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A25460 Fides Catholica, or, The doctrine of the Catholick Church in eighteen grand ordinances referring to the Word, sacraments and prayer, in purity, number and nature, catholically maintained, and publickly taught against hereticks of all sorts : with the solutions of many proper and profitable questions sutable to to [sic] the nature of each ordinance treated of / by Wil. Annand ... Annand, William, 1633-1689. 1661 (1661) Wing A3218; ESTC R36639 391,570 601

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and received as the word of Christ which other Scripture is as well as the Psalms But 3. Because of all Scripture the Psalms are of most generall use as having in them the greatest variety of doctrine the most fervent and working motives to godlinesse and piety and 4. Because of all the Scripture they were usually most if not only sung they were in a special way chanted by the Saints and sung by the holy men under the Law which besides the Spirit of God who by David did compose those Psalms suitable to be sung was occasioned from those holy raptures that by experience believers felt in themselves in the using of them arising upon the variety of Doctrine that was naturally perceived to be in them and flow from them but of these things more at large when vve come to handle that Ordinance of singing in particular CHAP. III. HAving opened the Text we shall now by the assistance of him whose word is to be spoken of come to the drawing out of such truths as shall and may serve for firm pillars whereby the true Christian and sober Saint may stand upright against and in despite of the storms and blasts of all contrary Doctrine Our purpose is to speak of the nature of and to defend the Churches practise in those effectual and grand Ordinances viz. the Word Sacraments and Prayer the Conduit Pipes to convey the water of life to the languishing and thirsty soul though some in this Age surfeiting through plenty account them but as puddle and to be shunned by men As a foundation and ground to the whole Discourse we shall therefore handle this point of Doctrine from the words in generall That it is a Duty incumbent upon all persons to have knowledge of and to be well acquainted with the holy Scriptures The word of Christ is the unum necessarium that one thing needfull for a Christian in this earth and in his passing or travelling toward heaven indispensably necessary as a guide to direct him as light to comfort him and as armour to defend him Ephes. 6.17 Psal. 119.105 Psal. 19.7 In the opening of this doctrine we shall observe this method 1. Show what knowledge it is that lies upon all Christians as a Duty 2. What it is to be well acquainted with the Scriptures 3. Give other Scriptures for the proof of the point 4. Demonstrate the truth of it by reasons drawn from Scripture 5. Discover some causes that hinder the knowledge of the word in our days 6. Draw some Corollaries 7. Resolve some Questions This shall be the Order that we will follow and the God of Order cause his blessing to go along with it that it may effectually teach us how to order our Lives aright towards God and towards man in these irregular days of ours SECTION I. VVHen Christ had ascended up on high and led captivity captive he gave gifts to men Ephes. 4.8 which gifts did vary and were more or less according to the good pleasure of him that ruleth all things Every man hath not knowledge alike and no man knoweth all things he that knoweth most knoweth but in part 1 Cor 13.12 According to the Order God puts men in he will give five two or but one talent and no more some things lie hid from the wisest and other things God will have the lowest of men find out he hath given his word universally to all that by it all may know their duty and he is a wise man which knoweth that There are three things that every Christian must indispensably know in Scripture 1. All necessary truths God will be offended if they know not how to be good Christians not if we be not good Disputants We are to know that God is a Spirit And they that worship him must worship him in Spirit and in truth John 4.24 that he is a hater and punisher of sin Rom. 1.18 that Jesus Christ is the Son of God and the Saviour of the world Acts 9.20 Acts 5.31 c. From the knowledge of these and the like things there are none excepted they are indeed the ground work of all Religion and God will be angry if men know them not 2. All profitable truths It is necessary for men in health strength and wealth to lay up some comfortable provision against the days come wherein they shall say I have no pleasure in them Texts that can mitigate sickness suppress doubts and keep off despair conduce much to a Christians being and his well being also The mysteries of Daniel will not afford so much comfort to a drooping soul as the great mysterie of godliness What time thou art afraid trust in God Psal. 56.3 Remember Happy is he what case soever befals him that hath the God of Iacob for his help whose hope is in the Lord his God Psal. 146.5 God may bring thee through the fire and refine thee as silver is refined and try thee as Gold is tryed Zach. 13.9 Meditate therefore upon the Faith and patience of the Saints Rev. 13.10 and upon the end of the Lord Jam. 5.11 3. All Relative truths i.e. to know those things that God hath given a man in charge in reference to that particular calling or relation that God hath given to him or put him in A Father must know his Duty for he shall answer for his failings in that particular the Magistrate his the Minister his the people theirs God will punish Eli for his failings as a Father 1 Sam. 3.13 Saul for his as a Magistrate 1 Sam. 15.26 Nadab and Abihu for theirs as Priests Lev. 10.2 The people for theirs Mal. 3.8 9 10. Eonus Civis sed malus homo it is one thing to be a good Christian and another to be a good Father be both or if thou be not thou mayst be saved yet so as by fire 1 Cor. 3.15 that is as a man that hath his house and his goods burned may yet escape with his life so thou mayst be brought to heaven but not in that comfortable and joyfull condition which thou mightest hadst thou filled up all thy Relations according to the duties enjoyned thee by the word But of these there may be and is a twofold knowledge 1. A speculative or a head knowledge a knowledge that goeth no further then the brain old Eli might know w●●t he ought to have done The word of Christ may be in a mans brain and there it will speed no better then the seed that was sown in stony ground Matth. 13.5 wanting depth of earth A head-knowledge will but encrease our guilt and that will increase our misery for he that knoweth his Masters will and doth it not shall be beaten with many stripes 2. An affective or heart-knowledge Theologia est scientia affectiva directiva which goes down to the affections and causes a man to walk and to do according to that which he knows Blessed is he that keepeth the sayings of the prophesie of this Book Rev. 22.7 This is to
of our wants bethinking while thou art fitting thy self to go to Gods house what mercies thou wantest what grace thou lackest if patience trust hope faith knowledge ask accordingly c. 3. By calling to mind thy particular sins and sacrifice them in thy Closet or at least bind them hand and foot and let them be slain in publick never spare for their crying 4. Know that thou art to do nothing else lose not thy labour by a carelesse performing of duty seeing God hath called thee from thy ordinary employment and to be outwardly in his work only may make thee lose the reward of all Follow therefore that since thou art allowed no work besides these following 1. What is for comelinesse decency and honesty as putting on of neat and cleanly apparel 2 What is for necessity as milking of beasts dressing of meat foddering of Cattle Matth. 12.1.5 11. 3. What is for charity so Physicians and Mid-Wives may work In those cases man is not made for the Sabbath but the Sabbath was made for man People may walk a journey to Gods service and Ring Bells for Gods people Numb 10.2 3. Nay watch and Ward nay be set to secure Gods people Neh. 13.19 All these rending to the great end of keeping the Law and sanctifying Gods name SECT III. God is pleased though he be a Lord of all to give his people a reason why he would have them keep this day holy to himself let us see why it was instituted and why it is continued 1. It is Gods own property from the beginning It was his own from the first and it shall and must be his untill the last Untill the time come that the whole Church celebrates an Eternal Sabbath with himself this Sabbath shall be kept for himself 2. It is a Type of mans happinesse to everlasting Six days God gives man to work in but in the Seventh he must not work he must not think his own thoughts he must rest from sin and labour for his God shadowing out that rest that man shall enjoy from all his labour and from all sin in the new Ierusalem 3. It is beneficial to the creatures while they have a being the beasts of the earth are preserved in it and by reason of sin servants are continued to till the ground by this precept God provides well for beasts and servants that they should not be oppressed by harsh cruel or covetous m●sters 4. It is con●inued that men might keep the doctrine of the Creation more firm in their memory God having created the world and the creatures therein men might contemplate and behold the wonderful works of God and read therin Lectures of his power he beheld all his works and he saw them good when he had been six dayes in making of them he will therefore have men to see the same when they have been six dayes making use of them 5. Because of that blessing which he gave the sabbath at its first instituting he blessed the Earth and by vertue of that blessing at this day it brings forth herbs yielding seed by which man is preserved he blessed the sabbath yea and it shall be blessed that is be a means whereby man may receive by Holy Duties saving graces that he may be happy he ordained it for no good it could do himself neither is it Holy through any holiness in it but it is a time designed for the service of a Holy God in whose service onely men are blessed and by sanctifying his name this day by setting themselves apart from the world for the duties of it God sanctifies their hearts by setting them apart from the wicked by his word for the glorifying of them SECT IV. We have them amongst us that are for no sabbath at all we have those that are onely for the Jewish let us therefore see what sabbath that is which day of the seven we are under the Gospel bound to keep and sanctifie by a Holy resting from our ordinary imployment That a sabbath or one day in seven is to be kept the Scripture is clear that that sabbath kept by the Iews was the sixth day from the Creation is more then probable that the sabbath of the Christian Church is the first day of the week is easie to be defended the Jewish sabbath being changed In which defence we shall distinctly speak to these three things And 1. See that there is such a change 2. The Authors of that change 3. The reason of that change We read in several places of the Apostles going into the Iewish Synagogues on the sabbath day to preach the word of God unto the people they bearing for a time with the infirmity of the Iews kept in a publick manner both their sabbaths and their feasts Acts 13.15 Acts 20.16 yet so that they alwayes Implied some freedom gotten by Christ and therefore daily met But when as the Iews grew perverse and urged a necessity of those things then the Apostles stood to their liberty and changed the day quite and clean and wrot to the Churches not to heed the sabbath that is the seventh day from the creation for instance Col. 2.16 Let no man therefore judge you in meat or in drink or in respect of an holy day or of the New-Mooner of the sabbath dayes every thing here is Jewish which the Colossians being pressed by some to observe the Apostle would not have them be startled for meat or drink or New-Moons or sabbath days for since Christ is come these are not to be observed At the difference of meats is taken away by Christ so is the sabbaths for you must note in all the Gospel the Christains day of rest is never called the sabbath and therefore not now to be observed by them or taught unto them It is to be observed that in the body of the fourth Commandement which is onely binding in respect of its being moral for all those after Laws as not kindling fires were not written upon the mount with the finger of God on tables of stone God commands simply the seventh day to be observed speaks not of the seventhday from the creation but gives and allows men six and the seventh to be his which is done even in the Gospel by setting apart for his service one day in seven the moral Law requiring no more which seventh day the Iews in their worship make the last day of the week and by it keep the Law the Christians in their worship make it the first day of the week not contradicted by the Law God leaving himself a power to alter or not alter the day as he saw good without infringing any of those Laws which he appointed should be binding the same God therefore that spoke to the Iews on Mount Sinai for keeping of the seventh or sabbath day indifferently forbids the Colossians to observe the sabbath the seven●h day from the creation stricty But shall the Colossians keep no day for the service of God shall
they rest from their labours no time witho●t question our Apostle had taught that Church to keep one day in seven he was a wise master-builder and could not 〈◊〉 in so necessary a point to give them his judgement we conclude therefore that that day that was kept by the Apostles and the Churches where they were was taught also to the Churches where they were not which caused the Collossians to be judged in not keeping the Jewish ●●bbath and that made the Apostle write to them so punctually against sabbaths Now the day that the Apostles kept and the Church with them is generally called the first day of the week never the sa●bbath of which we have these remarkable passag●● holding forth a change 1. Our Saviours resurrection Mat. 28. he sleeped in the grave the Jewish sabbath left it behind him wrapped in the grave clothes as he had by his death burial put an end to all Ceremonial Laws so to the Ceremony of the sabbaths being precisely the seventh day from the Creation 2 Col. 16. on only day in seven being moral we have this shadowed out untosis more clearly then that idle Romanist Paleatus who took great pains to write about the shape or shadow of our Saviours body in the linnen cloth wherein he was buried we are sure that the Jewish sabbath was but a type or shadow of that day of rest that even on earth was to be kept 2. Our Saviours apparition Iohn 20.19 the same day at evening being the first day of the week he appeared to all his Disciples vers 19. And after eight dayes he appeared again which must be the same day of the week On the Jewish sabbath if the Disciples should be gathered together to worship God yet they behold not Christ but being gathered together on the first day of the week Christ comes and preaches to them confirms their faith in that he is the Son of God and so declared by his rising from the dead 3. The Spirits descension Acts 2.1 the Holy Ghost did chuse this day to baptize the Apostles And when the day of Pentecost was fully come ther were al● wi●● one accord in one place c. And there appeared ● even 〈◊〉 as of Fire c. That this was no other then the f●rst day of the week may easily be proved for that our Saviour was crucified at the feast of the Passeover is clear in Scripture and that the day after our Saviours death was the Paschal sabbath feast on which the Iews rested Luke 23.5.6 Now from the keeping of the passeover or from the Paschal sabbath feast for at our Saviours death that feast happened on the sabbath the preparation was not so much in regard of it as in regard of the sabbath as Ioh. 19.14 compared with Luke 23.5 6. and Mark 15.42 is just fifty days the fiftieth day from the passeover must be the feast of Pentecost Levit. 23.15 16. which feast shall fall on the sabbath Now the day of Pentecost was fully come before the Spirit discended that is the day or first day of that feast he came not down in the beginning of it not in the middle but when it was fully come that is the day fully finished at its compleating the Apostles were gathered together with one accord that is in the beginning of the day after betimes they were met according to agreement without doubt to worship God for the spirit came and the multitude was gathered and all before the third hour of the day which is our nine of the clock An argument made use of by Peter to prove that neither he nor his fellow Apostles were drunk as was supposed many such circumstances fully shew that the sabbath was passed and the day of the feast fully come that is compleated and ended God therefore chusing this day to inspire his servants with his own spirit to imbolden them in the preaching of his word and they preaching upon that day baptizing upon that day taking no notice of the Jewish sabbath is an argument of its change God giving them the spirit of doctrine not on the Jewish resting day but on the first day of the week in regard that not that but this was the day wherein God appointed men should be taught in a more solemn way the wonderful works of God of Christs resurrection from the dead and of salvation to all those that believe in his name 4. The Sacraments Administration Acts 20.7 it is thus written And upon the first day of the week when the Disciples ea●● together to break bread Paul preached the Jewish sabbath was kept by the Iews immediately before at the close of it and beginning of the next day the Disciples came together that is believers or Christians as if it had been customary and they came to hear the word and receive the Sacraments to break bread c. And Paul preached until midnight which is the close of the sabbath Now why should the Christians design and appoint meetings forbear working spend the day in Ordinances continue at that so long except the time of rest had been changed they would rather have done it on the sabbath day that was immediately gone before then on this if there had not been a change made 5. The poors collection The Apostles 1 Cor. 16.1 orders the Members of that Church that upon the first day of the week every one lay by him in store as God hath prospered him concerning collections for the Saints Now why should this office of Charity of setting apart some small piece of money for the use of the poor be done upon the first day of the week but because of this that that day being the day set apart for the serving and worshipping of God they should set apart some of their goods for the poor Saints of God charity being alwayes a work accompanying the sabbath and he informs them also that he had given the same Order to the Churches of Galatia vers 1. The first day of the week they must also Remember the poor and not on the seventh 6. The Divine Revelation what time was it that God was pleased to make known to his servant Iohn the things that were to be hereafter it was on the Lords day Rev. 1.10 as we call it the Lords Supper because of his institution and his Church because of his presence there in an especial way so there can no o●her reason be given why any day should be called the Lords day more then another for it is manifest that Iohn is speaking of some particular time but in respect either of his institution or some special Act that was done or day that was dedicated for the Lords service in a particular manner above or more then other days And without doubt this day at or before that time was commonly called the Lords day for we read it was a common question among Christians Servasti Dominicum keepst or hast thou kept the Lords day the
her Sons and Daughters her man-servant her maid-servant and the stranger within her gates or within her roof 2. To shew the mutual love and care that ought to be in all governours of families the precept of keeping this Law is not given to one single but to every one alike the wife is charged as much as the husband and the husband no less then the wife with looking well to their families touching the worship and Law of God 3. The parties here to be cared for are the parties usually most apt to break our the Son the Daughter c. Marriage is honourable and that in all and God in this precept so far honours the married woman that he will not suppose her to transgress he takes it as it were for granted that she needs not be looked after in that particular She hath been brought up and looked after by her Father and her Mother when she was a Daughter and now she being a wife she will walk according to her education and the heart of her husband trusts safely in her 4. From that oneness that is between a man and his wife God after he had made two made these two one again and whom he had joyned together in marriage he will not dis●oyn in a precept the husband is the head the wife therefore must be the body What is spoken to the head as a duty nature teacheth the Members are to be imployed to perfom Let thou be said to a husband yet the man and his wife being but one flesh the same is spoken to her Quest. 6. Why is not the change of the Sabbath in Scripture mentioned That the Sabbath is changed is apparent why it is changed and that change not recorded or spoken of is not made manifest it might not be mentioned 1. Because not publickly taught by Christ he spoke many things in private to his Apostles Paul intreats the Elders of Ephesus Acts 20.35 to remember the words of the Lord Iesus how he said it is more blessed to give then to receive which words we find not in the history of our Saviours life The doctrine of the change might be taught among those that pertained to the kingdom of God of which the Scripture gives us no account Acts 1.3 If it had been publickly delivered before his death it had been recorded in the Evangelists 2. Because the publication of it might have been a great stumbling block to the Iews God is pleased to bring his people on by degrees After our Savirour came to preach and after he was ascended the sacrifices of the Law were not forbidden he never opposed circumcision the Temple standing things in some sort went on as before to have dashed the sabbath in pieces by a publick Law might have made the people to scruple at Christianity the Apostles wisely take their liberty to keep the first day of the week according to the private precept or in word instinct of Christ and the Spirit prohibite not the Iews their meeting that the Gospel of Christ might not be hindered knowing that time and knowledge might make them leave those things and of their own accord comform to their practice 3. Because it was not publickly opposed things that were much struck at as the necessity of circumcision justification not to be by the works of the Law that Jesus was the Christ the Saviour of the world these were the grand controversies in the Apostles dayes and these we have fully maintained now this of the Christians first day little or nothing medled withal since by the decrees of the Councel the Christians were freed from circumcision sacrifices and the converted Iews might be indifferent also as touching the Sabbath they see the first day kept Holy unto the Lord God of the Hebrews and the converted Gentiles see one day in seven kept to the honour of Christ one party no● opposing the other the Question is not much disputed and the 〈◊〉 therefore not recorded that caution given to the Col. 〈◊〉 2.16 doth exhort the Christians to their liberty in regard Chr●●● is dead says nothing to the Iews by way of reproof still hoping 〈◊〉 time they might be brought to the observing of the Lords 〈◊〉 Being therefore not publickly opposed at least in those places 〈◊〉 which the Apostles writ it is passed over in silence their dispu● being generally about things then and in that age called in qu●●●ion Quest. 7. Whether the Church may Command any other day to be rested on besides the Sabbath God Commanding the seventh day to be kept Holy and giving six dayes for man to work some conclude it unlawful to set apart one day or more for Gods publick worship then he did but it is otherwise the Church may set apart one day or two or more for the publick worship For 1. Because the Commandement is not preceptive but permissive when we are allowed six days to work the meaning is not that we shall fill up all those dayes by working as if it were unlawful for men to do any thing but work shall God never be served in those six dayes must we do nothing but work the meaning therefore is that when we have six dayes before us we shall do all our work not spend them all in working but upon the seventh day we shall do no work at all nothing hinders but that the Church may set apart a day for Gods service there being nothing in this Law that contradict● it 2. Because the Church of the Iews unto whom this Law was given did use such a liberty God gave the children of Is●a●l three feasts in the year each of them seven dayes long and commanded them to be strictly observed Levit. 23. Good Merdecai added a fourth in the Canon of the Scripture Est. 9.26 27. to be kept every year two dayes for the mercies shewn the Iews in their deliverance from Haman Holy Hezekiah added seven dayes more to the feast of Passeover then God did 2 Chro. 30 23. Valiant Iudas added a fifth feast in the book of the Apocrypha 1 Macha 4.59 to be kept seven dayes also at which feast our Saviour himself was present and never reproved it Iohn 10.22 Sure if this was done under the Pedagogy of the Law it may be done under the liberty of the Gospel 3. Because the frailties and imperfections of men require it it is often urged against the set times of the Church that if the Sabbath the day set apart by the Lord be kept it is no matter whether other dayes be kept or no but it would be asked if ever they kept a Sabbath mens frailties failings nay crosses may be much helped sanctified pardoned by their diligent worship in other dayes besides the Sabbath It is strange to hear to read how men will preach that ordinary Lectures ought to be kept and observed by people and yet at another time tell them it is sufficient to keep the Sabbath Ridiculum ●apus purely to oppose the Law of the
and were thus quarterly observed The Wednesday Friday and Saturday after Witsunday is the first Ember week the sa●e days after exaltari crucis or the 14. of September is the second the same days after Iodocus Lucius or the 13 of December is the third the same dayes aft●r the first Sunday in Lent is the fourth According to that old verse Post Cineres p●nter post crucem po●que luriam Mercurii Veneris Sabbatho je unia fient The whole week is called Ember though the fore mentioned days were not only observed by the Church for the ends hereafter to be mentioned Why they were called Ember weeks or days is doubted some say from the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i.e. Dies aday as if those days were singularly to be observed others from two Saxon words viz. Em. a Brother and Bertnable this may signify something Others say they were so called from that ancient and no lesse religious custome in using haircloath and ashes in time of publick pennance which was in these times performed by the Church for which cause also the first day after Lent was called Ash wedensday and therefore called Di●s cinerum or then from the Old custome of eating nothing on those dayes untill night and then only a cake baked under the Embers or Ashes which was called panis subcineritius Ember or Ashy bread They were kept by solemne prayer and fasting for these reasons 1 That the Church of God under the gospel might not be behind the Church of God under the law in point of devotion and piety the church of the Jews had their Iejunia quatuor temporum four solemn fasting times in the year instituted by themselves all of them mentioned with a special promise Zacha. 8. to respect the order of the thing done rather then the order of the text The first was the fast on the 10 day of the tenth moneth viz. Tebeth answering to our December upon which day Nebucadnezer first layd siedge to the city of Ierusalem the second is the Fast of the 17 day of the fourth moneth Thamaz answering to our Iune on which day the city of Ierusalem was taken the walls of it broken and Idolatry set up in the temple the third is the 9 day of the fifth month Ab answering to our Iuly for on this day was the temple burned first by Nebuchadnezar King of Babylon A. M. 3360. And afterward by Titus the Roman General A.C. 69. the fourth is the third day of the seventh month Tisri answering to our S●ptember for the murthering of Gedalia see Ier. 41.1 2 3 4. Now that the Christian might not be behind the Jew in the service of God those four Ember weeks almost at the same time of the year are set apart for solemn prayer and fasting in the Churches of Christ. 2 That there might be a blessing given to the fruits of the earth then either sown growing or gathered For now in those seasons the corn and fruits of the earth are in most danger and these days were appointed for solemn days of prayer for their preservation 3 That they might in some sort chastise their bodys for the sins of the last quarter and prevent exorbitancies for the quarter to come prayer and fasting will cast out the worst Devil to beg earnestly that God would pardon the sins of the last quarter quarterly can favour no more of superstition then to crave mercy upon the sabbath for the sins of the last week or in the morneing for the sins of the night begging withall to have grace assisting them in the dutys of the aproaching quarter weeke or day 4 That every Christian might assist the Church in her sacred ordinations the sabbath following In the next Immediate Sabbath following each of those days were men separate and set apart by ordination for preaching the word and administring the Sacraments This being known for Christians to meet in publike to call earnestly upon God for him to blesse those souls that were then going into his vine-yard that he would sanctify their gifts and give them courage ze●le knowledge and holynesse and make them Instrumentall of bringing in many sons and daughters into glory was a most laudable custom and pious practise For which end these days were in apeculiar manner set apart Besides those four solemn fasts observed by the Jwes they had other fasts though of lesse concernment as the 10. of Nisan Abib or March because Miriam dyed that day Some the 8 day of Tebeth or D●cember a day of great heavinesse for the translation of the Hebrew bible into Greek by the seventy Interpreters A. M. 3699. Some precise ones fast every Munday and Thursday and their fast endures untill the evening that the starrs appear The Christian also hath other Fasts besids those grand ones above mentioned Some abstaining from meat for one cause and some for another besids the vigils of every feast Wedensdey and Friday have been days of abstinence of old in the Church and publick fasts are generaly upon them days WedensDay is fasted in memorial of our Saviours being sold by Iudas and Friday in regard of our Lords crucifying Some also abstain on Saturday in memorial of that sorrow that was upon believers while our Saviour lay in the grave praying for a remission of those sins which were the cause of the death of the son of God Quest. 5. Whether it would bring Advantage to the Church now to have those days again observed There is a distinction passes mens mouths often without consideration that such days as these might be profitably kept dureing as it were the Churches nonage but not now when truly were the most sort of Christians looked after and tryed this time would appear to be their doteage these days therefore being observed would advantage the Church much every way particularly in these respects 1 To prevent schisme saction sedition or heresy for young Christians to see their parents and their teachers walking in the steps of the Ancient Churches and seing an holy and orderly conformity between them would much strengthen them against the pernitious doctrine of hereticks or discontented persons 2 They in a great measure satisfie the desires of the most devout there are really religious souls who exercise themselves continualy in prayer There are many that use the world as though they used it not Now such times as these fulfill the expectations of their hearts helping them to poure out their souls before the Lord in publick which otherwise through want of those opportunities might either not be done or with lesse profit For their fakes therefore we may say to the Governours of the Church Restore unto us the ancient paths 3 They will confirme us in the truth of the 9 Article of our Creed viz. the Communion of Saints not to speak of that Communion the Saints have with the head but with each other they are of one nature and heart alike disposed they have no externall fellowship in
time of teaching which is either Ordinary as the sabbath or extraordinary as the times of fasting and feasting appointed by the Church of all which we shall discourse somewhat and something briefly beginning with the ordinary time of teaching viz. the sabbath CHAP. V. Of the sabbath TO every thing there is a season and a time to every purpose under heaven saith the kingly preacher Eccl. 3.1 At all times God is to be worshipped and served by the sons of men but the sabbath is the special time wherein those that fear him singularly serve him When that beginneth then begin they as men in the dayes of Enoch Gen. 4.26 to call upon the name of the Lord more solemnly fervently orderly and publickly in obedience to his Law In prosecution of this Ordinance we shall let pass many distinctions made of sabbaths and particularly handle these points 1. What a sabbath is 2. How the sabbath is to be kept 3. Why God would have it kept 4. What sabbath it is that men now under the Gospel are bound to keep 5. Resolve some Questions SECT I. 1. A sabbath may be thus described It is one whole day in seven 2. Separated from other dayes 3. Wherein a man resteth 4. From all other works 5. And recreations 6. In a holy and spiritual manner 7. To serve and worship the living God in a publick solemn way 1. It is one whole day in seven a full day consisting of 24 hours beginning at the midnight before and continuing until the midnight after other dayes are of that length and the sabbath ought not to be shorte● Acts 20.17 Paul continued preaching on the first day of the week until midnight The Iews had a time of preparation for the sabbath Luke 23.54 which begun about three of the clock the day before the sabbath wherein all work was laid aside and all Artificers prohibited work saving Shomakers and Taylors and they had onely but half the time of preparation allowed them in this it were to be wished that Christians were Iews c. 2. Separated from other dayes the sabbath is distinguished from other dayes it is holy it is set a part by God for his own use and service she is Queen of all other dayes and Lady of the week the rest are attending her but as concubines and handmaids 3. Wherein a man resteth by this particle man is included all th●t is his ●he is head of his Wife Father of his Children Lord of his servants and Master of his beasts when he rests he is to see th●t all about him rest also from this day the day is named Sabbath signifieth rest and judgement shall rest on him that will not rest with all that belongs unto him 4. F●om all other works what ever trade or occupation he be of and what ever work he follow at other times must be laid aside at this time no servile work is to be done now without sinning against God and he that doth so sinneth against his own soul no bu●ing nor selling of Merchant ware no dealing in husbandry N b. 13.15 no carrying of burthens Ier. 17.22 no outward servile b●dily labour m●st be performed it would distract the soul and keep it from doing that for which this day was consecrated 5. And recreations This is a time wherein there is no time for sports and recreations that God that would not have us work never made the sabbath for us to play these distract the soul much therefore we are not to touch them it may be lawful with Samson to propose ridles at another time but not now for it is the sabbath of the Lord thy God Isa. 58.13 6. In a holy and spiritual manner The Law is spiritual and therefore birds the souls of men an outward resting from work is but Sabbatum Asinorum there ought to be a difference between the resting of a man and the resting of his Ox we must therefore rest from our works of sin but of this hereafter 7. To serve and worship the living God in a publick solemn way when God had made man he rested from all his works to shew that man was to be eternal and he instituted the sabbath as a type of that eternal test wherein man was to worship him for ever God ought to be must be served every day but in the sabbath more publickly if it can be or more solemnly if otherwise Acts 13 14 15 16.44 Acts 16.23 and Iohn 20.19 SECT II. The sabbath being known we are to inquire how this holy day is to be kept God will not have his sabbath polluted Is. 56.6 Other days by the Hebrews were called prophane this being by God made holy holding it unlawful to rost an apple to pluck an herbe nay to defend themselves when they were assaulted by their enemies by which a thousand of them were slain 1 Macch 2.38 The sabbath must be kept and our rest is onely sanctified and approved of God when we use the means and do the works of sanctification our resting must not be an idleness but in doing the work of God which is our sanctification Ex. 20.20 1. By using the means as hearing the word 4 Luke 20. praying to God Acts 16.3 receiving the Sacraments of Christ Acts 20.7 and all Acts that may conduce to the strengthening of grace confirming in faith 2. By doing good works as relieving the poor 1 Cor. 16.2 teaching the ignorant Acts 18.26 reclaiming the erroneous Acts 17.1 2 3 and all other Acts that have an immediate tendency to the edifying of the Church and these things must be done both priva●ely and publickly 1. Privately as Meditation upon the Word and inward application of it to a mans soul. 2. Publickly conferring with others ●●●ing the sick praying for them or if it may be singing some comfortable Psalm with them and that all these may be the better done we must prepare our selves 1. By removing all hinderances the night before overmuch businesse may and will distract the soul and keep a man either from all or from part of Gods worship the first burning of our Christian incense may be sweetest the first prayer may do us most good c. 2. By putting our souls in a holy frame some time before Meditate upon Eccles. 5.1.28 Gen. 17.10 Numb 3.1 Mar. 35. Isa. 2.56 Which may compose and put the spirit of man in a sanctified frame of heart to join in affection to the prayers of the Church and cause him to heed with affection the Word of Christ and that both Forenoon and Afternoon Eccles. 11.6 or then so far as in thee lies thou robbest God of half his due the whole day being his that this may be done 1 Prevent or quash all domestical or house-troubles Levit. 19. 3. Discords contentions and heart-burnings are but as water to quench the ●re of holynesse and may extend to the prophaning of Gods Sabbaths beware of coming before God with this strange fire least he consume thee 2. By meditating
answer was Christianus sum intermittere non possum I am a Christian I must keep it and that day being commonly so called Saint John calls it so likewise as either set apart for him or instituted of him which brings us to the next thing to be considered vi● 2. The Authors of that change The keeping of the Christian sabbath or the observing of the first day of the week for the day of rest in the Church of Christ whence was it from heaven or of men it is answered from heaven by Heavens great Trumpeter we are freed from any duty to the Jewish feasts or sabbaths from Heaven therefore doth our liberty come but whether first appointed by Gods Son or by Christs Apostles the Scripture is silent but that it was done by the spirit of God in one of them is certain We read that Christ carried forty dayes with his Disciples after his resurrection speaking of the things pertaining to the Kingdom of God What things conduced to the honour and glory of God how the Church should be ruled ordered and guided did our Saviour without question speak of there is written enough for us to believe but all that he spoke is not written Iohn 20.30 Now among those things this circumstance of time for publick worship might be treated on and spoken off Christ is Lord of the sabbath and he might remove it from the last unto the first day of the week If not changed by him then without doubt by his Apostles who were in points of such high concernment guided by the infallible spirit of God they durst not of their own accord teach any thing to any nation but what he gave them a commandement for Math. 28.18 And in this case what he spoke to them in the closet they might reveale on the house top and by their preaching administring the sacraments Laws touching gathering of collections upon the first day we are to conclude that that spirit that led them into all truth led them also to this practice and according to them in this hath the Church of Christ directly constantly holily set apart the first day of the week for the worship not by its own authority it being not in the power of the Church Men or Angels to alter the day but in him only who is Lord of it or them who are immediately and infallibly guided by the spirit sent from him but by example from the practise of the Holy Apostles this day viz. the first of the week is kept for the Lords service and because of that not unfitly called now as it was of old the Lords day as instituted by him or by his Disciples It is time to see the third thing viz. 3. The reason of the change Go● n●ver changes his will but he of●en wills a change darkly it seems to be his will that a change be made in some time of the world of the circumstance of time required for his own worship in giving the Law but to come to the reason of that change from the last to the first day of the week it might be made 1. From the indifferency of the Law at the Creation God blessed the seventh day and hallowed it now while the people were in bondage it may be questioned whether the Aegyptians would suffer them to rest since they were denied three days to sacrifice God at the establishing of his Law upon the Mount Exo. 20.2453 years after the Creation before which time the doctrine of the sabbath was never written God in the Law makes it moral that men shall for ever work six dayes and the seventh day they shall rest says not precisely the seventh from the Creation but in general one day in seventh now by this the time might be changed and the Law not at all altered since m●n even under the Gospel gives God one in seven which is that onely the Law requires 2. From the proportion of the Law the Law of the sabbath is because God rested from his work of Creation the change might be because God the Son rested from his work of redemption God the Father sanctified the beginning of the seventh day because he then ceased working God the Son might have the d●wning of the first day sanctified because he then ceased suffering This is by some tho●ght to be darkly mean by that Text H●b 47.8.9 The work of redemption was greater then that of Creation being done by the blood of God and the sabbath day being not precisely commanded on the seventh from the Creaation he that is Lord of the sabbath might command it to be kept in memorial of his resurrection which is ● new Creation unto Holiness and good works whence it might be called the Lords day 3. From the power that the Lord hath over the 〈◊〉 This might be done that we might know the Son of Man is Lord also of the sabsath Mark 2.28 He hath power over and he can say to the seventh day from the Creation Go and it goes and he can say to the first day of the week Come and it comes if the sabbath hasten to come abroad the seventh day shewing it self to be a day to be rested in he hath power to forbid its out going until to morrow he spake to his Disciples of things pertaining to the kingdom of God which are not written and the change of this might be one however the Spirit that guided the Church by the Apostles did not erre Christ having all power given unto him he gave them a power to change the day none durst presume to have altered a sabbath that had been instituted of God Laws made by him can onely be altered by him a change there was we know It must be by some that had power given them and that was the Apostles who had not the power of themselves but it was given them by one that had all power and was Lord particularly of the sabbath who bound it up in the Napkin that was about his head with the sacrifices that did attend it and left them both in a place by themselves in his sepulchre Col. 2.16 17. 4. From the change of that outward worship enjoyned by the Law the old sabbath had oblations circumcisions sacrifices washings c. All which were now to be abolished as to their outward act no circumcision now but that of the heart no sacrifice but that of prayer and praise these things being these things being removed God would also have the day removed they might dote upon those things still and to wean them from it another day is appointed and a new time set for that worship now to be per formed for though some of those parts of worship were continued after Christs death yet they were languishing dying and giving up the Ghost and in a few dayes were quite buried which though some amongst us would breath life into again and make them rise and appear in the Holy City shall never be seen to live more since
Church 4. Because God hath been pleased to bless his people for serving him in other dayes to let pass his approbation of that day set apart by the King of Nineveh for fasting Iona 2.10 the Israelites in captivity Zach. 8.19 set apart a fast on the fourth moneth another on the fifth another on the seventh another on the tenth All which God would turn to ●oy and gladness and chearful feasts it is known that it hath pleased God to refresh his servants with his comfortable presence in these dayes from such accidents as these did the Church of old institute those dayes that are called Rogation An. Ch. 450 wherein by prayers and tears and fasting and supplication the Church obtained great mercies c. And most of those dayes that are kept by the Church of England are owned by Reformed Churches and have been established for above a thousand years but of these afterward 5. Because of that enco●ragement and freedom that the use of those dayes gives to servants Prentices and others whereby the religious may have occasion to pour out their soul before God to read and study his word prepare themselves for his Holy Sacraments if any do abuse the use of these dayes ●●it were a pitty that those that serve God the more chearfully of them should be suppressed for the others prophaness 6. Because we see none speak against them but those that in other points are against all order and could willingly see that all Discipline were laid asleep we may behold them to be factious turbulent hypocrites stumbling at straws Apostates what not Quest. 8. Why doth God put a Remember before the Commandement of the Sabbath onely This word Remember is put in Scripture usually before nothing but what is matter of Moment as thy Creator Eccles. 12.1 From whence thou art fallen Revel 2.5 Lots wife Luke 17.32 that ye being in time passed Gentiles Ephes. 2.11 c. And the Sabbath day to keep it Holy Exod. 20.8 The reasons may be 1. Upon the Holy keeping of that depends in a great measure the observing of all the other nine Commandements how to cleave to God onely to worship him truly to use his name reverendly depends much upon this dayes observation and Holy keeping 2. There is less in nature to teach us the keeping of this precept then in any other of the Commandements nature teacheth us that there is a God to worship this God to honour the name of that God whom we worship to honour parents and though the Barbarian know no body seeth him none can accuse him none can judge him though he escape dangers by sea and perils by land yet he dare not murder for fear of VENGEANCE c. But to set aside one whole day in seven precisely one in seven and that not a part but the whole of a day and this not for thy self alone but thy cattle and thy servants must rest as much as thy selfe as long as thy self and that not at thy conveniency or times of leasure but in the thickest of thy imployments and not at thy pleasure but still one day in seven of this we say nature teacheth nothing and therefore there is a special memento put upon it 3. There is more in nature that may allure us to the breach of this precept then there is to the breaking of any other of the Commandements It is onely the Fool that will say there is no God and if he do it is but in his heart every man hath something of that natural principle to do as he would be done by but the Sabbaths being Gods property we are apt to catch hold of some part of it through the ignorance of God that is in us the day is clear and the streets are clean and such a thing is doing or may be done and profit will follow we shall gain by it c. All this might tend to the prophanation of the Sabbath and therefore God gives a strict charge particularly for that 4. They might in Aegypt have small or no regard unto the Sabbath if they had opportunity The people had been long in bondage and might forget at least in their observance that God had hallowed the seventh day or through bondage not have time to keep it which in time might blot or score the fourth Commandement out of their hearts forget to teach it to their Children which God by this remembrance brings back to their minds again and though they forgot to keep it Holy in Aegypt yet they must Remember it in Canaan It is by some probably conceived that in the latter captivity of the Iews in Babylon Akasuerus making a feast Est. 1.5 for the inhabitants of Shushan which continued seven dayes one of which must necessarily be on a Sabbath day which by reason of that feast that had been held a hundred and fourscore dayes to the Princes of Persia in which several Sabbaths had fallen and that one feast the Sabbath if not for many dayes yet for one was by the Iews neglected to punish which forget fulness God stirred up Haman to root them out and for that one dayes feast they keep a three dayes fast with their nights Est. 4.16 and by that got mercy yet by that might receive instruction the next feast that came and Remember to keep Holy the Sabboth day Quest. 9. Whether the first day of the week may be termed Sabbath or Sunday This is a Question in it self scarce deserving an Answer but by a Pharisaical generation of the sect of the Libertines being counted a piece of prophaness so to call it and a part of Religion to call it otherwise we shall spend a few drops of Ink to Answer it in brief it may be called Sabbath 1. From the sence and signification of the word it is their foolish mistake that because it was on Saturday therefore it was so called whereas if it had been upon a Wednesday so long as men rested upon it it might have been called Sabbath● that being the Hebrew word for rest A Sabbath day is no more then a day of rest Christians therefore resting from all their imployments and doing no manner of work they nor their Sons nor their Daughters nor their man-servants nor their maid-servants c. upon this day may lawfully call it a Sabbath day 2. From the equality of the Christian Churches practice with the Church of the Iews That day that was held Holy by the people of God under the Law wherein they ceased from working and therein did read upon the word of God repaired to the Temple or Synagogues and heard it taught was called the Sabbath the day therefore that is held Holy by the people of God under the Gospel and wherein they cease from working and therein read upon the word of God c. may receive the same denomination 3. From the morality of the Law the Law is moral requiring one day in seven to be kept Holy to the Lord which day
the flesh yet they have an interest in each other as in their teachers as in their hapinesse in their victories in their warrs in their fruits of the Earth which stedfastly to believe the observeing of these days were of great concernment 4 It might put a dayly check to growing sin when men otherwise cold in their acts of repentance and dutys of mortification should observe a solemn quarterly appearance before God for the ends above mentioned It might stirre them up to pray for a blessing on the fruits of the Earth and crave a pardon of their sins formerly committed which by degrees might make them perfect holinesse in the fear of God Quest. 6. Whether it might not be an acceptable service to have anannuall fast for the crimes lately acted in England This Question took its rise from the Authors occasionall reading of a motion made to the late long Parliament by one preaching before them for the keeping of a Fast in regard of that blood that was shed in the dayes of Queen Mary during her five years raign If that was supposed necessary sure this supposition is not to be thought vain It is not to be reflected on particulars either touching crimes or persons that being forgiven by an act of Oblivion here on Earth but since it is not for ought we know ratified in heaven it may not be in vain to sound a trumpet in this our Sion and proclaim a day of humiliation for 1 Flagitious and unheard of crimes have been acted and that that not in a corner but before the Sun such as were it possible should not be told in Gath. 2 God for a time may only keep away wrath some acts were of that nature that the world never knew that sin to compare with them and therefore there may be expected strange judgements God hath them written down and will without question without much entreaty visit for them therefore prayers and tears are to be offered to expiate the guilt 3 The Actors for a great measure seem not yet penitent we might charge many but it were to be desired that such as blew up division for their own ends whom God hath alwayes crossed would not keep up division to the Churches disturbance and their own ruin 4 To remove the scandall that may be in all ages and is in those times cast upon our profession King killing was once a doctrin charged upon the Jesuits who ever denyed it but now our religion bleeds by Turkes Jewes and Papists to let the world see that we are better catechised it is expedient that the Ministers of the Lord weep between the porch and the altar that it may be known those practises are both detested and abhorred by true Christians 5 That future ages might beware of the like crimes to open a story in the eares of the young might have the some influence upon tender yeares as the beholding of old D●unkards had upon the children of the Lacedemonians which was to make them shun the like actions 6 The hypocriticall fasts that have been so many deserve to have one week in the yeare that God may not remember them never greater sinners then those that presumed most to performe this duty of fasting and usually before they undertook notorious actions like Machiavil who sometimes appeares like a Devill and another time like a Saint God hath not forgotten these things and therefore they are to be regarded They were in their own nature sufficient to have made even God himselfe loath the very place they were made in and he often bringing the sins of the Father upon the Children if not upon themselves calls upon this generation to cry aloud CHAP. 7. Of a Feast FRom a fast we come to a feast both are Christian and therefore not an unlawfull transition he is a stranger to the Calender that is ignorant of the vigills ushering in the Saint We have seen two dayes wherein Christians may hear the word taught this is a third wherein possibly there may be a mariage in Cana of Galilee and though the Church Catholick invite neither the mother of Jesus nor his disciples as that of Rome doth it is not out of disrespect to either but out of their incapacity to be present yet Jesus is alwayes called Now every pious soul with David goeth to the house of God with the voice of joy and praise with a multitude that keep holyday Psal. 42.4 Fast or day of uhmiltion is appointed for mercyes to be asked a Feast or day of thanksgiving is designed for returning of praises for favours already received and is Either private or publick 1 Private which is a sweet and holy rejoycing in the Lord for some speciall mercy shown to a mans own soul or familie in particular to this is joyned reading of the word 2 Or publick enjoyned by authority for the returning thanks unto the Father of all good gifts for some peculiar blessing shown that Common-wealth in generall unto this is joyned preaching of the word for the stirring up of affection and of this we are now to speak and shall see as in the Fast. 1. The Nature of it 2. The Ends of it 3. The time of it 4. The manner of it 5. Resolve some questions concerning it SECT I. The nature of it 1. It is an extraordinary solemn and joyful appearance 2. of a Christian people or congregation 3. for th● performance of holy duties 4. Especially of praise and thanksgiving 5. for benefits or mercy received It an extraordinary solemn and joyfull appearance is this to distinguish it from the Sabbath or Sunday wherein there is a solemn appearance but that is ordinary this is extraordinary Neh. 8.1 2. Of Christian people or Congregation this is to distinguish it from the Feasts of Turks Jews or Pagans who have days set apart to worship for some special favour shown sometimes privately and sometimes publickly but the feast we are upon is a Congregation of Christians 3. For the performance of holy duties When there is a solemn appearance of a Christian Congregation it ought to be supposed that something sutable to their profession will be done before they part and the duties must be afterwards spoken of 4. Especially of praise and thanksgiving this is the chief end of this extraordinary appearance to return praises for mercies received and to adore the Majesty on high for his peculiar favour Nehem. 8.17 18. From this it is called a day of thanksgiving though prayers and supplications be made for all Saints on it yet thanks and gratulations is especially intended by it 5. For benefits and mercies received It is thankfulness that keeps Gods hand open he that would come to God suing for new favours must come with Iosephs brethren with double money in his hands thanks for the former and faith to procure future favours The Church possibly sees her enemy that wicked Haman fall before her blame her not if there be joy in all her Cities Ester 9.18
but vastly differ in the manner of keeping these days as also in other points touching those days For 1 The Catholick Church performes worship or makes prayer even in those days to God alone whereas that of Rome offers supplications petitions intercessions to those Saints in whose days they are performeing that or any other holy service 2 The Catholick Church keeps feasts for no Saint but what she is sure had a being and once were and keeps no day but upon good and real grounds now that of Rome hath days observed and prayers made to those whose very being not without just cause are called in question It is very much to be doubted if ever there were such a man as Saint Christopher or Saint George or such a lady as Saint K●therin or how can they know that Ios●ph the supposed Father of our Lord was a pious confessour or that Lady Anne was mother of the virgin Mary Who was he that told them that the virgin Mary never dyed but was taken up to heaven alive Aug. 15. and therefore that day must be in red letters in the Roman Almanack and on that day prayers must be made to her This is not to serve the Lord Christ the days that the Catholick Church keep are such as have in them a real truth and not legendary vanities 3 The Catholick Church keeps no days in memorial of Saints but those whom she knows to be good they were not only men but good men whom she honours with a day now in this the Church of Rome also fails she hath not only days in remembrance of them that never were but dayes in memoriall of them that never were good Thomas Becket must be Sainted and given to the Christmas holy days by way of augmentation and yet his religion purely consisted in rebellion and being an arch traytor deserved to be preferred in another sort and as we pray to Saint Feriol for geese to Saint Agatha for sore breasts to Saint Giles for Children to Saint Hubert for dogs to Saint Iab for them that have the pox to Saint Kathern for knowledge to Saint Orilia for the head arch to Saint Russin for madnesse to Valentine for the falling sicknese so we must pray to B●cket for sinners when if stubornesse be as iniquity were he in a capacity to be bettered by prayers supplications ought to be made for him yet poor souls are taught to pray Tu per Thomae sanguinem quem pro te Impendit ●ac nos Christe scandere quo Thomas ascendit The like might be sayd of many others 4 The Catholick Church she loves useth and enjoyneth those days to be observed as meanes conduceing to the good of men and no further no what ever day be enjoyned by Rome were it Beckets or Leola's they must be observed as part of divine worship binding the consciences of men to the observation of them though but of humane constitution in themselves and often times fictitious in their nature Quest 2. Whether the Festivalls appointed by the Church of England may lawfully be observed Those solemnities established by law in the Church of England ought not by any that is compos mentis well in his wits to be spoken against for they appear in many respects to be lawfull and usefull 1 From that countenance God gave to those feasts Instituted by the Church of the Jewes under the Law the the days of Purim was never spoken against and that seven days feast of Iudas Maccabeus his institution was graced by our Saviours observance shall they and may they appoint days to worship God in for temporall mercy and not be blamed what hinders then but that the Church of England may appoint days to return thanks for spiritual mercy shown to her in common with the whole Church of Christ on Earth 2. From the nature of that worship she in those days performes though the day may be denominated from a Saint or kept in remembrance of one yet the prayers she offers up are purely to Christ the Gospel she reads is the Gospel of Christ the b●ead she breaks is the communion of the body of Christ and nothing is done in way of worship but what is agreeable to the rule of Christ and will of Christ. 3. From that opportunity that they put into the hands of such as hunger after spirituall food they may by these often hear the word of the Lord receive the Sacrament instituted by the Lord as a memoriall of his death untill his second coming and what ever ordinance they take most delight in or receive most refreshment by of that they have abundance in the using of those dayes instituted by the Church 4. From that profit that would accrew to the poorer and weaker sort of people to them those days would be a Catechisme upon the feasts of the nativity to hear of the birth of Christ and afterward of his circumsion and then of his passion and then at Easter of his resurrection and then of his ascension and then of the spirits descension and so forward this might being taught upon those dayes be of very great consequence to all Christians especially to those whose understandings are not ripe enough for high contemplations in subjects of this nature 5 From that power that the Church hath to ordain fasts and dayes of humiliation which is granted we may draw her power to ordain feasts and dayes of thanksgiving which is the thing doubted but of the power of the Church in such cases we have spoken in another place 6. From the doctrine of reformed Churches Confess of Helva Art 24. of Bohem. Art 17. which Churches deliver their minds thus that of Helvatia says Every Church doth choose unto it self a certain time for publick prayers c. it is not lawful for every one to overthrow this appointment of the Church at his own pleasure and if the Churches do religiously celebrate the memory of the Lords Nativity Circumcision Passion c. according to Christian liberty we do very well allow of it The Church of Bohemia says thus Many of the ancient Ceremonies are retained among us at this day of this sort be many appointed for feasts and holy days c. such as Christs nativity such as be dedicated to the Apostles c. chiefely of those Saints of whom there is mention made in holy Scripture all these things are done of us that the word of God may be taught and that he may be glorified among us c. the same teacheth the Church of Ans. Art 4. The ignorant must or may learn that the observation of those dayes is no superstitious observation of days condemned in Gal. 4.10 for with the Atheist there is neither good luck nor bad luck supposed to be in them neither with the Papists are the consciences of men tyed to them It is no more a sin to observe such times as the Church teacheth then it is will-worship to observe noon for dinner time or to open a shop
the places of publick worship from the dayes of Adam might be called Temples however it is generally used for that glorious structure of the house of the Lord in Ierusalem IV. The Church 1 Cor. 11.22 of which there are two sorts 1. The material Church which is builded with the same matter that other houses are yet distinct from them in regard of the use they are designed for they being made to eat and drink in and what if I said to sleep in these for to worship God Of them the Apostle speaks 1 Cor. 11.18 22. 2. There is a spiritual Church which is the whole number of the faithfull souls in general or any holy soul in particular which is a personal Church Of them the Apostle speaks Rom. 16.5 The same distinction is made of Temples 1 Cor. 6.19 Hence it is that those places of publick worship of which we are now speaking may be called a Church or Temple that is material Churches being as the Temple set apart for Gods worship and as it were abiding in them Rev. 1.20 SECT III. We come now to be informed touching the necessi●y of those publick places for Christian worship by which we hold not the inconsistency of a Church without these but the dignity only they are necessary for its honourable being and for decency and order for these reasons 1. From the nature of the precepts there are commands in Scripture for the keeping of a Sabbath for the peoples hearing of the Law for the Prophets teaching and for the peoples gathering together all which in their own nature implie the necessity of having a proper and publick place to do these things in 2. From the practise of all Nations we see no Nation almost throughout the habitable world but hath places set apart for the worship of their false Idol gods and it hath been discovered that the Saints of old had places not to say buildings for they were not from the beginning where they erected Altars and worshipped the Lord and inquired of him touching doubtfull cases Gen. 25.22 shall Christians then be backward and want places of worship for to serve their Lord and Master 3. From the confusion that would upon the want of them ensue if every one might worship God in what place he pleased or every family in what place they pleased We may without the Spirit of Prophecy foresee as by a vision that thereupon would follow nothing but disorder confusion devision sedition destruction and it were to be feared damnation 4. From that ease it gives to Ministers In those places one Sermon may feed five yea ten thousand which could not be done were he to go to every particular company in what place they thought best so he should no where be sure of a Congregation and while he were teaching one the other might be without instruction and he not able through weariness to preach any more some must want which in time would make the people heap to themselves Teachers contrary to the practise of good people and sober Christians 2 Tim. 4.3 5. From that care that it puts upon Ministers These publick places and solemn meetings puts a certain awe upon the Preacher that he dare not utter that but what he is able to defend and what he knows to be truth in regard it cannot be recalled without some stain nor denyed without abundance of sin in regard of the multitude that hears which private meetings and corner-assemblies and brew-house or kitchin Sermons clearly takes away it being possible to preach to recal and deny that to one of them which he uttered in another and to speak truly the Kitchin or Barn is a good shelter both against Ignorance Heresie and Falshood 6. From that honour they bring to religion Is it not more honourable for Christ to be worshipped by his Disciples in large decent comely structures the very walls of which hath a certain holiness in them to put an awful respect into the soul of him that enters to see a number of Christians praising the Lord with one breath in this house then to see the same number meeting in a Washouse Warehouse Backhouse or any other outhouse worshipping God When the Turk hath starely Temples the Jews clean Synagouges to perform that service their ignorance and infidelity leads them to SECT IV. Questions resolved Quest. 1. Whether those places may be consecrated Quest. 2. Whether those places may be termed holy Quest. 3. Whether such places that have been builded by Romanists may be lawfully used by Catholicks Quest. 4. Whether at a Christians Entry into those places he may perform his devotion Quest. 5. Whether it be lawfull to have Musick in Churches now Quest 1. Whether those places may be conscecrated When it is affirmed that Christian Churches may be consecrated or dedicated it is not granted that the Walls of it are to be sprinkled with holy water or that crosses are to be ma●e on the pavement with Salt Ashes Water and Wine mingled together with many other Fopperies used in the Church of Rome But a solemn publick setting apart that building for holy uses and no other by preaching and praying which practise is lawfull 1. From the practice of Salomon and other pious Princes 1 King 8.63 having builded the Temple of the Lord at Ierusalem he and his people did consecrate or dedicate the same that is separated it from all secular or civil uses and appropriated the same unto God by prayer and sacrifice desiring that God would own it for his house and hear the prayers that should be made in it or towards it ver 9. which service was accepted and God promised so to do 1 Kings 9.3 the like did Zerubbabel at the building of the second Temple Ezra 6.16 The like did Iudas when he had raised a new Altar in the Temple of Ierusalem the heathens having polluted the other for three years 1 Mac. 4.59 which dedication was owned countenanced and graced by our Saviour himself Iohn 10.22 He was not it seems so scrupulous in his judgement as some in our generation are but that they value not Christ and they differing often in point of practise well may they differ in point of judgement The like we read 2 Kings 12.18 1 Kings 15.15 2. From the Law or rule of proportion if all along we find in the Scripture things that were appointed for the service of God consecrated and that service approved of countenanced and owned by him whether done to persons things or places what should hinder but that things and places set apart now for his worship and service might be also so de●icated were it a pulpit that God would bless the doctrine taught in it a Church that he would bless and cause to prosper the souls of such as delight in it and so of any other thing 3. From the practise of people in their several dwellings they will when they have finished a house set one room apart for a Parlour another for
death unto the soul. It is not sufficient for the nature of a Sacrament to affirm there is ground for it in Scripture so a fa● may be a Sacrament Matth. 3.12 but that the sign be appointed to signifie such a thing and to that appointment a blessing annexed ye● though we finde most of these in Scripture and appointed to be done yet never as Sacraments but as discipline proper for the Church Heb 6.2 and order to avoid confusion in the Church Acts 13.3 and that fornication might be avoided by the Members of the Church 1 Cor. 7.2 and as an extraordinary sign of an extraordinary cure by the Elders in the Church Iames 5.14 As touching pennance there is nothing of that in the least as it is used by Rome spoken of to the Church 2. They are not proper nor peculiar to the flock of Christ. Sacraments of old and now were given onely to the people of God and by receiving of them are men known to have a relation to him but Marriage one of the five is common to the Christians with Turks Iews and Heathens marriage we ●●n as honourable in all but since there is neither sign of it nor form of it instituted by Christ the Catholick Church dare not make a Sacrament of it 3. Sacraments are common to the people of Christ we shall alwayes see those Heavenly ordinances enjoyned to all that are Members of the Church but now this Sacrament of Ordination they confine it to the priesthood onoly of this the people of God and Saints under the Gospel cannot all be partakers particularly women Ordination indeed is an ordinance of God and so is Confirmation but neither of them Sacraments It is worth observation that this Sacrament of order hath seven degrees in it the lowest of which is to be a Porter in the house of God and the Highest is to be a Priest between whom there is the Exorcist the Lector the Ao●l●te the Subdeacon and the Deacon all which degrees are made visible signs by which grace is conferred on the partaker so that in truth they have in all fourteen Sacraments nay by some of them they are owned as Sacraments Et dicuntar hi ordines Sacramenta quia in eorum percep●iene res sacra id est gratia consertur egregiè dicis Domine Lombard quam figuran● qua ibi geruntur so that if they want real or inward grace it is not for want of visible or outward signs but twelve of their Sacraments having neither outward Element prescribed nor form nor blessing nor promise made to them as such they are rejected and the Church that teacheth them is condemned Touching the Sacrament of Extreame Unction the very rehearsing of its form and manner which are not at all instituted by Christ is sufficient confutation it is this When the sick party is just upon depar●ing the Priest usually or in case of necessity any other Person for it is dangerous to dye without it takes Oyle hallowed by a Bishop and annoints the sick Person upon the eyes ears mouth nose hands and feet using this form of words Indulgent tibi Deut per istam sanctam unctionem which possibly the sick man may not understand suam pi●ssimam misericordiam quicquid pecca●um permissum c. God out of great mercy and by this Holy Oyle forgive thee thy sins committed by thy eyes ears mouth nose hands and feet All the Angels Archangles Patriarcks Prophets Apostles Evangelists Martyrs Confessors Vitgins Widdows Infants heal thee He that finds that text of Iames who was but a servant in the Lords house Iam. 5.14 upon which this practice is grounded shall not onely see a vast difference between the anointings but may easiely perceive than a Sacrament as they would make it is not there intended 4. They are generally condemned by the reformed Churches of Christ in the Articles above mentioned and of the Church of England Art 25. the Article it self is this Art 25. of the Church of England Sacraments ordained of Christ be not onely badges c. as before There are two Sacraments ordained of Christ our Lord in the Gospel that is to say baptism and the supper of the Lord. Those five commonly called Sacraments that is to say Confirmation Pennance Orders Matrimony Extream● Vnction are not ●● be counted for Sacraments of the Gospel being such as have grow● partly of the corrupt following of the Apostles partly are states of life allowed in the Scripture b●● yet have not like nature of Sacraments with baptisme and the Lords supper for that they have not any visible sign or Ceremony ordained of God Quest. 6. Whether the effect of the Sacraments depend upon the worthiness of the Minister The Church of Rome makes the being of the Sacrament depend upon the Priests good meaning and his true Latine and some among us would have the effect or fruit of the Sacrament hang upon the Ministers holy living concluding that baptisme either wholly null or in part void that is ●administred by an evil or scandalous person but both are besides the truth For 1. Sacraments are administred onely in the name of Christ from him they have their power by his authority according to his word in his name are they they dispensed and therefore their efficacy depends not upon the power of any created being 2. Sacraments under the Law depended not upon the merits of the Minister Circumcision was a token of the Covenant and was equally in that respect a visible sign powerful in it self to declare the circumcised to be one of Gods people and give him an interest to the priviledges of the Sons of God who ever it was a good or bad Officer that cut off the foreskin therefore baptisme now is of force for the same use howbeit a scandalous Person apply it 3. By this we should never have certainty of a Sacrament there is no man but hath sin more or less in him and so according to his sin the Sacraments would be more or less ineffectual however in all there would be some hinderance and since the heart of man is deceitful we might call in Question our baptisme for he might be an hypocrite that is a notorious sinner that baptized us Without Question this doctrine was never so much sown without assistance from Rome whose doctrine in this particular is near to this in regard that she makes the Sacraments to depend upon the intention of the giver the people must either doubt at all times or act implicite faith for ever according to her tenents And he that is of the judgement that Sacraments depends upon the merit of man as it derogates from Christs honour so it takes from the conscience all peace and settlement why sho●ld I prepare for the Lords supper since all will not availe me if the Minister be not Holy and we can never be perswaded of the great benefit of that ordinance nor receive comfort from it sin being in the best 4. The
Whether it be a sin to receive the Communion in a mixed congregation and if private examination be necessary By a mixed congregation the age makes us to understand 1. A congregation wherein any Communicant is not of the same judgement principle or opinion though in things circumstantial 2. A congregation wherein there are some Communicans that have sin in their mortal bodyes though it be repented 3. A congregation wherein there be drunkards or sweaters though adhearing professedly to the doctrine of the Gospel Unto which we will add this also though he was never reproved nor admonished by us The Question is then whether a man that hath prepared himself by sound hearty real and holy examination for that Ordinance may altogether forbear it and omit it upon the account of his knowing or foreseeing that such a drunkard will be at that holy banquet It is answered in the negative he ought not to forbeat upon any such pretence For 1. That Ordinance is not arbitrary It is not left to our own will and discretion that we may or may not as we will we ought to do our duty and prepare our selves to be worthy receivers if another neglect his and yet receive let him look to it the Lord is at hand 2. We might neglect other Ordinances as well as that we might refuse to read the Scriptures to pray to hear upon the same reason and indeed this doctrine as it hath kept some from the Chancel that is from receiving it hath kept others from the Church that is from hearing and this again hath kept some from the Scripture resolving to keep company with none but such as are altogether without sin and therefore the light within is their rule 3. God requires no such condition he craves faith repeatance and new obedience on my part but not that my companion should have the same or then I to be refused and my offering not to be accepted one Christian shall never be bound hand and foot and cast into utter darkness because another of the company wants the wedding garment 4. It is plainly against that Text 1 Cor. 11.29 he that ea●eth and drinketh unworthily eateth and drinketh damnation or judgement to HIMSELF therefore not at all to another he that prepares himself aright need not fear what the unworthiness of others can do against him 5. It would clearly take away this Sacrament out of the Church who would prepare himself to come if he should be cursed by ano●hers unworthiness or approach that table though full of faith with boldness except he knew that every heart at the table were as holy as his own and others that were as full of faith as he might hang down the head least his unworthiness procure unto them a judgement and so the devotion even of the devout should receive a bar ●nd be shut from all comfortable actings and holy duties This is not spoken to countenance prophaness but to inform the weak and tender conscience there being Laws in the Church to d●b●rth scandalous from that table and also th● ignorant which may and ought to be put in execution by the Church Officer after his admonishing the one and instructing the other for to exclude either of these without tryal save in case of necessity is arrogant and rash and without Authority but upon certain knowledge to deba● such is both religiously and lawfully done No Minister shall in any wise admit to the receiveing of the Holy Communion any of his cure or flock which be openly known to live in sin notorious without repen●ance nor any who have maliciously and openly contended with their neighbours until they shall be reconciled c. The scandalous are found out by the ear and secluded by Law the ignorant cannot be found but by discourse conference or examination which leads in the second part of the Question Whether private examination be necessary There is a twofold examination in reference to the Sacrament of the Supper 1. In respect of God 1 Cor. 11.28 men are bound and it is necessary for them to examine themselves 2. In respect of the Church that the ignorant and unlearned make not that Ordinance undervalued the Question is of this latter and amounts to this Whether the Church Officer may lawfully debar a sober pious Christian or one of whom he neither sees nor hears evil purely upon the account he will not submit to his examination a practice of late too commonly known nay several thousands have been excluded except they came under the tryal not of the Church Officers only but of his lay-Elders an office not heard of in the Church until these late years and are parts of the Church no more then those Anticks whose mouths supplie the places of spouts unto the temples but to let them pass it is denied private examination in this sence is not necessary For 1. The Scripture would have given some Item of it when the nature of the Sacrament is stated and examination required 1 Cor. 11. No word that tended in the least to this is written but every man enjoyned to examine himself 2. It cannot be shewed that ever the priests examined the fitness even legal of those that aproached the Paschal and yet the danger of unworthy receiving the one seems as great as the other 2 Chro. 30.20 1 Cor. 11.30 3. That Parable Matth. 22.9 is against this practice wherein the servants are appointed to bring in all that they could find without Order to try if they had the wedding garment the want of which condemned the party but not the servant Yet by the Law of the Church particularly of the Church of England none are to be admitted to that Ordinance until they have given sufficient testimony of their knowledge in the principles of the Christian religion Which Law though not expressed in Scripture in direct terms yet consequently it is approved In regard that the Church Officers are called Watchmen Stewards Shepherds c. which titles denote what a care they ought to have of their people or flock This even this being not taught unto the people was a firebrand of division between the Pastor and his people in these last days examination being by them required and that rigidly not declaring it as necessary in respect of the Church which would have satisfied the minds of all sober Christians but as from Scripture when the people knew that no such thing was required and they themselves not being able ●o produce the Text wherein in it was enjoyned It was pretty sport to hear men publickly and privately affirming that those who submitted not themselves to examination ought to be secluded for breach of that Order or discipline they themselves erected and yet not conforming themselves to those Orders that by Law had been established By which two things to all of understanding occurred First their arrogance to make Laws and compel the people without authority to submit under the pain of le●ser excommunication
or Superiours 1. Tim. 2.1 There are five sorts of persons cheifely need our prayers and we sin if they want our charity when we aproach the throne of God they are Magistrates or Princes Ministers or Evangelists Apostates or backsliders Heathens or Idolaters Saints or Religious 1. For Kings Magistrates or Princes whether we be under good or bad governours that God that hath set them over us commands prayer for them from us 1 Tim. 2.1 good men have done it for wicked cruel and Idolatrous Princes Gen. 20.17 Dan. 4.19 Dan. 6.21 also for good kings 1 King 1.29 and thy are the sonnes of Belial that do it not For 1. Their frailties and Imper●ections stand in need of it kings are but men in nature and have their failings witnesse Davids Ambition Hezekias forgetfullnesse Iosias rashnesse and Solomons wantonnesse Non tutum est semper bonum dare consilium Regibus was an old saying 2. Their dangers and their labours to procure our good deserves it they are higher then others so their care is greater then others no crown but hath its crosse if not visibly to their subjects yet sensibly to themselves Bonus Rex servus est publicus It was a true speech and had much under it that was uttered by the Emperour Trajan that the Sea and the Empire were pleasant to look upon but troublesome and dangerous to be upon 3. Our Christian profession binds us to it If we would not be thought to be infringers of the laws and examples Ch●ist and his Saints have layd before us we are not to forget our Soveraign when we minde our selves and justly may God shut that part of our prayer from him that is not attended with this piece of loyalty We may think it a slight matter to oppose magistracy but God is strong and mighty to uphold his own ordinance and through justice seldome can we see Traitors go in peace to their graves Scripture shews us that Zimry had no peace who slew his master 2 Kings 9.31 and though they should scape on earth first or last they shall receive damnation Rom. 13.2 This is a scripture truth and a secure or deluded conscience shall never be able to ward its blows Let a prince be a hunter after Innocent blood Let him be a known Hypocrite Let it be known that God hath forsaken him let it be known that an evil and wicked spirit possesses him let it be known that God hath designed another to succeed hi● all which we know to be true of Saul yet who can put forth his hand against him and be guiltlesse seeing he is the Lords annointed 1 Sam. 26.9 Every true Christian will pray with David the Lord forbid that I should v. 11. The Macedonians had a law that condemned and put to death five of their nearest kinred that were once convicted of treason In a word our goods our bodys our lives and our pray●rs are to be laid out in the service of our Prince or else we are traitors to the King of Kings and may be punished by his deputy here on earth 4. The good or the evil that they may be the cause of may force us to i● An oversight in the general may ruine a whole army a single errour in the pilot may sinke a rich ship Kings and princes like great oaks if they fall will spoyle thousands of the lower shrubs that are about them they are the eyes of the nations to prevent dangers and perceive conveni●nces It went ill with him in scripture that cryed out My head My head 2 King 4 19. Regis ad exemplum totus componit●r orbis It is observable in sacred writing that Israel after their rebellion from the house of David never had good Kings all of them being successively wicked which made the people desperatly prophane untill God swept all away for ever but in the house of Iudah which did cleave to the house of David we find good Princes making their people good and sometimes wicked Princes makeing their people sinners such influence hath the lives of Princes upon the practises of their subjects which consideration will make the Christian pray for his soveraigns happinesse 5. Their true title and lawfull succession calls for it since in their persons they must dye like men to avoyd future danger we are to pray for their successours that God would out of their loyns raise up seed to sit upon the throne the first Saint we find praying for a King is Abraham and his prayers are for the Kings seed Gen. 20.17 a local alleigance we owe to every Prince in whose country we are ●nd a natural to that Soveraign under whom we are born ' a great part of which consists in this doing for Abraham was a stranger and a sojourner in Gerar when he prayed for posterity to King Abimelech 6. The best of Saints both to the good and wicked Kings have done it 1 King 1.34 1 Sam. 10.24 2 King 11.12 Act. 28.29 Vivat Rex or regnes in aeternum was a usuall complement the Pinces of Persia gave their Heathen kings D●● 5. 10. Dan. 6 6. the same is used by Daniel A man greatly beloved then to the same kings and by all true subjects to this day throughout the world whether Christian or Heathen Dij te serv●nt was the Romans prayer at the Installment of their Emperours D●j te servent Feliciter Imperator es cumfilio im peres was the prayer of the inhabitants of Tysdrum when Gordianus was proclaimed Emperor Antonie Pie Dij te servent Antonie Cl●ments Dij te servent Antonie Clemens Dij te servent vincis Inimicos hostes exuperas Dij te tuentur did the Roman Senators cry out having read some letters from Antonius their Emperour and God save the K●ng was the usual petiton of the Hebrews at the anoynting of their Kings and the same is the acclamation of the Ch●istian at the Co●onation of their Princes What shall we say since the days of Gambrivins who according to Authors was the first that ever ware a crown or royall Diademe never had people mor● reason to pray Give the King thy judgments O God then the people of these nations and for such as do is not let them know that the subjects of the South shall rise up in judgment against them and condemne them at the last 2. Ministers pastors or Evangelists must be partakers of our prayers and ought to be remembered of us when we appea● before God When those Cedars as Sylvarus and Timotheus men of the highest rank seeme to be pilla●s in the ca●t●h of God want the prayers of the people and call for it 1 Thes. 5.25 Rom. 15.30 Ephes. 6.18 19. Heb. 13.18 P●il 1.19 shall others that are but as shrubs and in comparison of them seem to be but smal pins in the temple of the Lord go without our prayers These things ought not so 〈◊〉 b● For 1 Of all men they have the greatest discouragements in the works of their