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A25383 Apospasmatia sacra, or, A collection of posthumous and orphan lectures delivered at St. Pauls and St. Giles his church / by the Right Honourable and Reverend Father in God, Lancelot Andrews ... Andrewes, Lancelot, 1555-1626. 1657 (1657) Wing A3125; ESTC R2104 798,302 742

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which is taxatio diet 1. For the first we see That reason consenteth to that which Salomon saith Preach 8. 6. That there is an appointed time for every action under the Sunne but especially 〈◊〉 it be a matter of weight and serious businesse indeed Then reason wills that we should make speciall choyce of a time when secluding all other things we may intend only and wholly to it alone For if we should not have a certain time appointed to us we of our selves are so carelesse that we would make accompt of very few dayes or none at all to sanctifie unto the Lords worship This matter then of Gods worship and Religion being a matter of our soul is the most weighty and serious businesse that can be in as much as the soul is the worthiest part of us And therefore it concerneth the freehold of our souls so neerly that if we neglect or set light by it Agitur de anima our soul is in jeopardy But if we set light of our soul which being so precious a thing is worth looking to yet in another regard it is a weighty duty and therefore we ought to be carefull of it because God is worthy of this service and duty which is opus Sabati wherefore indeed there is no time of our life but that we should think chiefly of this as the 〈◊〉 held That a man ought perpetually to be present and conversant with God And in our words send up short prayers and praises to God And that this is a bounden duty daily to be performed it is agreeable to the word of God Numb 28. which was shewed in their daily sacrifice every morning and evening offering oblations and incense to God But who is it that is able all the dayes of his life night and day to intend his businesse as he ought for this belonged as a duty not only unto the Jews but unto every Christian now Seeing this one businesse is to be intended above all other and every thing is then best ordered when we appropriate and apply the time and our studies only and wholly to it as the proverb is Quod unice id unum quod solicite id solum agas for this is the wisdome of man in matters of this life Then we must needs hearken to the counsell of the Prophet Psal. 46. 10. Desistite be still or leave off other things that ye may know I am the Lord c. And to the advise of the Apostle 1 Cor. 7. 5. we may leave off other matters and must consent so to doe for a time that the more fully and wholly we may be given to prayer and fasting This is called of some Induciae seculo a truce taken with the world for a time that not being troubled with the affairs thereof we may only set before us as much as our weak natures can our duty in the service of God which is our sanctification Therefore God appointed to this spiritual work a time at large that is appointed some time in which only and wholy Adam by necessity was enjoyed to this work Wherefore by all conveyance of reason by a much greater necessity must we know that we also must have a time at large for this businesse 2. The second point is That it was necessary not only that there should be a time at large that is some time of our dayes but also a certain set time or day appointed for it for otherwise God should have slender service or scarce any at all for if it were left at our liberty we would take liberty to serve him when we list and when we could intend it and when we had nothing else to doe Therefore one said well according to St. Peter Christiana libert as pallium est pessimis moribus And I referre me to your judgement how well God will be served if there were no time certainly appointed seeing this which is set down is so ill kept Those therefore which urge Christian liberty and would not have a set certain day but every day a Sabath they would have God stand at that portion of time and service which mens devotion and liberality would afford This then would be the inconvenience of uncertainty in this matter that perpetuum Sabatum jejunium would prove none at all And therefore God saw it necessary that we must have a set and a certain time And in this the Law of Nature agreeth with the Law of God for the Heathen had their statae feriae set and appointed holy dayes and the Hebrews call their holy-dayes by the name of Mogne which is a staid certain time still unmovable not at random but set down and appointed firm and perpetual 3. Now we are come to the third point That it must be one of the seven in the week which came not by natures light but by Gods ordinance his word setting it down therefore was it told Adam that he should tell it to the Posterities to come By which means the Gentills came to the knowledge of it and held it by tradition for in their books we shall plainly see it Lucianus testifieth that as the Jews kept their holy-day in which they worship God on the Saturday the Turks on the Friday the Egyptians on the Thursday the Assyrians on the Wednesday the Persians on the Tuesday The Grecians on the Monday And Christians now doe keep their day of worship the Sunday and first day of the week So that in all quarters and parts of the Earth every day and part of time is kept as a set day of divine worship And for the seventh day we shall see that the Pythagoreans had received a glimmering of this knowledge for they called the number of 7 numerum quietis and the number hallowed of God and the divine number or Gods number which they had no doubt not by the light of Nature and reason but by tradition from their Elders and so delivered it to their Posterity It is strange which Eusebius recordeth out of two Heathenish Writers 13. de preparatione Evangelii The one of Linus verse 2. That God made and finished all things the seventh day the other of Hesiod we agreeing to that saith that therefore the seventh day is the Lords holy-day And on the seventh day therefore the Gentiles called on their Gods and had their meetings in it and called the number of 7 Minerva by the name of their God Macrobius affirmeth that the Gentiles did mean by Pan and Jano and all other names of Gods only the great God Apollo as their chief God whom they served the seventh day But this is our rule most plainly revealed from Gods word that it is his will that we should keep the seventh day holy for seeing all the dayes are his he should have done no injurie if he had appointed and dedicated all the dayes of the week to be spent and imployed on his service yet he hath not done so St. Augustine saith That if God had