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

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doe celebrate it as a memoriall of the beginning of a new Creation Yea ob excellentiam tanti miraculi propriè In Ps 23. dies Dominica appellatur saith another And indeed the work of the day is the ground saith Bishop Lakes of the hallowing In T●esis 46. 43. 45. of the day whether it be weekly monthly or yeerly as particulars evince in Scriptures and Stories now when God doth any rare great and remarkeable workes hee will be honoured with a Commemoration day for that work if the work concerne the whole by the whole Church and by a part if it concerne a part by which practice or work Gods will is understood which guideth the Church where the ☞ precept is wanting This is a sacred rule observeable in the institution of all sacred Feasts both divine and humane saith that Father Now God raising Christ from the dead upon the first day of the week this remarkable work was to have that day a day of Commemoration above and before all other 1 Because it was the first notable work of God immediately following the Jewish Sabbath which being to cease the next glorious work of God following must needs bee the ground of another Festivall and in stead of the other for it is a rule in mortality saith the reverend Father Bishop Lakes that none in reason can deny due respect unto the worke and therefore cannot deny the hallowing of the day to wit on which it was wrought 2 The raising up of Christ from the dead declared him mightily to bee the sonne of God Rom. 1. 4. God fulfilling hereby to the children the promise made to their Fathers hee being manifest thus to be the Sonne of God his begotten Sonne in the day of his resurrection as the Conquerour of hell death the power of the grave and of Satans Dominion Act. 13. 31. 32. 13. and preferred above men and Angels Heb. 1. 5. 3 This is the work above all others which the Scripture so often mentioneth for the Fathers glory in his Son in that he raised him up from the dead Rom. 1. 4. Gal. 1. 5. Act. 2. 24. 32. 3. 26 4. 10. 10. 40. and in many other Scriptures 4 This is it by which Jesus is made both Lord and Christ to sit upon the throne of David Act. 20. 30 31 36. 5 It is the work of our perfect redemption and full justification Rom. 4. 25. 6 This was the act which to beare witnesse of he principally chose his Apostles Act. 10. 41. 1. 22. which work the Apostles first taught to the Jewes Act. 2. and to the Gentiles Act. 10. and for which they first chiefly suffered 7 This is the act on which dependeth all our comfort and without assurance whereof S. Paul telleth us his preaching was in vaine and our faith in vaine 1 Cor. 15. 14. and so our Christianitie nothing worth 8 This his resurection was to his Apostles and Disciples full of comfort and that which is most joyfull to all Christians for our justification Rom. 4. 25. as also for the hope of our eternall salvation 1 Pet. 1. 3. 3. 21. for if Christ had not risen wee had beene all in our sinnes 1 Cor. 15. 17. his birth his life his suffering had done us no good Therefore from the beginning hath the Church held this ever for the most remarkable work of Christ and to keep this day Festivall on which hee arose from the dead For that it being the most remarkable work of God next and immediately after the Jewish Sabbath as I said it required a Festivall and that within the space of a week within which space God from the creation reserved a day to himselfe and it s not fit that under the Gospel so glorious a work of our redemption by Christs resurrection for the restauration of the world should be more seldome remembred upon a set day then was the work of creation of the world before and under the Law CHAP. VIII Of the divers opinions concerning the beginning and ending of the Lords day and wherein conscience may rest it selfe THere are divers opinions about the beginning and ending of this our Christian Sabbath Some hold it from midnight to midnight this is the judgement of very learned Divines some say it beginneth in the Morning and so holdeth on till the next Morning not many of this opinion as being weakest and farthest from the truth Some hold it to begin at the Evening and to end at the Evening and of this judgment are many ancient Fathers and sundry Councels And the ancient observation of the Saturday in the afternoone as a preparative thereto may seeme to confirme as much But I am perswaded if we keep the day from the Morning to the Evening the consciences of men neede not trouble them about any other curious search So that there be a religious preparation to it and a religious care in ending of it not rushing into it with unsanctified hearts nor concluding it with profanesse For the nights are given for bodily rest and the day for labour as the Psalmist speaketh When the Sunne ariseth man goeth forth to his labours and work untill the Evening Psal 104. 22. 23. When the night commeth no man can work saith our Saviour Joh. 9. 4. Now a day for labour amongst the Jewes was twelve houres Joh. 11. 9. from six to six Matt. 20. 1. 2. 8. but otherwise it was from the beginning of the Morning light Gen. 1. 5. to the darke of the Evening Judg. 10. 9. 14. 16. Joh. 8. 29. Prov. 7. 9. And wee see in the fourth Commandement that albeit as it is held a naturall day doth comprehend the night and day yet is that time only mentioned in which men are to labour and to doe all that they have to doe in the six dayes which is on the day time and not in the night And so as they do well who labour painfully and honestly in the day light and take the night for their quiet repose and rest in the six dayes In like manner do they well who religiously serve the Lord Christ in the light of the day though the night before and the night after they thankfully take benefit of the same for corporall rest Neither doe we read that any were complayned of or punished as breakers of the Sabbath but for their transgression and sinne committed in the day time Our Saviour Christ honoured this our Lords day with his visible presence among his Disciples and followers on the day time At the Sun rising early in the morning Mark 16. 2. 9. then after in the afternoone continuing till the day was farre spent towards the Evening Luk. 24. 29. John 20. 19. upon the same day at supper time yea I confesse it is probable to bee somewhat late within the Evening and that space properly called the beginning of the night but not farre within And wee read how the Jewes on the day time kept their Sabbath
the Commandements of God 1. Cor. 14. 37. And it is acknowledged of all that the whole Catholick Church from that time till this day hath duly observed the same Therefore is it one of those things commanded by Christ to be observed and taught by his Apostles which the whole world hath so religiously kept hitherto And it will not bee denied that such an universall religious observation can have any lesse ground for it than the authority of God himselfe being so unanimously kept in all ages for these 1600 yeeres without gaine-saying as our Homily avoucheth very plainely Argument 5. EIther himselfe instituted this day for his publick worship or left it to others to appoint it for that end But he left it not to others Therefore he instituted it himselfe for his publick worship That he left it not to others to institute wee may thus reason 1 God his Father when he had ordained his worship did not leave to Moses nor to Israel his Church to appoint a solemn day for it but he himselfe instituted it Exod. 20. 8. When the Idolaters in Israel Exod. 32. did invent a worship they that invented it instituted a day for it verse 5. Jeroboam devised a worship which when he had done he ordained a day for it 1 King 12. 32. 33. So did Nebuchadnezzar devise an Idoll and a worship for it and appointed the dedication and day of the solemne worship Dan. 3. 2. The miscreant Prophet Mahomet as hee gave a Law and prescribed a worship so hee himselfe instituted his day for the same and did not leave it to the arbitrary will and pleasure of his Worshippers to ordaine and appoint Therefore from all this I conclude unlesse Christ should doe as his Father did and be lesse carefull of a day for the solemnitie of his set worship than the very Idolaters hee must bee the Institutor of this day which we observe to him For it cannot be proved that at any time in any age of the world that any publick worship was ever invented to be observed but the very Authour and Inventor thereof was also himselfe the Institutor of the day for that worship not leaving it to any others will to appoint the same for him 2 If Christ left it to others as to his Apostles then either before his ascension during his abode with them which is absurd to conceit or after his ascension if any doe think so then it will follow that from his resurrection to his ascension the space of six weeks the Church had no set day under Christ publickly to doe him solemne service For the other seventh day hee took away by his lying that whole day in the grave so that if he appointed no other day for it himselfe the Church had then for that space no such day But as I have proved Christ blessed the day of his resurrection and in this space from his resurrection to his ascension the Apostles and Church observed it And therefore he ordeined it and left it not to them 3 Wee are to understand that there are some circumstances about Gods worship which he hath ever reserved to his own authoritie and never left them determinable to any but to himselfe such bee these which doe concurre about the observation of the Lords day The first circumstance of this kinde is that which concerneth the very substance for time of performing of publick worship whether one day in a yeere in a moneth in a week or whether a part or some few houres of the day be to be set apart for his service or the whole day bee his The determination of this time is substantiall and God alwayes appointed the same as the ordaining of the Sabbath day and other holy dayes set apart by God doe manifest The second circumstance is that whereof there is no reason to sway or guide the judgement this way or that way but the will of God must bee needfull to the determining of it Such a circumstance is the proportioning of time and rest on the Lords day for Gods service For if reason could regulate it then should it bee the Law of nature but by his written Law and revealed will hath God ordered it The third circumstance is that which is of universall observation by all which none but God can impose by his supreme authoritie to which all are alike equally subject And such an universall circumstance is this for observation of this day by all Christian people and by the generall consent of the whole Church of Christ in all ages Therefore this day was not left to the Apostles to be determined but appointed by Christ himselfe Undoubtedly Christ would imitate his Father and set a day for his publick worship as he did And can we suppose our Lord Jesus Christ to bee lesse carefull than the Turkish Mahomet or other Idoll Worshippers in ordaining a solemn day for his publick service But if this day which we observe be not of his appointment then have wee none for all other dayes are the ordinances of the Church and observed only by humane authoritie 4 That which the Apostles did observe not only by inspiration but by way of injunction and command from Christ here on earth through the Holy Ghost that hee ordained and left it not to them to ordaine But the Apostles did observe the Lords day not only by inspiration but by way of injunction and commandement from Christ here on earth through the Holy Ghost And therefore he left it not to his Apostles The Minor is thus proved from Act. 1. 2. where it is said that Christ Jesus through the Holy Ghost gave Commandements to his Apostles in which Commandements is included the Lords day as before is proved which Commandement with the rest he gave them through the Holy Ghost that is he in giving them did convey his holy Spirit into them to make them to understand them to retaine them in memory to make conscience to observe them and to teach others to observe them as commanded from him for so much these words through the Holy Ghost import when hee gave them Commandements and spake of the things pertaining to the Kingdome of God So that through the Holy Ghost here is not meant as afterwards the divine inspiration of the Spirit directing them as occasion served to ordaine things expedient and profitable for the Churches of Christ which he himselfe immediately commanded not but left them to them as by the wisdome of his spirit they should be informed But here is to be understood the then operation of his Spirit upon them to receive the Commandemets which at that present in his own person he gave them which they should observe and teach others to observe as his own Commandements and as he himselfe had charged them to doe in Matt. 28. 20. when as here in Acts 1. he was to depart from them and to ascend up to his Father Of other things after Christs ascension the Apostles spake from the
day were to shew their delight in the Lord count the day honourable to the Lord and learn to expresse self denyall of their own thoughts delights and work Is 58. 13 14. 6. On this day they did not fast Judith 8. 6. but made merry for it was called the day of their gladnesse Num. 10. 10. wherein they might cheerfully refresh themselves and send relief unto the poor after such former duties done towards the Evening but this mirth was for their understanding of the Word Neh. 8. 9 10 11 12. It is true that this holy day to the Lord was the feast of Tabernacles but why they might not now do so on the Sabbath day I see nothing to the contrary For the strict precepts in the Wildernesse were out of date and the Primitive Church who observed our Christian Sabbath in the roome of the Jewish did make a feast after the end of Divine service See for the observation of that Sabbath Philo Judaeus de vita Mosis de vita Contempla De legatione sua ad Cajum C●sarem cited by Wall●us de Sab. pag. 127. 134. 135. 136. See also Dav. Kimch●on Psa 92. cited by Goniarus in his Book de Sab. pag. 81. SECTION XXVII Of Judaizing and true understanding thereof IT pleased some to taxe others of Judaisme concerning the Sabbath day And why of Judaisme know they why Judaisme was from the Jews but the Sabbath was long before this name became peculiar to a single tribe in Israel Judah so called Seeing they fasten as they must Judaisme upon the Jews let us see after this Tribe was separated from the ten tribes of Israel how they did Sabbatize for so we shall behold their Judaisme that we may judge with righteous judgement For the better understanding hereof let us consider the Jews as before Christs coming when he was come and afterwards in the times following Of these we must have a twofold consideration as faultlesse or faulty 1. As Faultlesse this is no Judaizing for in our discourse its taken in ill part They ever held and do hold the fourth Commandment perpetuall and so ought we as is before proved They held the seventh day Sabbath from the Creat●on which they had a warrant from God to do till the Resurrection of Christ so farre faultlesse without Judaizing in an ill sense As faulty and thus I. Before the coming of Christ we shall read that they were 1. Observers of the Sabbath in a bare rest from servile work but then doing their own waies finding their own pleasures not delighting themselves in the Lord nor labouring for Self-denyall on that day Of this their Sabbatizing the Prophet Isaiah speaketh who herein laboured to reform them Isai 58. 13 14. 2. Great prophaners of the Sabbath as appeareth by the Prophets complaints Jer. 17. 27. Ezech. 20. 13 16 21 24 and 22. 8. By Gods punishing of them driving them out of their Land as Captives for tbe breach of the Sabbath 2 Chron. 36. 21. as God had threatned Levit. 26. 34 35. By the Story in Nebe 13. 15 18. where Nehemiah telleth them that the prophaning of the Sabbath was the sin of their Fathers and the evill of their captivity befell them for it Now who with us do so Judaize and Sabbatize both these wayes let the world judge II. At Christs coming we may read That the Jews ceasing from such former prophanesse now were become grosly superstitious not allowing such things to be done as might be lawfully done without the breach of the fourth Commandement as in former instances are cleared This foolish superstition our Saviour confuted by word and by his works And therefore none of sound judgement with us do so Sabbatize our onely care is to observe the Commandement as the godly Jews did shewed in the former 26 Section and as the holy rest requireth in keeping the day holy as set apart for holy ends without putting any holinesse in the day it self III. After Christs Ascension and his Kingdome erected the Jews did faulty in their Sabbatizing 1. In observing the Seventh day from the Creation which was at that time out of date and now not to be observed of any Christian if any do these be Sabbatarians and do properly Judaize and not others It s a foul sin to belye and slander men and to brand them with names of reproach falsly 2. In carnally keeping the Sabbath as the Imperiall Edict of Charles the Great doth speak for these kept it in idlenesse in dancing and revelling See Ignatius in his Epistle to the Magn. St. Augustine de consensu Evangelist lib. 2. cap. 77. This Jewish Sabbatizing let those be blamed for who are guilty and the fault be where it is Thus much for the Mosaicall Sabbath FINIS A Large TREATISE OF THE CHRISTIAN SABBATH THE LORDS DAY also now commonly called SUNDAY By Richard Bernard Rectour of Batcombe Wee ought to doe all things for the truth but nothing against it for hee that striveth against the truth striveth against God for God is truth Let every friend of Christ observe the Lords day Ignatius in Ep. ad Magnes In the honour of Christ his Resurrection Clem. Rom. Const lib. 7. cap. 24. LONDON Printed by R. Bishop for Edward Blackmore at the signe of the Angel in Pauls Church-yard The Contents of this Treatise Chapter 1. THe Preface shewing wherein wee generally consent and agree in one Chap. 2. Of the title of Lords day and of the name Sunday Chap. 3. Of the name Sabbath given to this our Lords day or Sunday Chap. 4. Of the Reasons why it may be so called without offence Chap. 5. In what circuit of time this day hath beene kept to wit weekly with the Reason thereof Chap. 6. Of the first day of the week that it is the Lords day and also the seventh day Chap. 7. Of the time when this first day began to be the Lords day and upon what ground Chap. 8. Of the divers opinions concerning the beginning and ending of the Lords day and wherein Conscience may rest it selfe Chap. 9. The authority is divine by which it was established Chap. 10. It is of divine authority from Christ himselfe Chap. 11. Of some Objections which may be made against it answered Chap. 12. That this day cannot be changed Chap. 13. Of the honourable esteeme of this our Lords day and that it is to be preferred before all other festivall dayes Chap. 14. This day is to be kept holy and the whole day too Chap. 15. How this day is to bee kept holy morally as the ancient Sabbath was kept Chap. 16. How our Lords day was kept in the Apostles dayes and the Primitive times Chap. 17. How our Church would have our Sunday kept holy Chap. 18. How Christian Emperours would have it kept by their Imperiall Constitutions Chap. 19. How it was to be kept by the Edicts of Christian Kings in this our Kingdome Chap. 20. How our late Soveraigne King James and now our King
taken away and David appointed in his stead I am bound by the selfe same Law to honour David Even so is the accommodation of this fourth Commandement Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy this is the Commandement what day soever it be applyed unto The accommodation is the seventh day is the Sabbath day to keep it holy this the Commandement doth binde us unto as long as the day is unchanged and not taken away But the day being altered yet the Commandement abideth and is of forc● when another day is appointed in its roome as is now our Lords day And therefore the Commandement is Remember the Lords day to keep it holy From whence here note that as the taking away of Saul took not away the Commandement of honouring the King and Davids comming in Sauls stead held up the practice of the same Commandement Even so the taking away of the seventh day took not away the authoritie of the fourth Commandement and the bringing in of the Lords day in stead thereof holdeth up the practice of it and by it we are bound to observe this day as the Jewes their day And therefore may we pray as our Church teacheth us Lord have mercy upon us and incline our hearts to keep this Law And that without any Judaizing at all CHAP. XII That this day cannot be changed WEe have heard how that the day is of a divine institution and therefore is not subject to alteration by man The Church saith our learned Doctor On Rev 1. 10. In Cases of Consc ca. 16. In his Thesis Fulk hath no authority to change it so holds Master Perkins Bishop Lakes speaking of Christs resurrection giveth this reason saying as no man can change the work to another day so no man can therefore change the day This is an undoubted rule in Theology saith that learned man 2. What honour and dignity the Holy Ghost giveth unto a day cannot by the authority of man be taken from it to put it upon any other day but the first day of the week hath by the holy spirit this superscription set upon it The Lords day therefore it is not alterable by any to any other day to call that the Lords day 3. If the Church can change it then hath the Church authority to weaken the grounds on which the observation of the day was first setled but that she hath not or else can bring better reasons for the alteration else it were folly to alter it but there never was hitherto nor now is nor ever shall be any such reason to alter the day as there was for setling of the day to wit the blessed resurrection of the Lord Jesus of the excellent glory of which work yee have heard before Therefore the Church cannot change it into another day 4. Whosoever changeth one thing for another in matters of an high nature must have equall power with the first Institutors or receive authority so to do from them But the Church hath not such authority in her selfe or by delegation from either Christ or from his Apostles And therefore cannot change the day 5. It hath beene ratified by many Synods by ancient Councells by Imperiall Constitutions and Edicts of Kings established by the Lawes of Kingdomes and Countreys as it cannot be altered 6. The long continued custome of observing it from the first day in the Apostles time by the whole Primitive Church and by all Christian Churches since in all ages for these 1600 yeares without any gain-saying maketh it unalterable it being observed upon such grounds as is before mentioned To conclude to what purpose is it for any now to hold the change thereof when never from the beginning there was ever any one particular Church any Synod or Councell or any Orthodox writer in ancient times attempted it Nor ever durst any power on earth goe about it But all the holy Fathers and piously learned have with free consent endeavoured the setling and honouring of this day as may appeare in their writings and praises of the same as shall be manifest in the next chapter It is not therefore changeable either absolutely or practically nor have Christians at any time saith Bishop White judged it reasonable or convenient to alter such an ancient and well grounded custome which is commonly reputed to bee an Apostolicall tradition To this let me adde in the last place the judgement of that reverend Authour of the Antidote That seeing the observation of the Lords day hath beene confirmed by so many Constitutions Ecclesiasticall and Imperiall and hath withall continued with such uniforme consent through the whole Christian world for so many ages ever since the Apostles times the Church not to dispute what she may or may not doe ex plenitudine potestatis ought not to attempt the altering of it to any other day of the week CHAP. XIII Of the honourable esteeme of this our Lords day and that it is to be preferred before all other festivall dayes THere be many reasons to manifest the honourablenesse of this day and to preferre it before all other Festivalls 1. The blessed Apostle hath exalted it with the glorious title of the Lords day Rev. 1. 10. The Lord Christ his day as Bishop White speaks a title proper and peculiar Page of his book 208. to it Now things and persons named the Lords are sacred and venerable saith he in the highest degree which day was generally and religiously observed of all Christians And albeit the Apostles took advantage to goe and teach in the Jewish Synagogues upon their Sabbath yet saith Doctor Pocklington for which he citeth Eusebius and Page 11. of his Sermon Ignatius the blessed Martyrs in the Primitive Church by the doctrine and example of S. Paul and the Apostles so unfeignedly abhorred the observation of the Jewish Sabbath that they esteemed the observers thereof and the contemners of the Lords day the very sonnes of perdition and enemies of our Saviour and sellers of Christ So dis-regarded they the one and honoured the other 2. The ancient Fathers and others have given it tearmes of honour Justine Martyr called it Sunday as many others In Orat. ad Anton. after him no doubt as the chiefe of dayes as the Sunne is the most glorious to our eyes above all other planets In Cod. Just. lib. 3. tit 12. it is called venerabilis dies Solis the venerable and much honoured Sunday as Bishop White expresseth Against Brab page 197. Ad Magnes it Ignatius the Martyr who lived at least thirty yeares in the dayes of S. John and was his hearer calleth the day the Queene and Paramount of dayes Eusebius See the quotation of these in B. ●hite pag. 209. calleth it the principall and the first S. Chrysostome a royall day Greg. Nazian saith it is higher than the highest and with admiration wonderfull above all other dayes S. Basil the first fruits of dayes Chrysologus the primate of dayes A day above all
it whilst the sword was in his owne body and then fell down and dyed in the place the other went back into the Town but dyed also that day 6 Rule The conscience of the sinner is many times a good directer to point out to us that cursed thing If so then what shall we say in this case for divers Prophaners of the Lords day have upon their hurts felt withall the accusation of conscience and acknowledged that those harmes befell them for doing such things as they did on the Lords day Some dying bewailed their sinnes others living made good use thereof and herein reformed themselves of which examples may bee brought to make this good From all this which hath been delivered it may appeare I hope that it is not rash presumption nor any vaine and prophane observation to take notice with reverence of the immediate the mediate and casuall judgements which happen upon the Lords day for the better stirring of us up to the sanctification of the whole day with readinesse of will to the honour of our Lord Jesus so it be without superstition and hypocrisie which such as understandingly know to observe the day aright are farre from both in their intention and practice CHAP. XXVIII Of the serious ponderation of these things CHristian Reader that lovest thine owne soule lay aside all prejudice in the cause labour for selfe-deniall and be in love with the truth Behold the Primitive times weigh the records of our Church the care of Emperours and Kings take notice of the Decrees of Councells and Synods the judgement of the learned in the Church both the Ancient and Moderne the many to the few of a contrary minde and lay to heart these severall kinds of Gods judgements by all which we may see what God and all good men would have us to doe and what to avoid on this day without any Judaizing at all For we doe not put as the Jewes did holinesse in the day as holy in it selfe but as a day set apart by divine authority for holy duties Nor doe we make our rest holy but in the use of it requisite to holy performances of the sacred duties of the day for without cessation from our own profits and pleasures we cannot apply our selves to Divine Services and therefore it being both as a meanes to take us off from the hinderances of holy duties as also a furtherance to the exercises of holinesse which on this day are publickly and privately to be performed we presse the keeping of a Rest If we be well understood I suppose none would say wee did Judaize nor call us by the new reproachfull name of Sabbatarians we hold no more for restraint than holy men have done in former ages Doctor Heylin doth tell us that the fifth and sixth Centurie were fully bent to give the Lords day all fit honour not only in prohibiting all unlawfull pleasures but in commanding a forbearance of some lawfull businesses such as they found to be most hinderance to religious duties S. Augustine long before allowed on the Lords day no wandring about woods and In Serm. de tempo 251. fields with noyse and clamours no telling of tales no playing at dice nor dancing on this day yea he findes fault that whilst they rested from a good work the work of their calling they rested not from vaine and trifling works as if saith he one time of the day were set apart to the Service of God and the rest of the day and the night to their owne pleasures Tertullian before him telleth us how holily the Sabbath was kept after the breaking up of the Congregation as before hath beene delivered And it is worthy to be marked out of Doctor Heylin though he make mention of recreations cap. 3. pag. 84. cap. 4. pag. 123. in his Historie of the Sabbath yet hath he not produced any one testimonie of any one Father for the now conceit of Christian libertie concerning recreations of which he saith after dinner until Evening Prayer and after Evening Prayer untill the time of Supper there is no question to be made but all were practised which were not prohibited But had there beene proofes hee surely would have produced one Father or other for them But come we now to our Opposites See before Mr. Brerewood and see what they say for us without Judaizing and insteed of all the rest I take only here the learned Bishop White who saith thus so farreforth as secular labour and Pag. 226. 227. 261. pastime or recreation are impediments to sacred and religious duties publick or private to bee performed upon holy dayes they are to be avoided and abstinence from them must be used according to the equitie of divine law and the precept of the Church otherwise they are sacrilegious citing Cyrill for his purpose because they are meanes to robbe God of his honour and to hinder the spirituall edification of Christian people and because abstinence from labour and from recreation upon the holy day is subservient to the exercise of religious duties and on the contrary secular labour and pastime are impediments thereunto and if they be acted at such times as the precept of God and the Church prohibit they are prophanations of Gods holy day The same learned Father in another place in his book against Braborn saith that because the Lords day and other holy dayes are devoted to the Service of God and appointed to the exercise of religious and spirituall duties Christian people are to perferre their religious offices of those dayes before their wordly pleasures and profit and the more observant they are hereof the more they please God if other actions of their life be sutable to their devotions yea he saith further and so much as we may say and no more that devout Christians who are so piously affected as that upon the Lords day and other holy dayes they doe resolve to sequester and retire themselves from secular businesses and ordinary pleasures and delights to the end they may more freely attend the service of Christ and apply their mindes to spirituall and heavenly meditations are to be commended and encourged For the doing thereof is a work of grace and godlinesse pleasing and acceptable to God for which he quoteth Col. 3. 2. Joh. 6. 27. Object Let none say that flesh and blood cannot apply it selfe so holily an whole day together Answ For first flesh and blood shall not inherit the kingdome of heaven 1 Cor. 15. 50. Secondly we must strive to doe by grace what wee cannot doe by nature else we shall never doe at any time true service to God according to any of his Commandements Thirdly God must not loose his right of service from us because we have procured to our selves wretched natures soone weary of all spirituall duties Fourthly lazie servants can hardly undergoe any labour much lesse to hold out a day yet the awe they beare to their earthly Masters maketh them to doe
thankfulnesse to the uttermost of our power withall our hearts mindes soules and strength to serve him and to take the benefit of such times as bee set apart for his glroy and worship and to be taken up therein with spirituall delight in such service to the Lord our God For grace is more binding by the Gospel upon the regenerate than the Law can bee forceable upon naturall men If therefore the Law doth not admit of idle sports on the Sabbath then much lesse the Gospel which doth more enlarge our hearts with the love of Christ and more forceably takes us off from making any provision for the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof if in truth it be powerfully in us 6 All sports and pastimes on the Lords day are to be forborne whilst the lawfulnesse and unlawfulnesse is in question by the most judicious and greatest Divines at home and abroad and the same not decided for lawfull by any of the Fathers Councells or Synods but rather held unlaw●ull for in such a case to forbeare is safe without sin but if any one shall sport play or use pastimes on this day must either side with the one sort or with the other and yet unresolved because the controversie stands undetermined by some indifferent Umpire or he doth presume of his own knowledge to be able to judge in such a doubtfull case to lead his conscience to doe such things which is both too high a conceit and very dangerous or else is daringly over-bold in love to sports and pastimes to follow his pleasure and will whilst his conscience must needs remaine in suspence and doubting which is no little sinne Rom. 14. 23. and is no small signe that such a one is a lover of pleasure more than a lover of God in that he dareth to attempt the wounding of conscience and the breaking off of his sweet peace between God and him by so short a time of carnall delights For acts in doubtfull cases cannot be without sinne and to sport with sinne is folly which without pardon is the soules deadly wound and destruction of the whole man 7 Nothing is more warrantable to be done on this day and on this our day under the Gospel than was on their day under the Law understanding the Law in its originall and set apart from the accessory precepts added thereto and durable only for a time But under the Law no sports or pastimes for corporall pleasure were allowed on their Sabbath day and therefore to be forborne on this day For concerning sports on their Sabbath wee read not in any place of the old Testament either for allowance or practice thereof Indeed we read in Exod. 32. 6. 18 19. of eating drinking and rising up to play singing and dancing but it was upon a day made for the service of the golden Calfe and honour thereof but condemned by S. Paul 1 Cor. 10. 7. and greivously punished by the command of Moses Exod. 32. 28. we also read but when there was no King in Israel Iudg. 17. 1. 18. 1. 19. 1. 21. 25. and when every one did that which seemed good in his owne eyes that the daughters of Shilo on a Festivall day of the Lord came out in dances Quod erat saith Peter Martyr on this place Die Festo abuti Neither doe wee read that it was a mixt dancing of men and women together as our dances pleaded for commonly be contrary to all the instances in holy writ We may also heare what that learned Bishop White telleth us how the Rabbins out of the Page 138. Talmud affirme that it was permitted yong people to recreate and sport themselves upon some part of the Sabbath with running leaping or dancing provided that it bee in honour of the Sabbath Note this well then not for meere ☜ corporall recreation as our youths use their sports But what credit can be given to these late Rabbins For it is well knowne that the Jewes in the time of the Fathers became prophaners of their Sabbaths by revelling and the like as learned Doctor Prideaux witnesseth and therefore their example not to be imitated or regarded 8 Needlessely to doe on the Lords day what may if out propably hazard sinning and so the provoking of God to anger is a great presumption that the hearts of such are not possessed with that holy feare which maketh men ever jealous of their doings lest peradventure they should at any time offend God But for such to sport on the Lords day as have vigour strength and health to expresse the bodies activity in their pleasurable delights for of such the controversie only is it is needlesse whether you respect their bodies or their mindes and spirits And therefore of such are sports to bee forborne this day 1 They are not needfull for the body If the body hath lost any strength by weekly labour stirring sports and pastimes which are commonly performed with violent motion cannot repaire the lost strength First they are not the ordinary meanes appointed by God for recovery thereof but wholsome food quiet rest moderate sleep good physick and the like as the cause shall require Secondly sports and pastimes are commonly so violently pursued as mens bodies grow thereby the more weary and so in stead of repayring decay their strength Thirdly for ordinary and common refreshment for the reviving of the body to returne with more lightsomenesse and alacrity to work God hath given the painfull labourer rest and sleep in the night for every dayes labour a nights rest for six dayes six nights as in his wisdome he thought fit and sufficient according to that in the Psal 104. 22. 23. Man works on the day and rests at Evening But now for bodily strength if weakned by labour in the weeke before to refresh it for the weeke following a man hath first the Saturday night then the whole Sunday from servile labour and lastly Sunday night two nights and a day for corporall rest so that to an healthy body apt for labour recreations sports and pastimes this day are needlesse for if every nights rest in the week day can by Gods blessing preserve strength recover the decay of it and make it apt for new labour then much more two nights and a day if we pray for a blessing thereon Fourthly The persons addicted to sporting may be reduced to three sorts either to industriously-painfull or to slack-handed idle and lazy in worke or to the holy day persons such as either have little or nothing to doe living idlely like Droanes in an Hive upon the sweat of other mens brows inordinate livers not worthy to eat These last neede no recreations but rather a whip for correction The second sort are either rich mens children 2 Thess 3. not wearied with worke whose labour is rather a loytering than painfull diligence or slouthfull servants sports and pastimes to these two rather increase in them idlenesse than a will to work for these