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A65408 The practical Sabbatarian, or, Sabbath-holiness crowned with superlative happiness by John Wells ... Wells, John, 1623-1676. 1668 (1668) Wing W1293; ESTC R39030 769,668 823

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Now then a sacred work is no sleepy work Our enjoyment of God in Ordinances is a day of salvation 2 Cor. 6. 2. It is no night to sleep in It is against reason to 2 Cor. 6. 2. sleep with the Sun shining in our faces In Gospel Ordinances the Sun of righteousness shines in the face of the soul it doth shed its warming and its winning beams upon us The Gospel is called bright John 3. 19. which is to rouse us not to rock us asleep It was once a sharp expostulation of our Saviour What could ye not watch with me Mat. 26. 40. one hour The same query may be put to every sleepy hearer 2. In Ordinances the work we are employed in is opus animae the souls work Will the prisoner fall asleep when he is begging his pardon What are we doing in prayer but suing out our pardons and making up our peace with our offended God The Heir will not fall asleep while he is Evangelium est sublustre quidcam et praegustus clarae lucis sive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. gloriae divinae Quae revelabitur in coelis Chrys hearing the Will read in which he is highly concerned the discoveries of the Gospel are the Fathers will concerning his Children and when we meet in Ordinances we are hearing this will and is that a time of sleep and drowsiness In Ordinances the case of our souls is agitated heaven and eternity are proposed life and death are set before us the silver trumpet of the Gospel sounds and is that a time of sloth and oscitancy Ordinances are the way to life the means of grace not onely the radicall moisture to preserve spiritual life but the very first means to beget it and shall we sleep in Ordinances When the wind blows right shall the mariner betake himself to his bed or to his tackle to drown himself in sloath or to hoise sail and trace the floating Idem sermo aliis est propi●iatio ad vitam aliis condemnatio ad mortem quae diversitas non verbo sed nostrae incredulitati debetur fic admonitiones exhortationes doctrinae castigationes quib●● delinquentes ad recipiscentiam vocantur contemptores et impaenitentes judicantur in die ultimo Muse waves Every opportunity of grace is a good wind for heaven and shall we sleep away that seasonable and precious gale How then shall we finish our voyage to eternity We hear Proclamations with great attention Every Sermon is Christs Proclamation to proclaim pardon to all penitent sinners who will come in and lay down the weapons of sin and lust and submit themselves to the Scepter and Obedience of Jesus Christ and shall we sleep in hearing this royal Proclamation It is very observable what awakening and heart-penetrating expressions the Prisoner uses at the bar and there is nothing unobserved by him but with much greediness and attention he hearkens to the Evidence of the Witnesses to the Verdict of the Jury to the Sentence of the Judge and no wonder it is for his life Now the word we hear it is that which shall judge us at the great day John 12. 48. By it our eternal estate shall be disposed either to life or death that blessed word shall cast or crown us and shall we sleep away this word Shall it not then condemn us for mutes and so to be pressed to eternal death Our life our peace our souls are all concerned in the entertainment of this word and we sleep and dream it away surely greater frenzy cannot befall the Children of men Sleeping in Ordinances is a great affront to the richest priviledge we enjoy on this side heaven The time of worship is the souls Term time a few choyce minutes to gain glory in and shall we sleep away these golden filings of time these sweet Veniente Christo mors vigebat et regr●bat sed Christus ejus vigorem et regn●m sustulit et destruxit Alap opportunities of the soul when Christ is wooing us to court us to a Crown Did we ever understand the true value of Ordinances 1. Ordinances they are the purchases and price of Christs blood that we have a Gospel to hear divine truth to entertain this is the Revenue of Christs death The Apostle tells us Christ brought life and immortality to light through the Gospel 2 Tim. 1. 10. Christ by dying brought this life Christ by descending into the dark grave brought this immortality to light And the Gospel is the full declaration of these glorious atchievements And Christ by his Heb. 10. 20. blood hath opened a new and living way for prayer to the throne of grace Heb. 10. 20. And shall a priviledge purchased with blood be slept away We will not throw away Diamonds fetcht from far with care and hazzard nor cast away Rings left us as tokens of love by endeared friends why should we sleep away opportunities not purchased with treasure but tears not with wealth but blood nay the best blood which ever ran in the veins of humane nature 2. Ordinances are the Benjamins mess which are given to few in the world some corners onely of the earth are guilded and guided by this light Hath God indulged us with these distinguishing opportunities and must they pass away from us in a dream This very ingratitude is not so much a trespass as a prodigy Shall Christ select us out to feast with Cant. 2. 4. Esth 7. 1. him in his hanqueting house as once the King selected Haman to feast with him with the Queen and shall we sleep at the table when we should feast upon Gospel dainties shall we drowsily throw away those seasons of love nay the best love which few in the world are honoured with 3. In Ordinances we have the offers of the sweetest grace Quia filius dei est vivus cum Patre et sp sancto deus et quia secundum humanam naturam ad patrem abiit et ad dextram patris est evectus et omnem in coelo et in terrâ potestatem accepit indeut verus deus verus homo preces credentium exaudit ac 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 orationem ex fide in Christum prosectam non exaudiri Ger. Prayer hath the key of the treasury door John 14. 14. where our comforts are banked up In hearing we have the gracious offers of Christ and in him of life and happiness and shall all these offers these paramount tenders of love be slept away Shall we shut our eyes shut our hands shut our souls against all these rich revenues freely proffered in Gospel dispensations Beasts by natures instinct will not sleep at the provender nor at their manger 4. Ordinances they are precious but transcient priviledges As we sometimes pass upon the water and view a stately structure but we quickly lose the sight of it our prospect is upon the speed so yet a little while and we shall pray no more hear no more enjoy
of his Resurrection when his power was most illustrious The Resurrection of Christ was unparallel'd Others indeed were raised from the grave So Lazarus John 12. 1. So Dorcas Acts 9. 40. And women received their dead raised to life again Heb. 11. 35. But all these retired to their Christus post quam resurrexit talem vitam amplius non vivit immò mori ampliùs non p●ssit Alap graves again their renewed life was only a short apparition which was quickly smoothered a little Candle set up after it had been put out which burned for a while and spent it self till it went out again But our Saviour as the Apostle speaks Rom. 6. 9. Being raised from the dead dyeth no more This Sun being risen sets no more nay it is no more inveloped in a Cloud but shines in a higher sphear in a more sublime Orb to eternity Christs Resurrection was not damped with a revocation nor did he fly back again to his empty tomb there to shelter himself till the general Resurrection Nay let us run a little higher the Resurrection of Christ was that glorious work above all others which the Scriptures mention to the Fathers honour Rom. Gal. 1. 1. 1. 4. Acts 2. 24 32. Acts 3. 26. Acts 4. 10. Acts 10. 40. This work it was by which Jesus Christ is made both Lord and Christ and is exalted to sit at the right hand of his Father This act of Resurrection advanced him to the throne who before was stigmatized with the Cross and changed him from a prisoner to be a Prince and Saviour Acts 3. 31. Acts 10. 41. Nay to be the Prince of life Acts 3. 15. And nothing but glory and honour are the Attendants of his Throne To Acts 2. 32. publish this glorious act Christ principally did choose his Disciples Acts 10. 41. Acts 2. 32. Christs Resurrection Acts 2. 25. was the Motto of the Apostles embassie and the emphasis of their Errand the grand argument by which they both 1 Cor. 15. 14. made and comforted believers For indeed the receiving of 1 Pet. 1. 3. our Christ again after the certainty of his death and the solemnity of his burial is the spring of our joy the fountain of 1 Pet. 3. 21. our comfort the stay of our hearts and the assurance of our Hymnus Angelicus ad nativitatem Christi accipiatur 1. Tanquam gratulatio gratiarum Actio z. Tanquam Angelorum votum quod Angeli optant hominibus 3. Tanquam doctrina quae vera est pax scil in Christo solo Theod. Mat. 4. 2. justification This blessed work of Christs rising put the last hand to the work of our Redemption and so fasten'd it that it cannot unravel The Birth of Christ was accompanied with the joy of Angels Luke 2. 13. His life was embroidered with wonders and miracles for every word our Jesus spake was not less than a wonder John 7. 46. His death was imbittered with sorrows and perplexities and sighs were the escutcheons about his Hearse but his Resurrection was the new Birth of the World and the sparkling spirits of a Believers consolation The wise-men of the East rejoyced at his Star Mat. 2. 10. when it did proclaim the Birth of Christ But Believers rejoyce at himself when he himself proclaims his Resurrection The Star retires at the Suns rising And now shall the Resurrection of Christ be unparallel'd for glory and shall it not so far influence us as to make us exemplary for sanctity upon its weekly commemoration the Lords day Shall every thing concur to the honour of Christs resurrection and shall onely our loosness and vanity on the day of it cast a damp and put an ecclipse upon it When we prophane the Sabbath what do we but draw a veil before the glory of Christs resurrection and practically deny that he is sprung from the Grave What loves can those Christians have to or what esteems for their dear Jesus who when his resurrection-day gave new life to the world fresh joy to the Disciples and new wonders to Mankind can yet pollute and defile the Sabbath its constant Memorial Sabbath-breakers are worse than Sadduces they onely deny Acts 23. 8. our Resurrection but these vertually deny Christs for if Christ be risen why do they not adore the rising Sun by Eph. 5. 11. walking in the light on his own blessed day But why do they attempt to ecclipse this glorious day by their sins and deeds of darkness CHAP. LIV. Some miscellanious prescriptions for the better discharge of our duty towards the LORDS DAY THe Concernments of the Soul can be never sufficiently pressed because of the weightiness of the affair and Mat. 16. 26. nothing more conduceth to the advantage of the Soul then the holy observation of Gods blessed day Soul-welfare In die dominico mens nostra in piis exercitiis tota defigenda est Cartw. much depends upon a due and careful observance of it Spiritual Sabbaths very much draw the Soul to its center formal Sabbaths do much retard the Soul in its progress and Sabbaths wasted in prophaneness do very much harden the Soul in sin and vanity and drop apace into the Vials of Gods wrath jogging Vengeance to awaken it which seems to slumber It may easily fall under our observation that one who is slight on the Sabbath will be profuse on the week that sin which is hatched in the Sabbath will be fledg'd in the week And therefore where there is so much danger to lose the way it must needs be safe to take good direction and to set up more lights for our better guidance and this is the further designe of what followes in this Chapter Let love be the spring of all our duties upon the Sabbath-day Prescript 1. Love is a sweet but a forcible principle it works not as a Sword but as a Sun-beam it draws but not drives it Excessus mentis est intentio ad superna Ansel constrains but not compels and it wins by perswasion and not coaction 2 Cor. 5. 14. Fear storms the Town but Love takes it by composition a heart full of love will run through the Datur sancta insania quando mente excedimus deo Bern. duties of a Sabbath as the Sun through the several Signs of the Zodiack with swiftness and delight Nor doth it understand any toyl or weariness Our Sabbath should not be our task but our delight Isa 58. 13. and then we should be on the wing and flye to the Sanctuary as the Doves to the Windows And indeed what is there in a Sabbath which doth not court our love The Lord of it He is our Beloved Mat. 2. 28. Our love our dove our undefiled Cant. 5. 2. Cant. 6. 9. He doth or ought to lie as a bundle of myrrh between our breasts Cant. 1. 13. The Son of man who is the sum of our desires is the Lord of the Sabbath Love of
the strong Trace a Sabbath-work and is it any thing else but gaining knowledge treasuring up truth wrestling with God for pardon grace and assurance visiting our Beloved and driving the great Bargain of Eternity And for which of these good works must the Sabbath be prophaned John 10. 33 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or thrown away If Philosophers say of Vertue It is its own reward is it not much more true of holy worship spiritual communion converse with Heaven and those pleasing delights which are the sweet employment of a Sabbath Therefore 1 John 1. 3. to pollute this day or to trifle it away what is it but to Numb 14. 8. bring an evil report on Canaan a Land flowing with milk and honey Argum. 6 And it would be seriously considered Sabbaths are upon the wing and they will not long continue to us We cannot say of richest Sabbaths as once Christ said of poor persons the Sabbaths ye have always with you Mat. 26. 11. The Lords day is a triumphant but a transient mercy Now we enjoy these blessed Sabbaths and holy Ordinances we know not how soon the Songs of Zion may be turned into howling Lam. 1. 4 16. And Icha●od may be written upon our weekly jubilies We know not how soon Gods wrath or John 12. 35. our own death may hide th●se things which belong to our Levit. 26. 43. peace from our eyes O then let us improve our Sabbaths Luc. 19. 42. our sweet seasons our Summer-time our divine Harvest for Prov. 6. 6 7. if we do not gather grace on this day what shall we have Jer. 8. 7. to lay out on the week-day Or what shall we have to spend Prov. 10. 5. on a death-b●d when we are stepping into another World Psal 32. 6. We know the Water-man must observe his wind and tyde Suus cuique constitutus est dies certum tempus quo operari possit quo elapso nihil amplius praestare queat Chemnit and when they serve then he throws off his Doublet and bestirs himself left he should fall short of his Creek or Haven It concerns us to mind Sabbaths and to sanctifie them to the Lord then the gases of the Spirit blow fair then the waters of the Sanctuary run right for the Port to which we are bound but if these heavenly Opportunities slide away without our serious improvement we must with Esau Psal 115. 17. seek the Blessing carefully with tears but it shall not accrue Heb. 12. 17. unto us The Musician plays his Lesson while the Instrument is in tune let us ripen in grace while the Sabbath shines and Sabbath showers continue Our Saviour bids us work while it is day John 9. 4. Surely this principally points at the Sabbath-day which is the Souls day It is but a few Sabbaths more nay it may be not one more and we shall go down to our silent Graves Our life is uncertain not a Sun but a Vapour Jam. 4. 14. and can our Sabbaths be sure and steddy Our Sabbaths are our Tyde for Heaven and when the Tyde is past there is no rowing to the Port. When the Traveller observes the Sun is declining and draws towards setting then he spurs up his Beast and speeds his pace lest the Night over-take him Our Sabbaths are setting and the Gospel-Sun is low is speeding to a disappearance Let us then keep holy these days and carefully make the best advantage of them let us neither stain their beauty by our prophaneness nor detract from their bounty by our neglect and formality lest the shadows of death over-take us and then who shall remember God or work for Psal 115. 17. his Soul in the Pit or the Grave where we shall be lodged and awake no more till the Resurrection Arg. 7 But though the Lords day be fleet and swift as to us yet it is permanent in its self and in its duration calls for our devotion We admire not a Candle so much as we do the Sun Gen. 2. 3. and one reason is because the Candle wastes but the Sun endures The light of our Sabbath is not a transient blaze but a constant light which will continue till the consummation of all things and God hath folded up all things in change or dissolution Now Permanency is a character of excellency Gold is only refined in the same fire where dress is consumed The Priesthood of Melchisedech was more excellent Melchisedec 400 annis sacerdotium Aaroni●u● antec●ssit et ejus sacerdotium Christi sacerdotium repraese●tat quod usque ad finem mundi duraturum est Alap than that of Aaron because it continued for ever Heb. 7. 17. So the Sabbath of Christians is more excellent than the Sabbath of the Jews because that found a grave but this shall find none To our Sabbath it may be said in comparison with all the Jews Sabbaths They shall perish but thou remainest they shall all wax old as doth a Garment as a Vesture shalt thou rowl them up and they shall be changed but thou art the same and thy years shall not fail To our Sabbath all the Powers of Earth and H●ll shall never put a period it is a durable and therefore an honourable Ordinance And shall God honour it and shall we deface it Shall he promote it and shall we prophane it Shall he make it a lasting Ordinance and set it up as a Marble Pillar in the Church and shall we write froth and vanity upon it as if it was a Tomb-stone Our Sabbath is no flying Ceremony or transient Rite which hath the worm of Judaism at the root of it which will eat it out in time but it is a stable institution which God will have sanctified with all exactness The Persians Laws E●●h 1. 19. were irrevocable and therefore the more venerable and the transgression of but one of them threw Daniel into the Lions Den Dan. 6. 8 12. So the Law of our Sabbath it is solemn and solid not subject to decay or of a perishing nature which earnestly presses the sanctification and amplifies exceedingly the pollution of it It is not so great 〈◊〉 to break a piece of glass as to break a piece of Gold 〈◊〉 ●●●eness is the blemish of every thing Leases the shorter 〈◊〉 are the more inconsiderable The life of nature is no w●y to be compared with th● life of grace not only in point of sweetness but du●ation Sin upon the Lords day is not like ●●rase upon a picture which is a fading paint but like a flaw in a Jewel it is a more durable blemish and a more praejudicial debasement God h●th not only stamped his Name upon our Sabbath but something of his Nature there is a kind of eternity engraven upon it and therefore the violation of it Rev. 1. 10. by sin neglect or vanity must needs be a reduplicate impiety Arg. 8 Let us likewise take notice that this