the reformation in the dayes of Queene Elizabeths raign in all the time of Learned King Iames and also of this our now gracious Soveraign Learned Doctor Featley in his Handmaid to devotion oftentimes calleth it the Sabbath and in capitall letters the Christian Sabbath Master Primrose in his very lately published book concerning the Lords day calls it often the Sabbath And therefore without errour we may with the Ancients with our Kings with our reverend Bishops and learned Divines call it the Sabbath day And as no man of judgement and charitably minded will condemn them that among us call the Lords day Sunday for heathenish Solarians so should no moderate spirit brand others for Jewish Sabbatarians who call the day a Sabbath nor think a mystery of iniquity to be in it For will any say that our Kings reverend Prelates the Clergie composing the Canons the Compilers of the Homilies and learned Divines as aforesaid had in their thoughts any mystery of iniquity No God forbid of which we may well be perswaded for God prophetically speaketh of the Sabbath under the Gospel in Esai 66. 23. CHAP. IIII. Of the Reasons why it may be so called without offence AS it is and hath been so called so it is not without reason to give it this name For 1. It hath no evill in it nor any such mystery to bring any as is supposed by some into Judaisme Mosaicall bo dage or to cast a legall burden upon mens Consciences from which heavy yoak we are freed by the Lord Jesus Christ as it would appear if moderate and sober spirits might have leave to make known the truth which they hold yea they would easily to indifferent men clear themselves from Judaizing which unjustly is charged upon them What though some ignorant and rash have uttered their monstrous Paradoxes as some say they have and so passed the
Scriptures Master Brerwood confesseth That it is meet that Christians dedicate the day wholly to the honour of God that we should not bee lesse devout in celebrating the Lords day than the Jewes in celebrating their Sabbath Because saith hee the obligation of our thankfulnesse is more than theirs Therefore hee wisheth that it were most religiously performed with attendance to holy devotion This day faith Calvin is wholly to bee dedicated to him Calv. on Deut. cap. 5. vers 12. 13. 14. and it is necessarie that so we may intend wholly to the minding of Gods works and bestow the day in praysing and magnifying Gods name wee have no cause saith hee to grudge the giving of one day to him seeing hee leaveth us six for one Let any man give a reason if they give any part of the day to Christ why they should not think him worthy of all the day Is it too much for him and whole six little enough for our selves If wee will take a part from him for the whole none will except they be worse than Jewes and Pagans in observing their dayes which part is it not the morning for when shall we begin then to serve him Not the ending of the day for why are we weary of well doing Gal. 6. Gal. 3. 3. shall wee begin in the spirit and end in the flesh A liberall friend that hath seven pounds in his hands and giveth me six of them freely owing me nothing to imploy the seventh for him If I should grudge to bestow it wholly and take without leave any part of it to my selfe were I not most ungratefull Againe every holy thing is holy unto the Lord and is it not sacriledge to robbe God either of the whole or of part Lastly let us consider this that hee which willingly gives not God all would give him none at all if it were not for by-respects more than conscience of duty For conscience will binde to give the whole where all is due as well as a part of the due Therefore God commanding a day and an whole day as he giveth us six whole dayes so let us afford him his owne day and that wholly CHAP. XV. How this day is to be kept holy morally as the an●ient Sabbath was kept FOr the better satisfaction of moderate minds and to cleare this point let us consider how the ancient Sabbath was kept morally how our Lords day was kept in the time of the holy Apostles how to be kept by the stablished authoritie of our Church and how Emperours Kings Councels Synods Fathers and others would have it kept yea God himselfe from profane pollutions Concerning the first the ancient Sabbath was kept in rest and in the employing of that rest unto religious duties which what they were see at large in the other Treatise Section 25. For the Ceremoniall and Leviticall Services on that seventh day they are abrogated so all the Jewish superstitition brought in by mens vaine Traditions are condemned likewise those accessorie precepts for the more strict rest on that day belonging only to the Israelites for a time are taken away and doe nothing concerne us and are not to be imitated of us But the ancient people of God are to be followed of us as farre as the fourth Commandement bindeth us in the naturalitie thereof in the spiritualitie and in its morallitie as the holy people of God then kept it in such common duties as wee are as well as they were bound to performe for Gods service and for the benefiting of their owne soules in the use and exercises of his heavenly ordinances on his holy day This is farre from any Judaizing at all so much laid in the dish and reproachfully cast upon many in these times but without cause at all if the matter be well weighed and they rightly understood as it were to bee wished Their Service was both in the forenoone and in the afternoone every day Num. 28. 3. Exod. 29. 38. then much more on the Sabbath day For in the morning of their Sabbath they had the Service in the Tabernacle and Temple and their Sacrifices doubled Num. 28. 9. and also burning of incense in the morning Exod. 30. 7. So in the afternoone both Sacrifices and burning of incense and thus every day continually Exod. 29. 38. 30. 7. 8. To this David alluded in Psal 141. 2. This afternoone Service was about three aclock and called the ninth houre of Prayer Acts 3. 1. what time the godly used to pray Dan. 9. 21. and which Eliah observed in the offering of Sacrifice 1 King 18. 29. and we read while the incense was offered the people were devout in their prayers Luk. 1. 10. Preaching was also in the Temple for there Christ preached Matth. 26. 55. Mark 12. 25. Luk. 19. 47. John 7. 28. of which as of any strange thing the chiefe Priests and the Elders did not aske him but of his authoritie so to doe Matth. 21. 23. Luk. 20. 1. 2. And into the Temple earely in the morning came hee to teach John 8. 2. and the people to heare Luk. 21. 38. whither the Jewes alwayes resorted John 18. 20. Here also the Apostles preached Acts 3. 1. 12. 5. 21. 23. 42. And in this place no doubt was it in which the Scribes and Pharises sate to teach the people Matth. 23. 2. It is most certaine that on the Sabbath day in the Synagogues there was constant reading and preaching Acts 15. 21. 13. 27. In the morning Christ went in to preach Mark 6. 2. in other places it is not so evident what time it was whether in the forenoone or afternoone when hee came into their Synagogues Mark 1. 21. Luk. 4. 16. 13. 10. nor what time of the day the Apostles went into the Synagogues Acts 13. 14. 14. 1. 17. 2. 10. 18. 4. 19. nor is it certain whether they did depart home a while and came againe It may be they held out from the beginning to the ending and to the breaking up of the Congregation as it seemeth probable in Acts 13. 43. so Nehe. 8. but it is certaine that upon their dayes of fasting they did hold out and continued together from the beginning to the end Nehem. 9. 3. Whatsoever they did for the time they holily begun their Divine exercises with a blessing Nehe. 8. 6. and ended with a blessing Num. 6. 23. 26. Lev. 9. 22. 2● CHAP. XVI How our Lords day was kept in the Apostles dayes and the Primitive times THe Lords day being know● to bee an holy day and to be kept holy the Church rested on this Histo pag. 95. part 2. day for performance of religious and Christian duties as Doctor Heylin acknowledgeth There was an assembly of Christians they came together saith the Text Acts 20. 7. who came together the whole Church 1 Cor. 14. 23. whither into some one place 1 Cor. 11. 20. 14. 23. for then they had no Temples but met
Lords day that herein they were strangely presumptuous that their observation was rash vaine and impious and they in so doing deserved to be censured for insufferable arrogancy now God forbid I presume the spirit of wisedome will not suffer any moderate minde to think it nor ever did let any such a condemning censure and deadly doome passe the pen of any upon them for so doing Nor indeed was there cause nor yet is if the judgements be wisely applied For is it not acknowledged by a learned Opposite that in some cases it is lawfull to apply particular judgements to particular sinnes of particular persons Then why not in this case if the case be put right to wit for the prophanation of the day and not hailed and drawn to other by-ends and by-respects not intended in the production of these judgements For another learned Opposite saith thus without all question whether the observation of the Lords day stands by vertue of Gods immediate precept in the fourth Commandement or otherwise or onely by Apostolicall or Ecclesiasticall Constitution the prophanation of the day marke the words must needs bee a greivous sinne and powerfully-attractive of Divine vengeance seeing it is acknowledged by all that in the prophanation of that day both Gods precept as farre as it is morall in the fourth Commandement is violated and the authority which God hath commanded all Christians to obey is contemned If then the prophanation of the day be a greivous sinne and powerfully-attractive of Divine vengeance when God layeth his hand upon the prophaners of the day what letteth any sober spirit to apply the judgement Gods wayes are not our wayes Esa 55. 8. saith one true not in his mercies of which the Prophet there speaketh and yet we feare not to apply his mercies to our comfort and to the comfort of others But the judgements of God are unsearchable Rom. 11. 33. what judgements such judgements as we speake of The Apostle speaketh not of the works of his justice for sin immediate mediate or casuall which happen in the sight of men and are so made manifest and are not unsearchable But the Apostle by judgements understandeth the hidden determinations of Gods meanes to bring about the manifestation of his justice and mercy to this and that people as to the Jews and to the Gentiles which made the Apostle to cry out Oh the depth of the riches of the wisedome and knowledge of God c. If the sinne be manifest and the punishment visible here is not an unsearchable judgement nor such his way past finding out These two places alleadged that of Esay for judgements of mercies and this of the Romanes mis-understood and mis-applyed to our matter in hand do not hinder the applying soberly Gods judgements when they fall out upon men in their sinfull courses Our Saviour sufficiently will some say taketh us off from this rash attempt 1. In the blind mans case John 9. 2. In the fall of the tower of Siloam and massacre committed on the Galileans And 3. the whole booke of Job serves to shew the folly of vaine men First For the place of John 9. concerning the blinde man there is no application of any judgement by the disciples they doe only ask him a question saying Master who did sinne this man or his parents They knew not the cause they only supposed there might be some sin in the one or in the other why the man was borne blinde Our Saviour answers them and directeth their thoughts to an higher consideration upon the occasion of his healing but he condemneth them not of any rashnesse as in some other cases he did when sometimes they asked him a question This text taxeth not the sober minded for observing sinnes and applying of judgements when they happen Secondly Concerning Luke 13. 1 2 3 4. it is to as little purpose for here some tell Christ of that which befell the Galileans and our Saviour himselfe bringeth in the fall of the tower but here is no mention of the peoples apprehending of any sinne for which they might apply to them the judgements nor doth our Saviour finde fault with them for any such conceit but hee onely maketh a supposition if any thought them to bee the greatest sinners aboue all others that dwelt in those places they erred in so thinking and taught them the right use thereof to wit to repent least they themselves should perish This Text is against such as rashly judge such to be the greatest sinners who perish by either mediate or casuall judgements but who doe so judge of those whom God hath punished for prophaning his day for my part I know none of so presumptuous a spirit we speak of the sinne wee apply the judgement and desire men to make the use thereof which Christ doth here to repent that they may not likewise perish and this we have warrant to doe Thirdly for the whole book of Job which is said to serve for this purpose to shew the folly of vaine men presuming to particularize the foot-steps of the Lord as if hee proceeded in justice according to our fancies I answer all might well have been spared in this matter for it maketh nothing against the observation and application of Gods judgements against the prophanation of the Lords day Job was a very holy man his friends could not convince him of any open crime and yet for the strange manner of Gods afflicting him they rashly condemned him They reasoned from Gods hand upon him to make him guiltie of foule offences which they could not justly taxe him of for which Elihu reproveth them But we reason from the sinne the prophanation of the day which is acknowledged a grievous sin to the punishment that God is offended and therefore the sin to be a avoided In this is neither folly nor we vaine men nor led by fancie nor doe wee darken counsell by words without knowledge for Iob 33. 2. which God reproved Job not Elihu for finding fault with Job for Elihu his reprehension of Job was sound and good Iob 42. 3. against which Job made no reply Oh but yet some may say if it bee denyed that either the evill inflicted is a judgement or that it was for this to wit the prophaning of the Lords day inflicted wee are forthwith put to shame and silence Sooner said than proved Can any deny the evill befallen to be a judgement For the better understanding hereof we must know the word judgement to be taken two wayes First for the extraordinary vindicative Justice the dreadfull revenging hand of God in his wrathfull vengeance plaguing some notorions wicked ones as the Sodomites Egyptians Jehoram the son of Jehoshaphat with a rotting disease incurable so that he stank above ground and the like Secondly for ordinary punishments which may happen to any so as the word judgement taken in 1 Cor. 11. 29. where the word translated damnation is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 judicium judgement so also in
to be his God and the God of his seed after him Gen. 17. 7. calling himself The Lord their God in giving his Law and remembring them of that their great deliverance which he had promised also unto Abraham Gen. 15. 13 14. To the second third and fifth Commandements he added reasons all which the learned take to be for the ratification of the Commandements and to urge us to keep them and so do interpret the words accordingly The words of God knit to this Commandement have no doubt been added for the like purpose even to be a Confirmation and an establishment of the Precept and the perpetuity thereof and to move us to keep it Yet neverthelesse of late divers have endeavoured to fish out of the words matter to change the nature of the Commandement from Morall as they speak to Ceremoniall and to take away so the perpetuity of the Commandement and there withall mens hearts and consciences from affecting and obeying it as being no Commandement now obliging any Christian and so do they rob God of one of his Commandements sacrilegiously But the words are so to be interpreted according to Gods intention as may uphold the nature and perpetuity of the Precept as the words annexed to the other Commandements do very forcibly as also to binde us unto a carefull keeping of the Precept as they do very effectually and do meet with all that which our corrupt nature may perversly object against our obedience thereunto In the words we are to note 1. The Scope of all the words 2. The Matter which is 1. A Directory guiding to the observation of the Commandement in Gods allowing of us sixe dayes and the reserving of the Seventh to himself 2. A reason of his thus approportionating time between him and us for labour and rest 3. A Conclusion in the last words upon which this fourth Commandement is raised As if God had said I have from the beginning blessed and hallowed the Sabbath day therefore I do command them to remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy Thus inforcing the Commandement from the prime institution Note it well So as the Commandement is a binding Law from the first institution for the Sabbaths more solemn observation for ever SECTION XIII Of the scope of the words THe scope and use of the words is to take man from his own bottome For after the Lords Memento before the Commandement to forget oblivion and forgetfulnesse of it through worldly distractions He closely answereth and meeteth with mans corruption which might hinder him in submitting to this Commandement If any man should be unwilling to give God a day he sheweth his bounty in giving us fix for fear of repining If any man shall think six dayes not enough for his worldly affairs the Lord prescribeth a means which is labour by which he may finish all that he hath to do if he loyter not nor busie himself in other mens matters If any man should undervalue the seventh day as of mans devising God to prevent this contempt here challengeth it to himself and presenteth himself in his Soveraign authority over us saying it is the * This is remarkably of great force to direct us aright in our Christian Sabbath For the day of the Lords rest must be the day of our rest Now the day of the Lords rest may be either the day of the Lord our Creators rest or the day of the Lord our Redeemers rest Sabbath of the Lord thy God If any man should suppose that he might deferre off to the Sabbath day some of his week dayes works the Lord doth inhibite him from doing any such manner of work for fear of incroaching upon his Sabbath If any man should claim any exemption for himself or any under him God cometh with his charge upon parents and masters upon children and upon strangers for fear of any misapplying it onely to some or a conceit of any dispensation for other some If any man should ask an example of imitation and perhaps presume to neglect it because great men little regard it God hath given us his own example both for labour on Sixe dayes and rest on the Seventh day If any man should doubt of any good hereby and enquire and aske what good and benefit he might reap by the observation of this day more than of any other The Lord telleth him that he hath blessed the day for him And lastly if any man should leave his worldly businesse and might now follow his vain pleasures The Lord telleth him that he hath sanctified it to holy uses Thus God fortifieth his Commandement and wisely meeteth with mans corruptions to keep us in a carefull observation of this Commandement SECTION XIV Of the Directory in the words THe words are to be a perpetual direction in what space of time and what day in that space we are to take for the Sabbath day For the words of the Commandement being generall and not appropriated to any particular day or speciality of time God would not have his people either the Israelites then or the Israel of God in any age to be ignorant of the time or day but to be able certainly to determine and to be resolved of the day without any doubtfull disputation concerning the same as all might and may if we will use this Directory for our guide herein I say it s a Directory for it s not brought as a reason of the Commandement because here is no such connexion of the words to the Commandement with a For as the reasons are in the two other Commandements but here the Lord without any such connexive word presently saith Six dayes shalt thou labour c. as if he had said I will direct thee lest thou mistake the generality of the Precept in application how thou must know in what space of time and on what day in that space thou maist keep my Sabbath SECTION XV. That one day in Seven must be the Sabbath day FOr this number God exceedeth not here first mentioning Sixe and then a Seventh day and no more So as within this time limited is the Sabbath day In the beginning of time God made the mensuration of all time to be onely Seven dayes Gen. 1. 31 2. 2 which was afterwards called a week Gen. 29. 28. The Week then consisting of seven dayes must be the compasse in which to finde the Sabbath The first Sabbath was within a week to which the words of God here hath reference Whether nature doth teach to consecrate one day of seven to God as Z●nch in●●tum praeceptum holdeth is not here to be disputed It s enough that we have Gods example from the beginning and here his Word for a seventh day The practice of Gods Church is grounded hereon which from time to time from age to age thousand of yeers have observed one day in a week for the Sabbath One Master Dowe saith in his discourse of the Sabbath that many grave and
darknesse the Lords people observed a weekely Sabbath day then surely we should be ungratefull and negligent of our own salvation if we yeld not to God a weekly day or a sufficient time for his service as well as the Iews did Thus you see how we agree in the proportion of time one day in the week according to Gods designation of time and the equity of the Law CHAP. VI. Of the first day of the week that it is the Lords day and also the seventh day AS we must have a day within the week so is it needfull to know which day in the week it is which we are to observe for the Lords day else should wee be uncertaine for one would keep one day and others another day In Scripture the first day in the week mentioned in Mat. 28. 1. Mark 16. 2. 9. Luk. 24. 1. Joh. 20. 1. 19. Act. 20. 7. 1 Cor. 16. 2. is that which is called in Rev. 1. 10. the Lords day So saith S. August the first day of the week is that day Epig. 86. qui postea Dies Dominicus appellatus est S. Cyrill affirmeth In Iohn lib. 8. cap. 58. Apost 2. the very same Our Sunday saith Justine Martyr is the first day of the week Our Homily saith the first day after the Jewish Sabbath is our Sunday It is our Lords day said the Divines in Ireland The former Scriptures are interpreted See the many Exposit cited by Master Spr. pag. 61. by all Expositors the Fathers Greek and Latine the later writers Protestants and Papists to bee the Lords day It cannot well be d●nyed saith B. White that the first day of every week was the Christian weekly holy day It is manifest saith Doctor Pocklington that the first day of the week is the Lords day and to strengthen more this truth learned Beza saith that he hath read in a Manuscript 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 added to the Text in 1 Cor. 16. 2. so Crispine in his Greek Lexicon This first day of the week hath beene observed for our Lords day ever and no true Christian Church can be named that ever brake off the custome of this day This universall unity of so Catholique a custome is sufficient to settle any Christian in his faith of this truth that the first day of the week is the Lords day For what better Expositor than the Churches continuall practice and observation which must needs bee from a setled judgement of the truth of the time observed Our Church telleth us in the Homily that this custome hath beene kept in all ages without any gaine-saying And although this day after the Jewish account bee the first day of the week yet neverthelesse it keepeth the proportion of time in the Commandement the seventh part of a week so as it may be called the seventh day though not that seventh day I say the seventh day Let none here make a stir about the seventh and a seventh for the seventh day and not a seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord our God for the particle the and not a is to bee prefixed to seventh and not only because of the six dayes in which the world was made the dayes of the Creation as is commonly and onely so supposed to bee taken but for the donation of six dayes to us by God and that in the promulgation of this Law and Commandement as is in the former Treatise shewed Alwayes in counting of numbers we our selves in any ordinary number of seven when six is taken out doe not say there remaineth a seventh but the seventh for a should note an uncetainty but the doth not God of seventh dayes for there are no more in a week nor ever was hath given us for ever irrevocably six of them for to labour in and to doe all that wee have to doe Exod. 20. 9. These dayes we take to our selves as Gods gift from his words in the Law Now if we have six of the seven certainly knowne unto us can we reasonably say a seventh is the Lords or the seventh is his A seventh may be spoken of whole numbers where a certainty is not determined nor pitched upon nor taken out but where the number is no more but seven in a week as none heretofore nor any now count more there six being taken out for us the seventh is left as a certaine day not to bee doubted of for the Lord. So as yet the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord our God both by Gods donation of six to us and our counting our dayes to come to the seventh having taken to us the six For our first day of the week is Munday and so wee account forward to the Lords day as the seventh day and our Sabbath and resting day And most fit it is that wee should still hold the seventh day for our Sabbath * Dies dominica representat m●moriam Creation is mundi non minus quam Sabbagim nam die dominica incepit mundus fieri unde Iustinus Apo. 2. Et Leo Epist ad Dioscorum dicunt diem dominicam colitam ob memoriam mundi Creationis quàm ob resurrectionem Christi Bellarm. de ●●l●u sanct lib. 3. cap. 110. that we might whilst we honour the Sonne in finishing the work of our redemption not forget the honour of his Father for his perfecting of the work of the worlds Creation and his resting from the same which cannot bee by observing any other day but the seventh day CHAP. VII Of the time when this first day began to be the Lords day and upon what ground THis first day observed was the very first day immediately Mat. 28. 1. Mar. 16. 2. 9. Luke 24. 1. Iob. 20. 1. 19. Ad Magnes after the Jewish Sabbath so the Scriptures confirme it to us whereto agreeth the exhortation of Ignatius After the Sabbath let every friend of Christ make the Lords day a solemne Festivall And the reason of this was because of the Lords resurrection S. Aug. ad Ian. epi. 119. 130. De verbo Apo. ser 15. Epi. 93. by which the Lords day was declared to Christians and from that time began to be celebrated and in another place it is said that the Lords Resurrection promised us an eternall day and it did consecrate unto us the Lords day And Leo saith the same Dominicum diem nobis Salvatoris resurrectio Lib. 8. c. 33. consecravit In the constitutions of the Apostles it is Ca. 50. ordained to be kept holy in the memoriall of the resurrection so a Councell held at Paris in Anno 829 ordeined the like Bishop White alleadging reasons why the Lords day was Against Brab pag. 269. 270. preferred before other weekly dayes saith that the Primitive Church could have made choyce of no other day of the week more proper and convenient for the solemne and religious worship and service of Christ Great was this work saith Athanasius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for we
taken away and David appointed in his stead I am bound by the selfe same Law to honour David Even so is the accommodation of this fourth Commandement Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy this is the Commandement what day soever it be applyed unto The accommodation is the seventh day is the Sabbath day to keep it holy this the Commandement doth binde us unto as long as the day is unchanged and not taken away But the day being altered yet the Commandement abideth and is of forc● when another day is appointed in its roome as is now our Lords day And therefore the Commandement is Remember the Lords day to keep it holy From whence here note that as the taking away of Saul took not away the Commandement of honouring the King and Davids comming in Sauls stead held up the practice of the same Commandement Even so the taking away of the seventh day took not away the authoritie of the fourth Commandement and the bringing in of the Lords day in stead thereof holdeth up the practice of it and by it we are bound to observe this day as the Jewes their day And therefore may we pray as our Church teacheth us Lord have mercy upon us and incline our hearts to keep this Law And that without any Judaizing at all CHAP. XII That this day cannot be changed WEe have heard how that the day is of a divine institution and therefore is not subject to alteration by man The Church saith our learned Doctor On Rev 1. 10. In Cases of Consc ca. 16. In his Thesis Fulk hath no authority to change it so holds Master Perkins Bishop Lakes speaking of Christs resurrection giveth this reason saying as no man can change the work to another day so no man can therefore change the day This is an undoubted rule in Theology saith that learned man 2. What honour and dignity the Holy Ghost giveth unto a day cannot by the authority of man be taken from it to put it upon any other day but the first day of the week hath by the holy spirit this superscription set upon it The Lords day therefore it is not alterable by any to any other day to call that the Lords day 3. If the Church can change it then hath the Church authority to weaken the grounds on which the observation of the day was first setled but that she hath not or else can bring better reasons for the alteration else it were folly to alter it but there never was hitherto nor now is nor ever shall be any such reason to alter the day as there was for setling of the day to wit the blessed resurrection of the Lord Jesus of the excellent glory of which work yee have heard before Therefore the Church cannot change it into another day 4. Whosoever changeth one thing for another in matters of an high nature must have equall power with the first Institutors or receive authority so to do from them But the Church hath not such authority in her selfe or by delegation from either Christ or from his Apostles And therefore cannot change the day 5. It hath beene ratified by many Synods by ancient Councells by Imperiall Constitutions and Edicts of Kings established by the Lawes of Kingdomes and Countreys as it cannot be altered 6. The long continued custome of observing it from the first day in the Apostles time by the whole Primitive Church and by all Christian Churches since in all ages for these 1600 yeares without any gain-saying maketh it unalterable it being observed upon such grounds as is before mentioned To conclude to what purpose is it for any now to hold the change thereof when never from the beginning there was ever any one particular Church any Synod or Councell or any Orthodox writer in ancient times attempted it Nor ever durst any power on earth goe about it But all the holy Fathers and piously learned have with free consent endeavoured the setling and honouring of this day as may appeare in their writings and praises of the same as shall be manifest in the next chapter It is not therefore changeable either absolutely or practically nor have Christians at any time saith Bishop White judged it reasonable or convenient to alter such an ancient and well grounded custome which is commonly reputed to bee an Apostolicall tradition To this let me adde in the last place the judgement of that reverend Authour of the Antidote That seeing the observation of the Lords day hath beene confirmed by so many Constitutions Ecclesiasticall and Imperiall and hath withall continued with such uniforme consent through the whole Christian world for so many ages ever since the Apostles times the Church not to dispute what she may or may not doe ex plenitudine potestatis ought not to attempt the altering of it to any other day of the week CHAP. XIII Of the honourable esteeme of this our Lords day and that it is to be preferred before all other festivall dayes THere be many reasons to manifest the honourablenesse of this day and to preferre it before all other Festivalls 1. The blessed Apostle hath exalted it with the glorious title of the Lords day Rev. 1. 10. The Lord Christ his day as Bishop White speaks a title proper and peculiar Page of his book 208. to it Now things and persons named the Lords are sacred and venerable saith he in the highest degree which day was generally and religiously observed of all Christians And albeit the Apostles took advantage to goe and teach in the Jewish Synagogues upon their Sabbath yet saith Doctor Pocklington for which he citeth Eusebius and Page 11. of his Sermon Ignatius the blessed Martyrs in the Primitive Church by the doctrine and example of S. Paul and the Apostles so unfeignedly abhorred the observation of the Jewish Sabbath that they esteemed the observers thereof and the contemners of the Lords day the very sonnes of perdition and enemies of our Saviour and sellers of Christ So dis-regarded they the one and honoured the other 2. The ancient Fathers and others have given it tearmes of honour Justine Martyr called it Sunday as many others In Orat. ad Anton. after him no doubt as the chiefe of dayes as the Sunne is the most glorious to our eyes above all other planets In Cod. Just. lib. 3. tit 12. it is called venerabilis dies Solis the venerable and much honoured Sunday as Bishop White expresseth Against Brab page 197. Ad Magnes it Ignatius the Martyr who lived at least thirty yeares in the dayes of S. John and was his hearer calleth the day the Queene and Paramount of dayes Eusebius See the quotation of these in B. ●hite pag. 209. calleth it the principall and the first S. Chrysostome a royall day Greg. Nazian saith it is higher than the highest and with admiration wonderfull above all other dayes S. Basil the first fruits of dayes Chrysologus the primate of dayes A day above all
bounds and limits of truth out of inconsiderate zeal are all others to be censured to be men of the same mould Brotherly love and Charitie cannot but be better Judges 2 We see it carrieth antiquity with it and hath had allowance for a long time in the Churches of Christ 3 It is our rest day and so indeed a Sabbath for the word Sabbath is nothing else but rest so the name well agreeth with the nature of the thing 4 This name best leadeth us to the duty of the day which is to cease from weekely works which are not works of piety works of charity nor works of necessity and to imploy our holy rest on this holy day in the publike worship and service of Christ and in other Christian duties as is very excellently set forth in our thirteenth Canon 5 Learned and holy Bishop Lakes saith in his Thesis that eternali rest was shadowed out in the first Sabbath which our Lords day continueth and is a fore-taste of our eternall rest and a shadow thereof as lasting as the world This being so it may well be called the Sabbath day 6 If the fourth Commandment hath any perpetuity in it for a weekly day to be kept and ours being a weekly resting day then it may be called a Sabbath the Commandment propounding such a day under the name of Sabbath 7 All holy dayes appointed by God besides the weekly Sabbath were called Sabbaths and that upon these reasons because on them they rested to perform holy duties and had a holy Convocation Now why may not our Lords day because of our rest to holy duties and for the publick assemblies on that day be so called Our Linwood out of Aquinas saith Dies Dominicus dici potest dies Sabbati quia est requies vacatio ad Deum 8 The very Gentiles gave the name of Sabbath to their Festivalls as the Learned have observed 9 Christ lesus is the Lord of the Sabbath not only as God but as he is God-man or Mediatour for so himselfe saith the sonne of man is Lord also of the Sabbath Mark 2. 28. Now this Lordship as he is Mediatour he never layeth down 1. Cor. 15. 24. 23 whilest the world doth last and therefore he claimeth and holdeth the Sabbath for his honour that all may with a Sabbath honour the sonne as they have honoured the Iohn 5. 27. Father 10 If our rest into which Christ hath brought us which is a ceasing from sinne be called the keeping of a Sabbath as it is Heb. 4. 9 10 11. Then may a certain set day be so called for that therein we do not only hear and learn how to attain to the spirituall rest but do especially on this day labour through Gods grace to expresse the performance of it in holy and spirituall exercises CHAP. V. In what circuit of time this day hath been kept to weet weekly with the Reason thereof THere is a time for all things saith Salomon and nothing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 can be done but in time therefore must we needs have a time for the service of Christ which time is to be within the circuit of a week Saint Chrysostome telleth us from Gen. 2. 3. that God hath instructed us to set apart one day within the compasse of every week for spirituall exercises whereto agreeth our Reverend Hooker saying In his Eccl. Pol. pag. ●79 that we are bound to account the sanctification of one day in seven a duty which Gods immutable Law doth exact for ever Of this judgement saith Bishop White are divers Divines Cyted by Mr. sprim on the Sab. pag. 17. and 34. many of good note in the Church of God as Junius on Gen. 2. with others whereto may be added Learned Zanchius on the fourth Commandment who saith that one day of seven all men are to consecrate to the externall worship of God Pope Alexander said that both the old and new Testament Cyted by D. He●●inca 5. p. 2 depute the seventh day to rest Our Church in the Homily of Prayer teacheth us that Gods will and Commandment was to have a solemn and standing day in the week wherein the people should come together But what need I seek herein for consent when the whole Christian Church hath this 1600 yeers kept within this proportion of time which Custome is a Law for saith Saint Augustine Mos populi Dei instituta S. Aug ep c. 86. Majorum pro legetenenda sunt Now this observation of a day within a week is from Gods institution before the Law from the Creation who Gen. 2. having set down the dayes of a week took one within the Exo. 20. circuit of the week for his publick worship which he also commanded his people to observe under the Law both which hath been proved in the two former Treatises Now for the finding of proportion of time who can better proportion it for himself than God himself That is the fittest that can be imagined Nature cannot but acknowledge his wisdom and goodnesse in his choyce saith Master Dow. Hence is it no doub● that Peter Martyr said that one day of a week be consecrated pag. 24. 25. In loc Com. ca 7 to Gods worship is an ordinance of perpetuall force and Reverend Bishop Lakes confidently averreth that the seventh In his Th●sis part of time is Gods ordinance as everlasting as the world for saith the same Father of our Church the Lords day onely changeth but altereth not the portion of time prescribed Luther Dieterius on Dom. post Trin. Among the Scholemen Iacebus de Valen. and others St●ll● on Luke 14. Against Brab pag. 151. by the fourth Commandment by which we are guided to it Yea some have held that one day in seven is the morall part of the Commandment Sure I am there is acknowledged an equity in that Law durable for ever both for a time as also for the conveniency and sufficiency of time to which equity it is consonant saith Learned Bishop White that one day in seven be an holy day wherein Christian people ought to rest and give themselves to religious exercises who saith further that the common and naturall equity of that Commandement is morall to wit that Gods people are pag. 90 obliged to observe a convenient and sufficient time for publick and solemne divine worship and for religious and Ecclesiasticall duties And abstinence from secular labour and negotiation and keeping holy one day of every week both for mans temporall and naturall refreshing and for the spirituall good of his soul is very agreeable both to naturall and religious equity and it is grounded upon the ancient custom and practise of gods people in time of the Law And we Christians having obtained a larger measure of divine grace and our obligation to serve God and Christ upon his heavenly promises being greater than in the time of the Iews If in those former times of greater