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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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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
of Job 5. 15. them not one can be wanting but the defect will soon appear he hath an exact muster roll of them He calls them Job 5. 10. over continually and every Star must answer to its Name He convocates the Clouds he summons them and then m●lts them into showers and every drop of Rain alarms the Psal 147. 8. grass to rise and spring not only in the Fields Job 5. 10. Tolle animam e corpore quid fiet de corpore Peribit dissolvetur Quan●o magis si gubernationem de mundo tollas but upon the lofty mountains Psal 147. 8. So God preserves the Earth not only in its poyse and Being but in its feracity and plenty And its observable if God contract our time in the world there is no warding off the stroke of death Luke 12. 20. And if God lengthen out our days beyond what nature promises then death hath no stroke to give Isa 38. 5. In a word he that made us in the womb Job 31. 15. keeps us in the world fixes our time both for our Job 31. 15. Psal 31. 15. abode and departure Psal 81. 15. All things depend upon A deo mundum regi fateri oportet etiamsi nulla haberemus sacrarum literarum testimonia Deus est quasi anima illum sustentans Gods b●ck hang upon his hand live upon his bounty If he hide his face they are troubled and if he take away their breath they die Psal 104. 28 29. It is Jehovah who is the pillar to support the world who is the first being to give life to the world who is the Soveraign to rule and govern the world and who can not only untile but cast down this beautiful fabrick when he pleases Upon the Basis of Divine All-sufficiency the Universe resteth And Gods supporting power is not only evidenced in the world in generall but his care and preservation is most illustrious and conspicuous in the keeping and defending of Haec est illa ecclesia cujus causâ reliqua omnia condita sunt gubernantur his Church Let us observe this First In single persons Daniel is preserved in the Den Dan. 6. 22. Jeremy in the Dungeon Jer. 40. 4. Paul and Silas in the Prison Acts 16. 39. Lot among the Sodomitical Rout Gen. 19. 11. Secondly In lesser numbers the three Children are preserved in the fire Dan. 3. 25. O the admirable providence 1 Cor. 12. 6. Rom. 11. 35. of God! The Furnace shall be a field to walk in and the flames shall suspend their unkind heat and not disturb their recreation Gods providence can shadow and shelter his precious ones when designed for fuel and destruction Thirdly In particular Churches Rev. 3. 10. Temptations Rev. 3. 10. troop together and besiege the Saints but God in that hour breaks their ranks and routs them and rescues his people from those destructive Onsets Fourthly In the Church in general The Church of God was upon the brink of ruine in the time of Haman the Bill for their execution was signed and sealed Esth 3. 12 13. But then God tore the Bill and brought the promoter of it Est 3. 12 13. Esse in Deo Providentiam 〈…〉 su● 〈…〉 gare 〈…〉 qui● Ratio ejus ita cum Divinitate conju●cta est ut nullo pacto possu separari Leid Prof. to shameful ruine and destruction Esth 7. 10. God wounded the hairy scalpe of the Churches enemies Let us further trace the providence of God towards his people and it will appear nothing but a stock and treasury of wonders First His earliest thoughts of love to his people how are they a Morning star to cast light on the excellency of Divine providence He loved his own f●●m Eternity Eph. 1. 4. Every Saint lay in the womb of Eternal love before he lay in the womb of his Mother God from all everlasting laid his people near his heart Josh 21. 45. 2 Kings 9. 36. 2 Kings 10. 10 Jer 31. 3. Secondly In time God gives his precious ones a Being to capacitate them for future good things Non-entiti●s are incapable of good or evil God creates his people and so brings them upon the stage of the world to act those parts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of honor he hath designed them unto He who hath reserved love for his Saints must give them a Being to be receptive of it Thirdly In process of time God calls and converts his people and brings them home to himself by a work of Regeneration They are not only born by Gods power but Psal 113. 7. Luke 1. 52. ●ob 5 12 13. John 3. 5. new born by Gods grace and so God qualifies them for glorious things which shall be revealed 1 Pet. 5. 1. He gives them faith John 1. 12 13. And faith gives them power to be called the Sons of God Now he adopts them In toto mundo nihil est ● divinae providentiae legibus exemptum fatendum tamen est Major cura est de hominibus maxim● de Sanctis into his own Family God doth not only bring them into the outward Court of the world but into the inward Court of his own peculiar Houshold Gal. 6. 10. Eph. 2. 19. They are now his friends John 15. 15. His Jewels Mal. 8. 17. His Spouse Cant. 4. 9. The beloved of his Soul Jer. 12. 7. His chosen ones Isa 41. 8. Kings and Priests Rom. 1. 6. Thus glori●us is Gods providence towards his people Fourthly Further to trace Divine providence in reference to the Saints God preserves them in the world as a spark in an Ocean When the whole world was drowned God prepared an Ark for Noah and his F●mily and when the Gen. 7 1 Inhabitants of the world had no peni-house to secure them God provided a shelter for this holy Family When all perished in the storm they had a Haven to put into The Church of God in Egypt they were in bondage but they were in Being The Task-masters had a hard hand over them Annon hae mirabiles ecclesiae conservationes aperte declarant Deum singulari Providentiâ illam tueri but God spread a large wing over them and brought them in time out of their servitude in glory and triumph and made their way through the waves when the waters were their walls their security not their ruine When God sent his people into Babylon it was to chastise them not to confound them to humble them under their sin not to sink them under their burden these Captives at last were Conquerors Exod. 14. 29. and erected their Trophies in Jerusalem For he had thoughts of peace and not of evil to give his people an Jer. 29. 11. expected end saith the Prophet Jeremy And God seems to have tears in his eyes when he hath a rod in his hand And indeed how would Christs little flock survive if God by a Luke 12. wonderful act of providence
severall attributes in God which bespeak our greatest attention and Rev. 1. 13. devotion in holy Ordinances First His excellent and incomprehensible greatness If we Christus praesens est medio suorum càm convenerint nomine suo gratiosâ sut praesentiâ had any dread or awe of an infinite Majesty upon us we should throw away all sleep and drowsiness when we come before him in holy worship Let us contemplate on the royalty of his Throne of the brightness of his Majesty and this would awaken us to fear and astonishment Shall a besotted worm stupifie himself by sleep when he is under the full view and immediate eye of the Almighty Surely not only his sences but his reason is asleep and his whole man is Psal 11. 4. in a benummed Lethargy Cannot infiniteness startle us And the dread of the Almighty pull us out of our dream One sparkling of his eye could confound us if he should command a ray of the Sun it would fire us out of our sloath and scorch us into nothing or that which is worse then nothing Secondly His omnisciency We sleep but God doth not Psal 121. 4. slumber he fully seeth our desperate carelesness and wilfull drowsiness in holy Ordinances There is no dropping asleep in a croud or taking a nap in some obscure place can Gen. 28. 17. evade the full view of Gods eye He takes notice of the frame of our hearts much more of the posture of our bodies 1 Chron. 28. 9 When thou sleepest in the time of worship there is no curtain before thee nothing to abate the view of God or darken his eye God sees all thy snoring indulgence which is excessively Psal 139. 12. offensive to him Thirdly His holiness God is exceedingly displeased with our unbecoming behaviours in holy worship his purity is much provoked by our sinful Lethargy Sleeping in Ordinances it is a sin nay a dangerous sin nay it is a crying sin Psal ● 5. and therefore highly provoking to divine holiness Our Saviour Rev. 3. 1. speaks of some who seemed to be alive and yet were dead And such are sleepy hearers their Pew is their grave their cloaths their winding-sheet and their present sleep their temporary death Indeed sleeping in Ordinances is a sin against nature it self The Sun will not stop in its course in attending on the world but the foolish sleeper stops in his attendance on the word and yet the Sun receives no reward but the Christian looks for one and though he hath snorted away a Sermon he presumes he hath discharged a duty and so is in his road to life eternall Fourthly His justice which is easily awakened by his holiness a just God will not endure a drowsie hearer The young man who slept at Pauls Sermon fell down from the Acts 20. 9. third loft and was taken up dead In mercy God presents the Gospel to our attention and in justice he will punish our want of attention God indeed took away a rib from Gen. 2. 21. Adam when he was asleep Gen. 2. 21. But he will not take Edormiente potiús quam vigilante formavit deus mulierem quia deus se ei in somnis revelari voluit sicut se revelare solebat prophetis Par. away a lust from any of the Sons of Adam while they are asleep in the Paradise of Ordinances A Lamb will not sleep in the paw of a Lion in the reach of an enraged Panther how much less should fond and formall sinners sleep in the presence in the most peculiar presence of him who is the Lion of the tribe of Judah Rev. 5. 5. who can tear our souls like a Lion Psal 7. 2. nay tear us in pieces and there is none to deliver Psal 50. 22. and break us in pieces as a potters vessel Jer. 19. 11. to be made whole no more Jer. 48. 38. Sleeping in Ordinances is distastful to the view of Angels Those holy spirits frequent the assemblies of the Saints 1 Cor. 11. 10. And they are witnesses of our carriage and Nos Angelos habemus obedientiae inobedientiae no strae c. Chrys Theo. Theoph. Ans deportment of our obedience and disobedience as Theophylact Anselm Chysostom and others aver and how much disgust must it cast on those holy and most Seraphick beings those blessed Courtiers of heaven whose concerns are so much wrapt up in the honour of God to see a stupified formalist with his sences chained up in unseasonable Angeli templum percurrunt singulorum habitus gesta vota explorent Nil sleep when the Eye Heart Mind and all should be attentive to grasp after divine truth in the publick dispensations of it and when the inward and the outward man like winde and tide both should meet to carry away and treasure up the discoveries of Gods word and counsel to him The Angels see our foolish glances wanton looks undecent postures they have a strict eye upon us in Ordinances O then let us not damp these glorious spirits by our uncomely and unworthy drowsiness This sinfull sleepiness is disquieting to the assembly of the Saints with whom we do associate Do we know what hearts are saddened what spirits are grieved what passions are raised by our sleepy carriage and our drowsie behaviour Our Saviour charges us not to offend one single Saint much 1 Cor. 10. 32 less an assembly of Gods people when we are met together in divine worship When we see one sleeping and Mat. 18. 6. hear another talking and observe another rowling his eyes from one object to another is not this to turn the Temple Sed etiam Christi monitu quantò magis necessaria tantò magis cavenda sunt scandala ne à nobis vel concitentur vel capiantur into a Babell and the order of the Church into confusion and to attempt to build Gods house a new with axes and hammers A sleepy hearer is a spot in our Feasts like a seared bough in a green tree a disturbance and grief to the assembly like a broken string in a lute which jars the Musick This stupid drowsiness is very prejudiciall to the work we are about when we come to Ordinances we are employed in the work of heaven This is opus dei Gods work a holy and sacred work In Ordinances we deal with God we pay our tribute to God we have communion with God we drive a great trade with 1. Vt in eâre quam agimus sit tota animi intentio 2. Vt sit inexplicabilis cupiditas benè operandi 3. Vt accedat assiduitas continuatio Basil God and shall we sleep in Gods work Basil observes there are three things requisite for the carrying on Gods work First That the mind be wholly set upon it and taken up in it Secondly That there be a restless desire of doing well Thirdly That there be diligence and unweariedness in the work
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
shady Ceremonies which were to teach the Children of Israel But our Sabbath is of a higher and nobler nature not covered with so much darkness nor subject to so much decay and therefore if God be so punctual Mark 2. 28. and exact in his time in these flitting solemnities which were to cease at the very first dawning of the Gospel Ah how much more on his fixed Sabbath the souls weekly banqueting day with the Lord Jesus the blessed Lord of the Sabbath Hi● verò infertur ut aeq●●●●s qu●rti praecepti pates●●t nempe quod deus benignè nobiscum vildè agit qui cum sex dies nobis relinquat unum tantùm in septimanâ diem sibi postulat Wal. Mic. 6. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys Tom. 5. Nos illorum Apostolorum sequentes traditionem dominicum diem divinis conventibus sequestramus Isich in Levit. Cap. 9. And fourthly yet further to clear this truth we must conclude To abate any thing of spending a whole day with God is but the wanton abuse of divine indulgence The Sabbath is a price God puts into our hands and to play and sport upon it is to trample upon our pearls And truly God hath so smoothed and sweetned the fourth Commandment with so much equity and kindness in giving us six dayes and taking to himself but one that to break this Commandment is but the greater evidence of obstinacy and stubbornness and indeed to those who encroach upon his Sabbath by their toyle and their pastimes God may frame the same expostulation which once he made to back-sliding Israel What iniquity have you found in me wherein have I wearied thee come testifie against me Have I roughed my Comm●ndmen●s with any grievous severity have I not given you six dayes and reserved to my self onely one And must part of that one day be prostituted to the flatteries of sin to vain sports and unprofitable recreations is not this to abuse my ●●ve and sport with my indulgence Nay to crumble the Sabbath into so many pieces and divisions to spend part of it in holy services part of it in civil labours and part of it in sensual pleasures it is nothing else but so to disfigure the Sabbath that neither Divine command nor Apostolical institution will know it so as to own it to be their issue and production We may likewise fetch an Argument from the Text it self which commands our delight in the holy Sabbath We must Isa 53. 13. Sabbatum est delicatum i. e. delicatè tenerè observandum delicatum i. e. delitiae tui domini Deus enim capiet mognam delectationem ex religioso sui cultu in Sabbato Alap in Isai call the Sabbath our delight saith the Text. Now can this be consistent with that delight and complacency a Christian should take in the Sabbath after a few hours to break from holy services and spiritual duties to gad after the pleasures or profits of the World To refresh their wearied and tyred selves with a bowle or a foot-ball and to leave Communion with God to recreate their selves with a fit of masking dancing or shooting Surely our delights in Gods holy day are weak and faint if they must be fetcht again and revived with such loose and vain satisfactions Indeed it argues a very vain and frothy spirit to have no more pleasure in Gods day then to spend a good part of it in vain talk and idleness in rioting and wantonness in sports and foolishness It cannot be imagined that any men who ever tasted any sweetness in Christ or his Sabbath and felt the Sponsa Christum laudans ab oculis crsa est sed cur quontam cum amantes aspectu mutuo nequeant satiari et semper abaltero ad intuentis oculion imago gratior reflectatur et fit ut crescat admiratio et simul laudandi cupiditas neque in hacre sit ullus modus Et oculi sunt amoris duces Del. Rio. unknown refreshings of his holy Rest but that they will mourn for their cold affections and that they have not spent their Sabbath more accurately and exactly Certainly those who plead and inveigh much against the strict observation of Gods holy day never fully tasted what the Sabbath was and what the glory and excellency of it Is the Majesty and Glory of God so vile in our eyes that we do not think him worthy of special attendance one day in a week doth he call us now to rest in his bosome on his holy Sabbath and do we kick his bowels and despise his bounty Doth he call upon us to spend this day in holiness and shall we spend it or at the least part of it in mirth sports and pastimes and in all manner of vanity Where are our longings and breathings after Christ upon a Sabbath Were holy duties gratefull to us we should not so soon shake them off we should not make the time of a Sabbath like the vail of the Temple at Christs death to be rent in twain viz. between the Lord and the World whereas one bone of Christ was not to be broken so not one hour of this day Psal 42. 1 2. here we must say as Christ of the fragments gather up the fragments let nothing be lost It is perilous to clip the Mat. 27. 51. Kings Coyne and very dangerous to clip the Lords day Joh. 19. 36. let us not with Annanias and Saphira bring half the price Mark 6. 43. This holy time was never ours nor ever was there any part Acts 5. 2. thereof in our power therefore to keep back any hour of this holy day must needs be sinfull If no part of this day be the Lords why do we give him any And if the whole Communio nostra est cum Patre et Filio et in Patre cum Filio sunt omnia vera et coelestia bona Zanch. be the Lords as certainly it it why do we put him off with part But there would be no need of these questions were our delight in Gods holy day and were our hearts captivated with Divine Communion Delight sweetens duty and makes it easie and pleasurous That Sabbath cannot be long which is complacential David did request to spend not onely the Sabbath but his life in the Temple and counted 1 John 1. 3. one day in Gods house better then a thousand It is nothing but a carnal frame of spirit disgusting the things of Psal 27. 4. God makes the Sabbath tedious and wearisome and seeks to break open the Cage door that it may fly out to its sensual Psal 84. 10. delights and recreations Was the Sabbath our delight we should not cast lots upon it which should have most of it God or the World holy duties or trashy pastimes Our own Conveniency and advantage calls for the whole day of a Sabbath to be spent in holy and spiritual services Sabbatha docent perseverantiam totius diet Iren.
Man when he breaks Gods Commands Omnia deus quidem nectit ad suos trahit effectus Boeth he fullfills Gods Decrees and when he runs counter to what God imposes he keeps pace with what God determines That alwayes comes to pass which God who exerciseth an universal providence over the world hath appointed to fall out and come to pass Those who crucified Christ acted a Acts 2. 23. great sin yet they fulfill a certain decree for the Lamb was slain before the foundation of the world Rev. 13. 8. The divine purpose and determination is the center to which the lines of occurrences and affairs are drawn There was a medley and miscellanious contrivance to bring Christ to the Cross There was Judas his treachery the Pharisees enmity the peoples inconstancy Pilates desire to make himself popular and the Souldiers cruelty but all these different interests meet in the execution of Gods designed purpose as Peter most excellently Acts 2. 23. Him being delivered by the determinate counsel and fore-knowledge of God ye have taken Acts 2. 23. Exod. 2. 24. Exod. 7 22. and by wicked hands have crucified and slain And thus Pharaoh not onely burdens Gods people but hardens his own heart both which carry on Gods end which he had 1 Sam. 6. 6. determined viz. The delivery of the poor Jewes and the drowning of Pharoah and his wretched Aegyptians So Mat. 2. 15. Gods end and purpose is atchieved in every undertaking Herod in his rage enforces Joseph to carry Christ in his infancy Hos 11. 1. into Aegypt but Christs going into Aegypt did not so Verba haec ad Christum referenda sunt quamvis judaeorum interpretationes ab hoc scopo l●ngè abeant Riv. much decline Herods fury as accomplish a divine prophesie Hos 11. 1. Herod unwillingly fulfils what God wisely had foretold The Gospel is the sweetest means of salvation yet it is a savour of death unto death to the reprobate world They suck poyson out of these flowers because they shall dash upon their designed ruine The Gospel of life shall be a means to accomplish their determined death All things arrive at Sicut fragrantia unguenti columbam vegetat scarabaeum necat et sicut lumen solis oculos sanos recreat debiles offend●t sic Christus malis in ruinam est bonis in resurrectionem gloriosam Theoph. 2 Cor. 2. 16. 2 Cor. 4. 3 4. that end which God hath set them Christ himself is for the ruine of sinners which are appointed to misery for the joyous salvation of Saints who are determined to glory So the same fire purges the Gold and consumes the stubble In a word the works of providence First Sometimes how strange are they and misteriously intricate as in the case of Joseph through how many mazes and maeanders did that holy man pass to his appointed principality Secondly Sometimes how terrible are they and tremendous as in the case of Pharoah his fatal and final destruction being ushered in by ten preceding Judgements Thirdly Sometimes how worthy and glorious are they as in the case of Hester who was advanced by unexpected Est 7. 3 4. means to her soveraignty for the preservation of the Isa 44. 28. Church from ruine Isa 45. 1. Fourthly And sometimes how good and gracious as in the case of Cyrus who was raised by God for the returne of Israel to their beloved Country and Home CHAP. XX. God is most gracious in the transcendent work of mans Redemption LEt us meditate likewise upon the great work of our Redemption This glorious work is the Master-piece of divine Christus est dei sapientia tum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quia est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aeterm patris tum revelata quia in Christi cognitione salutaris sapientia sita est Par. wisdom The Angels desire to look into it 1 Pet. 1. 12. but though they excell in wisdom yet they cannot see to the bottom of it there are so many small threads of curious contrivance in it that no eye of the creature can possibly discern them It is worth our notice that Christ who carties on this work is not onely called the power of God but the wisdom of God 1 Cor. 1. 24. to evidence the traces of infinite contrivance which are in this blessed undertaking And therefore how should we on the morning of a Sabbath contemplate on this rare design of mans redemption by our dear Jesus the holy Son of God How should we ponder 1 Pet. 1. 19 20. Gen. 3. 15. it deeply get lively and strong apprehensions of it that it might leave deep and lasting impressions upon our souls Let Eph. 1. 4. us view over the several passages and transactions of this Non-such of Gods works First Let us view it in the plat-form how gloriously was this laid in the eternal purposes of Gods love Eph. 1. 4. Yea in the eternal promise past between the Father and the Son Eph. 3. 8. Christus est agnus macta●us ab origine mundi 1. Aeternâ dei praeordinatione 2. Promissione de semine mulicris contrituro caput serpentis 3. Fide Patrum quae sui 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rerum sperandarum 4. In vict●m●● patrum quae erant ipse agnus sacramentaliter 5. In membris suis quibus patientibus ipse patiebatur Par. Tit. 1. 2. O the everlastingness infiniteness and unsearchableness of this love of God! That the everlasting God the Majesty of Heaven and Earth should take care of us before the world was that he should buisie himself and his Son about poor worthless and wretched worms O let us adore this first love admire this free love of God and Christ Secondly Let us see in the next place the early discovery and shining forth of this mistery in the very morning of the world No sooner man was fallen but a promise of Christ our Redeemer is reached forth unto him Gen. 3. 15. And after many ages God sends his blessed Son out of his bosome to fulfill this promise Gal. 4. 4. We could not come up to Heaven to Christ and therefore he comes down upon Earth to us O let us see the King of glory stooping bowing the Heavens to come down and dwell in a dungeon and lodge among prisoners and pitch his tent in the Rebels camp Let us think how the holy Angels wondered to see the King of Heaven stepping down from his throne to sit on his footstool Occisio Abelis innocentis suit figura occisionis agni Lyra. yea putting off the robes of a Prince to put on the livery of a Servant Phil. 2. 7 8. and that after treason had been stampt upon it nay taking our nature after it had been in armes against God not that Christ took the sin of our nature upon him Heb. 4. 15. but he took the shame of it after it had been under a cloud under a blot before God and Angels nay God
glory be in its full brightness and perfection But as our Sabbath below doth something resemble so it doth infinitely fall short of our Sabbath above The two Sabbaths differ in their duration Our Christian Sabbath is a golden but a little spot of time like a draught of rich wine it is lushious but it is quickly drank off Our sweetest Sabbath here is but the passage of a day it endures no longer then the Sun can make its flight for a few Psal 39. 5. hours Our life is but a span our Sabbath how little a Nemo tam Divos habuit faventes Crastinum ut possit sibi polliceri Sen. part of this span It is the Lords day but yet a day of bright gleam the souls market which is presently over like a great Feast wherein we have fed plentifully but the next day the meal must be renewed or the body faints and languisheth Nay our Sabbath is only the seventh part of the week and all our Sabbaths are but the seventh part of our Vita nostra tam brevis est ut nescio an dicenda sit vita mortalis aut vitalis mors August life which the Apostle calls a vapour Jam. 4. 14. both for its contemptibleness and speedy disappearing Gods blessed day here is sweet but short it is a banquet indeed but the cloth is soon taken away it is like the star in Bethlehem which was useful to bring to Christ but it soon disappeares Mat. 2. 10. But our Sabbath above shall be stretched out to all eternity Vbi appropinquassent magi● Hierosolymae disappar●it stella Hoc Sabbatum est sempiternum neque alio quodam Sabbato terminabitur excipietur aut perficietur Musc it will be always spending but never wasting no week day shall follow it no night shall close it no death shall bury it The Jewish Sabbath was entombed in Christs grave the Christian Sabbath shall end with the world The beautiful fabrick of the world shall be taken down and the Sabbath of Christians shall be rolled up together but our Sabbath above shall never be shut in with any period or termination This blessed Sabbath in glory is spotless and why should it die if it have not offended It is perfect and perfection admits of no end or conclusion whatsoever is undefiled is eternall so God is everlasting the good Angels John 3. 16. 2 Cor. 5. 1. Heb. 13. 14. Luke 16. 9. 2 Pet. 1. 11. Heb. 9. 15. Heb. 4. 9. and glorified Saints The Sabbath above is a full rest and it could not be perfect ease if it met with a certain end a conclusion must needs be a disturbance and that rest must needs be imperfect which is interrupted The Saints would not pray so ardently for this rest Psal 55. 6. if they were to Heb. 4. 9. 1 Pet. 5. 10 2 Cor. 4. 17. Spirituale Sabbatum licet N. T. sit tamen ipsum est imperfectum tum demum perficietur quando veniet quod perfectum est suffer another remove and still be liable to change and mutation The Jews rest in Canaan which was sweetned with the over-flowing of milk and honey did only prefigure this Eternal rest as the shadows in the time of the Law did typifie Christ But the rest of Canaan is at an end and all the legal shadows are passed away but Christ and our Sabbath above shall remain for ever In this then our Sabbath to come surpasses the present viz. in continuance and duration The two Sabbaths differ in their purity Our Sabbath here may be and is spotted it is black as well as comely fair indeed but yet not without its wrinkles the emblems of Cant. 1. 5. frailty and imperfection This holy One will see corruption The most acurate Saint defiles his best Sabbath and when Psal 16. 10. he is most circumspect he is offensive he either pollutes it with the lesser stain of vain and frivolous thoughts or with the larger stain of unsuitable and impertinent language or with the blacker stain of unjustifiable and sinful practice or with the deeper stain of deadness and unbecomingness in holy duties or with the more usual stain of mispending time letting that golden oil run in wast The Saints themselves fall seven times on this day as well as others The Prov. 24. 16. way is so narrow on a Sabbath that we easily miss it either we are not prepared for the duties of a Sabbath or we are defective in those duties or we are weary of those blessed Peccatum ita omnes homines invaserit ut nemo in hac vitâ quamvis vir sanctus sine peccato esse queat et peccata sanctorum sunt lapsus qui eis inter ambulandum in luce contrà animi sententiam contingunt Zanch. Joh. 1. 1 8. 10. services There will be still something amiss either our tongues slip or our hearts wander Isa 29. 13. Our feet slide or our graces flag either we neglect holy Ordinances that day or we are careless in Ordinances or we are incautelous after Ordinances we have not been so vigorous in closet duties or not so savory in family services or we have not behaved our selves so composedly in the publick Assemblies as did become the purity of a Sabbath The Sabbath here may complain that it sojourns in Mesech and dwells in the tents of Kedar Psal 120. 5. It is like the Ark among the Philistims 1 Sam. 5. 1. It is unattainable by the Saints of the highest form to keep a Sabbath upon earth without blot or blemish Here the learest sky hath a cloud But now our Sabbath above shall not be defiled or freckled with the least defect or imperfection We are perfect in our eternal Sabbath and therefore we can breath no damp upon it The Apostle avers there we shall be like Christ 1 John 3. 2. which is security enough against all fear of 1 John 3. 2. Quemadmodum pu●itas mundities speculi requiritur ut imago in eo conspiciatur sic animae corporis perfecta mundities in beatis erit ut Deum videro ejus demque imaginem in semet ipsis perfectè exprimere possint Ger. taint or pollution Hereafter we shall fully recover the image of Christ our souls and bodies shall be perfectly pure And indeed that glass had need be clean in which God must see his image and representation the least speck or tincture of imperfection would wholly spoil the resemblance The Psalmist by an eye of faith seeth the day of Resurrection and rejoyces in this he shall fully recover the image of Christ Psal 17. 15. Both the Prophet and Apostle agree in this triumphall truth we shall be fully restored to Gods image in glory And if we are perfect from whence should our Eternal Sabbath receive a stain From the Author of it He is a holy God from the nature of it It is a perfect rest from the possessors of it They are unspotted Saints
midwived into the world by Apostolical precept or practise The infinite distance between the Authorities must needs conclude a vast difference between the benedictions nor can the Canon of a Council tie conscience so fast or bless the obedient so much as the Canon of Scripture our enemies themselves being Judges nor can in the least any Scripture be produced to authorize the Church to set up a Sabbath for the Christian World God usually blesseth his own institutions Prayer is powerful because He commands it Preaching John 14. 15. effectual because He en●oyns it the Sacraments comfortable Mat. 28. 19 20. because He ordains them and so the Lords Day is often Luk. 22. 19 20. bedewed with showers of the choicest love and benediction because it was Christs institution either more immediately by his personal command or else mediately by his inspired and infallible Apostles And therefore let us fall down before the force of truth and conclude the blessings of our Sabbath speak the beginnings of our Sabbath to be in Gods breast and not in mans will God usually accepting the worship at Jerusalem and not that at Dan and Bethel he loves those festivals of which himself is the Author And let us fetch a pregnant argument from Providence What signal judgements hath God punished the prophaners of Peccatum est dei●idium ● Christici●●um est summum malum spomane● infania somnus et mors anima ex sui naturâ mortem meretur grav● est onus animum deprimens cibus durus nullo stomacho digestibilis morbus pesti lentissimus putidissima corruptio Alap the Lords day with as shall be shewn more fully hereafter Now the prophaning of the Lords day must needs be a breach of the law of God or else how can it be a provocation of the wrath of God God punisheth only for sin which the Apostle saith is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a transgression of the Law 1 John 3. 4. Now if our Christian Sabbath be only a law of Man where is the positive and provoking sin in the violation of it where is the infinite evil which should so inflame divine displeasure as to pour out his fury on the violatours of it and to follow them with tremendous judgements Is it probable that God would strike so deeply and punish so fearfully and wonderfully for the breach of a Canon of the Church or a Decree of a Council It is true was the Lords day bottom'd on Ecclesiastical authority it would be a piece of disobedience to the Church to violate it but still where is the infinite evil as every sin is to stir up so much indignation in the Almighty Surely the breach of a humane constitution could never raise such storms in the world nor pelt so many untimely into their dust and oftentimes on a sudden and in a stupendous and terrible manner as shall be fully shewed hereafter And again we meet with no such tragedies in our sporting upon holy dayes and those festivals which are of the Churches appointment those dayes run waste in mirth and jollity nor do we meet with broken limbs sudden deaths fearfull diseases unexpected blindness c. the common issues of the prophanation of the Lords day to be the success and consequence of that vanity Providence then makes the distinction between dayes of the Churches appointment and that blessed day our Christian Sabbath which is of divine institution To conclude then this particular Let us cloath the Lords Quid hac die f●●icius est quâ domin●● judae●● mortuus est nobis resurrexit In quâ cultus Synagogae oc●ubuit et est ortus ecclesiae in quâ nos homines fecit surgere et vivere secum et sedere in coelestibus Haec est dies quem fecit dominus exultemus et laetetemur in illo Omnes dies fecit dominus sed caeteri dies possunt esse ju daeorum possunt esse Haereticorum possunt esse Gentilium sed dies dominica dies est resurrectionis dies Christianorum est dies nostra est Hier. day in all its royal Apparel and put on all its Jewels and Ornaments and then we shall see this Queen of dayes in all its splendour and glory A day it is of honour and renown above all dayes that ever the Sun shone in the most gloririous day that ever God created the most solemn day that ever the Church celebrated a day which Christ hath crowned with the greatest glory of any day that ever dawned upon the world It is a day of the Lords power a day of his perfection the day of his praise and glory and a day of his b●●●nty and blessings the day of his espousals and of the gladness of his heart When Christ was born the Angels celebrated that day with Songs and triumphs Luke 2. 13. When Christ rose from the dead or else why was he born Let the Saints celebrate that day with weekly solemnities and praises and not passe away their laud in a transient musick as the Angels did On this day our Christian Sabbath day there was a confluence of wonders and wonderfull transactions wrought by him whose name is wonderfull Isa 9. 6. In a word this day is the highly favoured of God a map of Heaven a taste of Glory the golden spot of time the market day of souls the day break of eternal brightness a day to be marked of thousands for their new birth day a day on which many have been redeemed from more then Aegyptian bondage a day of light of joy of love and delight a day which is truly delitiae humani generis the delight of mankind as once Titus was called Ah! how do men flutter up and down on the week dayes as the Dove on Rom. 1. 4. Luke 13. 32. John 20. 22 23. the waters and can find no rest for their souls till they come to this day as to an Arke and this day takes them in On this day the light was created the Holy Spirit descended life hath been restored Satan subdued Sin mortified Souls sanctified Cant. 3. 11. Hos 2. 19 20. Acts 13. 34. Sex praerogativae recensentur ad diem dominicum propiissimè pertinentes Beda in lib. de officiis Eccles Cap. 1. the Grave Hell and Death conquered O! the mountings of mind the ravishings of heart the solace of soul which on this day men enjoy in their dearest Saviour Our Lords day is the first day of the week was the first day of the world On it the Elements were formed the light was created the Angels were produced On it Manna was first rained down On it say the Fathers of the sixt General Council was Christ born On it did the Star first appear to the wise men who came out of the East On it was Christ baptized in Jordan by John the Baptist as the Council of Paris observe Sextum Concilium generale Constantinopoli celebratum On it saith a learned man Christ
the bread of life when we attend upon the preaching of the word and generally as our Estate is better than the condition of the Jews in respect to the whole worship of God so likewise more especially in our worship upon the Sabbath our priviledges are more and our burdens are less than theirs our worship is more spiritual more easie more sublime and heavenly and more above the Alphabet and rudiments of their Religion Their lisping Sacrifices proclaimed their minority but ours speak more plainly the Dialect of Heaven Nay which is very considerable in those things wherein we are equally bound with them we much exceed them are we bound to meditate in the law of God day and night yet Psal 1. 2. we are not commanded to carry it about in the skirts of our Numb 15. 38. garments and upon our bracelets Deut. 6. 8 9. And though Rom. 32. it is our duty as well as theirs to teach our Children the Oracles of God Deut. 6. 7. yet we are not charged with Scripturae sacrae in iisque promissiones et Pacta Divina et suturorum mysteriorum prae dictiones haec fuerunt eloquia dei Judaeis concredita Alap the writing of them upon our gates and the posts of our doors Deut. 6. 9. And so in our Sabbaths we are free from the servilities and rudiments with which the Jews were chained as a signe and token of their bondage and servitude Though we are charged to rest upon the Lords day and so keep it holy yet we are not over-charged with Sacrifices and Ceremonies they are all laid asleep in Christs Grave and we are freed from these Fetters and so enjoy a more glorious liberty The inference of the whole will be this Hath God filed off all Chains of servility plained off all knots of difficulty hath he put an end to all legal Sacrifices and chased away all shadows of Ceremony that nothing might encumber our Christian Sabbath How exact then should we be in the observation of it Divine indulgence as it is properly a curb to sin so it is a forcible spur to duty the Lord hath abundantly sweetned therefore let us more carefully sanctifie our blessed Sabbath he hath freed it from the Jewish thraldom let us therefore keep it with Christian freedom the Sabbath of the Jews like the Infant Moses floated among the Reeds but ours hath its Nest among the Stars Obad. 4. Let its sublimeness and spirituality engage us more strongly to a due and holy solemnity nothing can more soften unto obedience than love and indulgence which is written in the fairest character upon the Christian Sabbath It is a most natural Induction that we being loosed and unfettered should run with more swiftness the way of the fourth Commandement now spiritualized to us by Jesus Christ Our Sabbath triumphs in a more glorious occasion then that Gen. 2. 3. of the Jews doth That which occasioned the Old Sabbath was the finishing of the work of creation but that which Mat. 28. 1. occasioned ours was the accomplishment of the work of redemption which glorious work far surpasses the other as the Temple exceeded the Tabernacle The work of Redemption is more precious As mans gaining the world cannot recompence the loss of the soul so Gods making the world doth not equalize Christs redeeming the Mat. 16 26. Inutile est mundi lucrum cum perditione animae conjunctium perditio enim animae est irreparabile damnum Chemnit soul Christs recavering must needs exceed Gods creating a world to draw men out of an enthrall'd bondage is more then to bring man out of a confused Chaos In the Creation God was to deal with no Enemy but in the work of Redemption Christ was put to combat with all the Devils in Hell and to over-power men opposing their own mercies The work of Redemption is more pressing It made the soul of Christ heavy unto death Mat. 26. 38. In this work Christ did not only fight with the Devils but God Himself seemed to combat with Christ and to put him to grief Isa 53. 10. The worlds creation was finished without difficulty but the Redemption of mankind was a work knotted with much pain and grievance The world was created with the speaking of a word it was only Let it be done and this was all the Sun the Stars and all other Creatures they sprang from the Energy and power of a Command from the force of an omnipraevalent fiat but the work of Redemption was not wrought but by the expence of Christs dearest blood The work of Redemption is more profitable Indeed to have Earth to tread on Air to breath in Meat to feed on Christus vicit triumphavit non virtute et sudore aliorum ●t mumdani Imperatores solent sed suâ solâ passione suâ solius virtute Daven Light to walk by these are benefits and good natural supports but the subduing of Satan the removing of the sting of sin with all the astonishing and sad sequels of it the pacifying and quenching of the flames of Gods anger the reparation of mans nature these are transcendent benefits and bid defiance to an hyperhole The work of Redemption yields a far greater crop and harvest of joy peace and happiness We may be Gods creatures and yet fall upon the spikes of eternal ruine But Christs Redeemed ones shall come with singing to Zion and everlasting joy shall be upon their heads and they Quomodo illum diem qui a domino dicatus est nosque ab exilii dedecore liberavit venerari par est Isych shall obtain gladness and joy and sorrow and mourning shall flee away Isa 51. 11. Isa 65. 17. The work of Redemption is the fullest treasury of mans happiness And as it was long ago prophesied Hag. 2. 9. That the glory of the second Temple should out-shine that of the first So the glory of the Redemption out-shines the glory of the Creation Indeed the work of Creation is a lesser good to us as the Law is a lesser good then the Gospel and the Old Testament then the New Redemption must be owned as the greater work inasmuch as things spiritual are more valuable then things natural and Gods last works are his best the first being only preparatory to the last and indeed he who shall question whether Redemption be a greater work then Creation knows little what a Redeemer is or what the ransom of an immortal soul is worth Psal 49. 8. In creating the world God did much for me he gave me a body admirably and curiously wrought Psal 139. 15 16. He likewise endowed me with a rational soul and endowed this soul with rare and excellent faculties but all these had been only capacities of misery and receptives of wrath and ruine had not the work of Redemption interposed And therefore Christ in shedding Eph. 1. 7. his blood in conquering death in satisfying for sin hath done more for me
and it had ears and chaps like the forementioned beast This monstrous sin is most justly punished with a monstrous birth to make good that of holy Job John 4. 8. Job 4. 8. Even as I have seen they who plough iniquity and sow wickedness reap the same God sometimes punisheth the prophaning of his day in the posterity of the offendor as may be seen in the ensuing stories On the Sabbath in the afternoon at Twickenham in Middlesex the people being much given to May-games they May the 14. 1626. assembled to take down the May-pole and as they were taking it down one of the Church-Wardens wives was with her young child in her arms within her own gate looking upon them But whilst she was looking on one of the greatest ropes failed and broke and the pole fell down upon the pale that parted the gate and the street and the upper end of the pole with the fall lapped over and struck the child on the head in it mothers arms and killed it Thus little children who knew not the sin yet must die for it Let this story be annexed A vain and wanton maid hired on the Lords day a fellow to go to the next town to fetch thence a minstrel that she and others might dance and be merry but she committing lewdness that night with one of her companions proved with child And at the time of its birth she murthers it and so was hanged for the murther confessing and mournfully acknowledging at the time of her death That the occasion of her great misery was her prophanation of the Lords day Thus this crimson sin o● Sabbath-breaking can cut off root and branch and pursue with ruine and shame the actors of it and all those who are entangled in it God overtakes those who prophane his blessed day oftentimes with sudden death and shoots no warning-pi●ces to summon them to prepare for their departure out of this world to his own d●eadful and tremendous Tribunal as may be seen in these following stories A Tailor of Buntingford being a nimble and active man dwelling at the upper end of the town in a bravado would go to the other end to buy some meat before morning prayer but coming home with both his hands full in the midst of the street he fell down stark dead Dr. Teate was an eye-witness of his fall and burial Oh what swift destruction pursues this cursed sin A townsman of Watford going to gather Cherries on the Lords day fell from the tree and in the fall was battered and bruised insomuch that he never spake more but lay groaning in his bloud till the next day and then he dyed A company of prophane young men near Salisbury upon the Lords day in the morning went to Claringdon Park to cut down a May-pole and having loaden a Cart with the tree and themselves with the bitter fruits of sin they are severely punished by the hand of God for entring into the Mr. Clarks examples City of Salisbury through a place called Milners Barnes unawars the Cart turns and struck one of the Sabbath-breakers such a mortal blow that his brains flew out and there dyed on the place This story was attested by divers godly persons living in the City of Salisbury to a Reverend Minister who made enquiry about it One at Ham nigh Kingelone going on the Lords day to visit his grounds where finding some cattel grazing which were not his own and running to drive them out he fell down and dyed suddenly upon the place Thus Gods angry eye is seconded by his revenging hand he sees and strikes together and they who will not keep a day shall not live an hour God punisheth the prophanation of his Sabbath with painful and tormenting death as may be exemplified in these stories At Tidworth on the Lords day many were met in the Church-yard to play at foot-ball where one of this wicked company had his leg broken which by a secret judgement of the Lord so festered that it turned into a gangrene in despight of all means used and so in pain and terror he gave up the Ghost and dyed For the sin of Sabbath-breaking God embitters his very executions and the offendor must not only die but he must die upon the rack One gathering fruit on the Lords day fell from the tree and was so hurt That he lay in anguish and dreadful dolour all the week till Sabbath day and then he ended his miserable life Thus God puts Gall and Wormwood into the Cup of those who prophane his blessed day God sometimes stops those who prophane his Sabbath in their carier and proceeds of sin as is seen in this following story One Mr. Ameredith a Gentleman of Devonshire being recovered from a pain he had in his feet one of his friends said he was glad to see him so nimble the Gentleman replies he hoped he should not be frustrated of his expectation in dancing about the May-pole the next Sunday But behold the justice of God in his just punishments of such vain and sinful resolutions for the Lord presently smote him with such feebleness and faintness of heart ere he stirred from the place where he was and likewise with such a great and unusal dizziness in the head that he was forced to be led home and from thence to his last home before the Lords day shone upon him Thus the very intentions of acting this sin were dreadfully and strangely punished God punished this sin in the Embryo of it while it lay onely in the Womb of a resolution God punishes the most inconsiderable breaches of his holy day as may be observed in the ensuing story Two Brethren on the Lords day in the Forenoon came to an Uncle they had to dine with him they living in a Market-Town not far off after Dinner they took horse again but had not gone far but one of the horses fell down dead and these Brethren going back again to their Uncles house put the other horse into the Stable and within an hour or two that horse likewise died in the place Thus the insensible beast shall bear the burden of mans sin and Sabbath-prophanation Rom 8 22. shall be branded upon the bruit creatures We have known saith Ludovicus Pius the German Emperour Didicimus quesdam in hoc die opera ruralia exercentes fu●mine interemptos quosdam artuum contractione multatos quosdam visibili igne obsumptos sub●to in cinerem resolutos o●cubuisse Proinde necesse est c. Lud. P. in one of his Declarations Some busied in works of husbandry on the Lords-day to have been slain with lightning some punished with contraction of Limbs some consumed with visible fire and on a sudden turned into ashes and so to have perished in a judicial way wherefore it is a necessary duty that in the first place Priests then Kings Princes and all faithful persons do most devoutly exhibit due observation and reverence unto this day We may
the time of the Sabbath Let us labour to get high esteemes of the Sabbath day We Praescrip 3. keep those things most charily we prize most We lock up Jewels which we value but we leave out other things which we despise and contemn One great reason why men practice Sabbaths no more is because they prize them no Apparet in S●r●p●uris hunc diem esse solennem ipse enim est primus dies seculi c. Aug. more Sabbaths fall in their opinion and therefore they sink in their observation They look upon the Sabbath as a common day a day of leisure to please themselves with carnall rest or sensual delight Only their sh●ps are shut and so they cannot follow the works of their Calling but their hearts are open to entertain any temptation and so they mind the Magistrate more then Jehovah upon his own day Dies dominicus est dies Regalis in qu● Imperator ascendit ab inferis Chrysost But serious and gracious persons have always spoken highly of Gods blessed Sabbath The Apostle John calls it the Lords day Rev. 1. 10. which is the Lord Christ his day for this name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is derived of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is appropriate to our Saviour Christ both in regard of the dignity and excellency of his person and because of the greatness and largeness of Ne ipsam quidem dominicam diem J●nctissimi festi ullâ inreverentiâ habuere c. Athanas his dominion as likewise in respect of his bounty towards the members of his mystical body Acts 4. 36. Joh. 20. 13 28. Revel 17. 14. Cap. 19. 16. Now things and persons which are named the Lords are sacred and venerable in an high degree So The grace of our Lord Rom. 16. 24. The spirit of the Lord 2 Cor. 3. 17. The beloved of the Lord Rom. 16. Is solus et unus reverâ est proprius et dominicus dies et melior est aliis innumerabilibus diebus sive qui communitèr intelliguntur sive qui a Mose c. Hier. 8. The glory of the Lord 2 Cor. 3. 18. The word of the Lord 1 Tim. 6. 3. The cup of the Lord 1 Cor. 11. 27. Et sic Convivium dominicum the Lords banquet Tertul. lib. 2. ad Vxor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril Hierosol Catech. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The body of the Lord. Athanas ad Epict. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Scripture of the Lord. Clem. Alexandr Ignatius the blessed Martyr of Christ who lived in the Apostles age and was St. Johns Disciple maketh the Lords day the Queen the Princess the Lady Paramount of all dayes Eusebius in the life of Constantine the Great lib. 4. cap. 18. stileth the Lords day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In truth and in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Ignat. very deed the principal and the first Chrysostome calleth it a Royal day And Gregory Nazianzen Orat. 43. saith it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Higher then the highest and with admiration wonderfull above all other dayes Basil calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The first fruits of dayes Chrysologus Ser. 77. saith It is the primate among days And Hierome in Marc. 16. The Lords day is better then other common dayes and then all the Festivals New Moons and Finitur septimus dies dominus est sepultus reditur ad primum dominus est resuscitatus domini resuscitatio promisit no bis aeternam diem et consecravit diem dominicam Aug. Sabbaths of Moses his Law The Lords day saith Maximus Taurinensis is venerable and a solemn day among Christians because like the Sun rising and dispelling infernal darkness Christ the Sun of Righteousness shined forth unto the world by the light of his Resurrection And the incomparable Augustine saith The Seventh day is ended the Lord was buried a return is made to the first day the Lord is raised the Lords Resurrection promised us an eternal day and it did consecrate unto us the Lords day Justin Martyr calls our Sabbath Sunday as many others after him and not without very good reason That being the Chiefest of dayes as the Sun is the most glorious of all the Planets and therefore the Civil Law calls Cod. Justin lib. 3. tit 12. our Sabbath The venerable and much honoured Sunday Our Sabbath is called Sunday to honour Christ who is the Sun of Righteousness Mal. 4. 2. Enlightning every one who Nos jure optimo diem quem Mathematici solis vocant domino ascripsimus et illius cultui totum mancipavimus quoniam nulla re magis imaginari possumus praepotentis et universim supereminentis Christi M●jestatem quàm per splendidissimum solis lumen Et Leo est solare animal Cael. Rhodig cometh into the world and who by his triumphant Resurrection caused the heavenly light of Truth and Grace to appear in full lustre to them who sate in darkness and in the shadow of death And Gaudentius Brixianus speaks fully to this purpose It behoved Christ saith he the Sun of Righteousness with the fair and pleasant light of his Resurrection to dispell the gross darkness of the Jews and melt the frozen cold of the Gentiles and so reduce all things that we reclouded with the black vail of confusion by the Prince of darkness into the state of prime tranquility And Ambrose concurs in his judgement This day is called Sunday saith he because Christ the Sun of Righteousness arose from death to life upon this day to enlighten the Children of this world Hierom tells us It is called Sunday because on that day Light rose in the world and the Sun of Righteousness appeared in whose wings healing may be found So Christ made it Sunday not only from his beams but likewise from his wings for as there was light in the one so there was Cypr. Epist 33. Orig. in Exo. Homil. 7. contr celsum cure in the other and both together gave it this Name And nothing more speaks the glory of Christ then Light and the Sun is the fountain of light and therefore our Sabbath is Tertul. de Coron Mil. called Sunday as Coelius Rhodiginus observes Nay Christ himself is called Light John 3. 19. And the Gospel is named Light Rom. 13. 12. No wonder then if that day on which Christ is worshipped and the Gospel is preached is called Sunday But in all ages our blessed Sabbath flourished in an honourable Bellarm. Tem. 1 de cult Sanctor cap. 11. lib 3. Dominica dies primatum obtmet et major est inter alios dies Durand Rational lib. 7. de Festiv esteem Bellarmine himself saith The Sabbath is a day above all other days to be esteemed And so Durand gives the Lords day all primacy and assigns it a majority for worth and honour above all dayes And it is very observable that Easter-day so much cryed up by some was once the unhappy cause of much contention in
the Church But the Lords day was alwayes celebrated in the Church with joy and unanimity nor ever was the spring of controversie or contention This glorious day alwayes shone bright in the Church without the ecclipse of contempt or disuse And indeed our sweet and lovely Sabbath is a Jewel of inestimable worth a golden stream dissolving and running by us for us to make use of for our passage to a glorious eternity Man never forgets himself more then when he knows not his time and falls below the brute Creatures who understand their seasons Jer. 8. 7. How many observe not the time of Christs coming to meet his people upon his own Eccles 9. 12. blessed day David was wont to say One day in thy Courts is Psal 63. 2. better then a thousand Psal 84. 10. And the same judgement Psal 42. 4. must we pass upon the Lords day before we shall come to a Jer. 8. 7. due observation of it Sabbaths are kept as they are valued And as is our apprehension so is our observation We should look upon the Sabbath as one of the dayes of the Son of man a season put into our hands for life and salvation Luke 17. 22. Luke 19. 42 43. and this would steer our hearts to a Amos 8. 11. devout celebration of it Did we prize the Sabbath as our Rabbini docent Judaeos Sabbatum suum ideò venerasse ut illud 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 omnium dierum good wind for our Port our seasonable gale for our coast our indulgent call to our Rest surely we should spend it with God for we know not how soon the things with the day and the day with the things may be past and gone It is observed of the Jews thy so much honoured their Sabbath that they Reginam appellarunt were wont to call the whole week by the name of Sabbath Luke 18. 12. And they were used to say the first second third or fourth day of or after the Sabbath and this they 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 did as learned men observe not only 1. To discriminate themselves in calling the dayes of the week otherwise then the Gentiles who called them by the names of their Idols But Mark 16. 2. 2. To demonstrate the dignity of the Sabbath day and Luke 18. 12. Hier. ad Hed. quaest 4. Theoph. in Luke 18. that above all dayes it was with them in greatest account And ought not Christians much more hold up an high and honourable esteem of the Gospel Sabbath which is a far more glorious day Most assuredly our practice will keep pace with our repute and if we look not upon the Sabbath as the Tremel in Syriac Para phras day of God we shall never keep it as the day of God And strange it is that the Sabbath should not be precious in our eyes when eternal life is but our great Sabbath our long Sabbath which hath no evening as Ambrose and Augustine Ambros in Psal 119. observe Nay Epiphanius tells us That Christ is but our more durable Sabbath and we rest in this Sabbath when we August de Civ dei repose our hearts and hopes in him Nay a good Conscience as Augustine saith is the bed of God the Palace of Christ the Epiphan lib. 1. Heres 30. Temple of the Holy Ghost the Paradise of Delights and the Sabbatum dei est illud quo ab opere exteriori cessare dicimur et sacramentum interioris Sabbati ubi mens sancta per bonam conscientiam à peccato quiescit Hugo Rev. 2. 10. standing Sabbath of the Saints Thus holy Augustine in his tenth Sermon to his Brethren in the wildernoss A good Conscience indeed is our continual Sabbath our constant feast and rest And therefore in keeping Gods Sabbath let us be faithfull unto death and he will give us a never ceasing Sabbath when we shall wear a Crown of life In the saddest and sorest times when Kingdomes are shaking and Cities sinking nay all Gods Ordinances seem to be taking their leave in a Land yea when all externals in the world are at the worst yet then there may be an internal Sabbath in the heart and an eternal Sabbath in the heavens for all those who are here consciencious in keeping the externall Sabbath viz. the Lords day with all holiness and accurateness of observation Aquinas well observes There is a Sabbath of Sabbatum est duplex Pectoris Temporis time every first day of the week and a Sabbath in the breast inward rest and quietation Now the one leads to the other Aquin. 1m● 2dae quaest 100. Artic. 5. when we are Critical in keeping the Sabbath of time we may be confident in the enjoyment of a Sabbath and Rest in our bosoms Piety on a Sabbath will assuredly end and conclude in a Paradise in the bosom and when we have rested with Christ on his day he will certainly sup with us at night and bring grace and peace with him Rev. 3. 20. Let us keep every day as a Sabbath A good week will fore-run Praescrip 4. a good Sabbath as the Sabbath should influence the whole week so the whole week should prepare for the Sabbath And indeed the whole term of our life should be a continued Sabbath in two respects In cessation from the service of sin Sin must always be our corrosive not only on the Lords day but on our day we have no vacation for evil sin is a spot on the week though a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignat. deeper on the Sabbath as Christ is always the Saints love so sin is always the Saints load How bitterly doth Paul complain of his inbred corruption Rom. 7. 17 18 21 23 24. And so Augustine condoles his condition by reason of sin Alas saith he Sin follows I fly and yet I fall I fight and yet I am captive I run from it and yet I am drawn to it I would rest and yet I cannot be quiet one day nay not an hour Now thus to rest from sin is an every Qui cessat ab operibus se●uli spiritualibus vacat iste est qui diem festum Sabbatorum agit neque onera portat in viâ onus est omne peccatum neque ignem accendit c. Et in loco suo sistit neque recedit ab eo Quis est locus animae Justitia est locus ejus veritas sapientia sanctificatio Etomnia c. Orig. days Sabbath there is no day but sin prophanes it sin is the blemish of the shop as well as the Sanctuary and is a brand upon the week as well as the Sabbath It is observable there was no death stigmatized with a Curse but the death of the Cross but on the contrary there is no day but is stigmatized with sin and iniquity Every day must be a Sabbath to us in abstinence from sin It is rarely observed of
and laid the foundation of a better world then this created universe this beautiful artifice of Divine Power Again in the Creation there was nothing to withstand but in the work of Redemption there was Justice against Mercy Wrath against Pity In the Creation God brought something 2 Cor. 5. 21. out of nothing but in the work of Redemption God Gal. 3. 13. brought one contrary out of another Good out of Evil Life out of Death an immortal Crown out of a shameful Cross Indeed the great discoveries of Wisdom Grace Power Justice Mercy were all seen in the glorious work of mans Redemption The Heavens are the work of Gods fingers Psal 8. 3. But Redemption is the work of his Arm Isa 53. 1. Isa 52. 9 10. So that if it shall be demanded wherein doth the work of Redemption excell the work of Creation it may be answered as the Apostle in another case much every Rom. 3. 2. way Once more let us put these two works in the scale and we shall find the work of Redemption to weigh down the work of Creation as Gold of all metals is the weightiest In Eph. 2. 4. John 3. 16. 1 Joh. 4. 9 10. Gal. 4. 4. Phil. 2. 6 7. the creation Adam was Head but in the work of Redemption Christ was the Head by the creation we have a temporal life by the work of Redemption we obtain eternal life In the creation Adam was espoused to Eve but in the redemption the poor soul is espoused to Jesus Christ By creation Non solùm de me sed de omni quoque quod factum est Scriptum est dixit et facta sunt At verò qui me tantùm et semet fecit in restituendo et dixit multa mira gessit et pertulit dura nec tantùm dura sed etiam et indigna Bern. de diligendo deo man enjoyed an earthly Paradise but by redemption we enjoy an heavenly Kingdom In the creation Gods wisdom and power was principally seen but in the work of redemption All his glorious attributes were seen in their greatest splendour In the creation man was produced out of nothing but by the work of redemption he is produced out of worse then nothing a state of enmity and opposition Rom. 8. 7. Thus the glory of the work of redemption shines with a brighter ray and glitters with a stronger beam then the work of creation And shall not this most glorious work of which our Sabbath is the weekly memorial enforce us to a more devout observation Let us consider we equally enjoy the benefit of the creation with the Jews but they nothing at all of the benefit of the redemption with us They are Strangers to the Covenant of grace and the common-weal of the true Israel Eph. 2. 12. Let us then see the beauties of free-grace in the glass of our redemption and let this put new life into us to walk closely with God upon his own day when we are remiss in the duties let us reflect upon the occasion of the day and let us remember that the conquering of Death the chaining of Satan the subduing of Sin the quenching of Divine Wrath the perfuming of the Grave these several branches made up that blessed work which calls upon us for the keeping holy of the Lords day And again if the Jews have observed their Sabbath strictly Christ came not to licentiate us and to enlarge our carnal and sensual liberty Christs people are a willing but Psal 11● ●● 2 Tit. 14. not a wanton people The Son hath made us free and so we are free indeed as Christ himself speaks John 8. 36. But this freedom is from burdens not from duties a freedom it is to Debitâ 〈◊〉 ●●minicae obse●vatione 〈◊〉 minuitur quicquam Christiana libertas Non enim est libertas sed licentia Christina ut nos libera●i putemus ab observatione illius praecepti è Decalogo Et experientia docet licentiam et rerum sacrarum non curantiam magis magisque invalescere ubi diei dom●nicae ratio non habetur run the wayes of Gods commandments Psal 119. 24. That can be no christian freedom to indulge our ease to flatter our sense to please the flesh to pursue our sports to gratifie our fancy with dalliance and delight upon Gods holy day this kind of liberty Christ never died to purchase Christian liberty is quite another thing it is a liberty from ceremonial yokes and legal impositions Gal. 5. 1 2 A liberty of access to God to cry Abba Father Rom. 8. 15. Gal. 4. 6. A freedom it is from sins vassalage from Satans slavery from the worlds drudgery and lusts dominion and tyranny Christ did not die to make us free to sin but free from sin Tit. 2. 14. It is a harsh and injurious interpretation of Christs coming to suppose he came to make the broad way broader then before that before Christ came the people of God were tied to a strict observation of the Sabbath but since we have a latitude and liberty for sports and delights for ease and recreation on that blessed day and that now we are not so pinnion'd and shackl'd as in the times of the law This must needs be some loose construction of a carnal Gospeller who Ames is become Antinomian in the fourth Commandment Christian freedom is a dilatation and enlargedness of bea rt in holy Isa 61. 1. services when the soul can freely vent it self without contractedness Luke 4. 18. and drawing their praying breath with difficulty Gal. 5. 1 13. Sensualliberty is a priviledge which better becomes the Disciples James 1. 25. of Bacchus or Epicurus and well suits with a feast of Priapus Ruffinus pleads hard in his prescriptions for Sabbath-observation That we do not spend it carnally and in delights this is to act the Jew not the Christian And Die Sabbati nihil exomnibus mundi octibus oportet operari si ergo desi●●● ab omnibus socularibus nihil mundanum geras sed spiritualibus operibus vaces lectionibus divinis tractatibus aurem praebeas ut non respicias ad praesentia visibilia sed ad invisibilia futura haec est observatio sabbati christiani Origen in a passionate heat cryes out Let us lay aside the Jewish mode of keeping Sabbaths and let us observe them as Christians discarding all worldly acts and secular employments let us be conversant in spiritual works in reading the Scriptures in hearing the word not eying things present and visible but looking forward to things to come and invisible and this is the observation of a Sabbath which will become a Christian The Fathers of the primitive times could not bear with any carnal liberty on the Lords day well knowing how contrary it was to the mind of Christ Nor can it be supposed that it was any part of Christs purchase to procure us a freedom to handle a Bowl or