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A37049 A practical exposition of the X. Commandements with a resolution of several momentous questions and cases of conscience. Durham, James, 1622-1658. 1675 (1675) Wing D2822; ESTC R19881 403,531 522

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be no material or Typical Temple because of the Moral things there being expressed and Prophesied of under the names of the Old-Levitical-Services yet could not a Warrant be inferr'd from them for these and that Jure Divino if the things were not Morally to bind which were so signified Hence I argue if the Sanctifying of a Sabbath as a piece of worship to God be Prophesied of to belong to the New-Testament then are we bound to the Sanctification of a Sabbath as a necessary Duty but the continuance of Sanctifying a Sabbath unto God is specially Prophesied of and foretold as a piece of worship under the New-Testament Ergo c. The third place is Matth. 24. v. 20. Pray that your flight be not in the Winter neither on the Sabbath-day where the Lord insinuateth that as Travelling is troublesome to the Body in Winter so would it be to the minds of the Godly for he is now speaking to his Disciples alone to Travel on that Day specially and solemnly set apart for God's worship now if there were no Sabbath to continue after Christs Ascension or if it were not to be Sanctified there would be no occasion of this grief and trouble that they behoved to Travel on the Sabbath and durst not tarry till that Day were by-past and so no cause to put up this Prayer which yet by our Lords Exhortation seemeth to infer that the Sabbath was to be as certain in its time as the Winter And doubtless this cannot be meaned of the Jewish-Sabbath For 1 ● That was to be abolished shortly 2. Travelling on the Jewish-Sabbath was to be no cause of Grief unto them if indeed all dayes were alike neither would it be scrupled in such a case by the Apostles to whom he now speaketh 3. Besides if no Sabbath were to be it had been better and clearer to say Stand not and griev not to Travel any day but his words imply the just contrary that there was to be a solemn Sabbath 4. He mentioneth the Sabbath-day only and not the other Festivals of the Jews which were to be kept holy also and by this he distinguisheth the ordinary Sabbath from those other dayes and opposeth it to many as being now the only Holy day on which they should eschew if possible to Travel and would therefore pray to have it prevented for in the New-Testament the Sabbath spoken of as the solemn time for worship is ever meaned of the Weekly Sabbath and other Holy dayes are called the first or last day of the Feast and therefore if the Lords meaning were that they should pray that their flight might not be on any of the Jewish Holy dayes to mention the Weekly Sabbath only would not be sufficient for that end To say that it was for fear of scandal that they should pray not to be put to flye will not remove the former reasons besides at that time the Apostles and other Christians had given up with the Jews and stood not on scandal in such things in reference to them on whom as the Apostle faith 1 Thes. 2.16 Wrath had come to the uttermost and who were not infirm but malicious and so in respect of offence to be dealt with as the Lord did with the Pharisees and therefore all things being considered it appeareth from our Lords words that a Sabbath among Christians was to be Sanctified 40. years or there-about after his death which proveth that the Scripture mentioneth a Sabbath to be Sanctified under the New-Testament We come unto the second way of making out the Morality of this Command to wit by shewing how the Scripture speaketh of the whole Decalogue and thus we reason 1. If all the Commandments of the Decalogue be Moral then must this be so also for it is one of them and if it were not Moral and binding there would not now be Ten words as they are called by the Lord Deut. 10.4 but Nine only which at first blush will and cannot but seem strange and absurd to those who have from Gods word drunk-in that number But all these are Moral and binding as is granted by all except the Papists who deny the second and therefore score it out of their Catechisms And that they must be all alike Moral and binding may be made out these two wayes 1. All of them in the Old-Testament had alike Authority Priviledges and Prerogatives which neither the Judicial nor Ceremonial Law had as 1. To be distinctly pronounced by God himself without adding more Deut 5.22 2. To be written by His own finger in Tables of Stone Exod. 29.18 3. To be laid up and kept in the Ark Exod. 25.1 ● And if these and other Prerogatives did put a difference and shew a difference to be put betwixt the other Nine Commands and all Judicial or Ceremonial Laws Why not betwixt them and this also 2. In the New-Testament they are all alike confirmed when the Law in general is spoken of none of them is excepted and therefore this Command is necessarily included For which we should look first to that place Matth. 5.17 Where our Lord in a special manner intendeth to vindicate the Moral Law and to press holiness in Moral Duties upon His Hearers even in another sort than the Pharisies did Think no ● saith He That I am come to destroy the Law and the Prophets I am not come to destroy but to fulfill Verily he that breaketh one of the least of these Commands and teacheth Men so shall be called least in the Kingdom of God c Where by Law must necessarily be understood the Moral law for he was thought to be a Transgressor of that and especially of this Command in it for that Sermon in Mathew cometh in in order after His being challenged for breach of Sabbath Joh. 5.10 c. And His scope is to wipe off that Imputation and how by shewing that He still presseth the Moral law even beyond what the Pharisies did 2. It was the Moral law especially which the Pharisie s corrupted and whereof he undertaketh the Vindication and it is Holiness in Obedience to that which he presseth as necessary beyond what the Scribes and Pharisies did and indeed it was in that law they failed mainly and not in the Ceremonial law 3. The offence and mistake that Christ is to praeoccupie and rectifie amongst His Hearers requireth this for many of them sancied that by the Messiah there should be a Relaxation from the Duties of Holiness called for in the Moral law and therefore saith He think not so now a Relaxation from some other laws might have been thought of warrantably 4. It is such a law whereof to teach the Abrogation at any time is sinful and pernicious therefore it is certainly the Moral law Secondly We reason thus when He speaketh of the law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or by way of eminency meaning no doubt the Decalogue He speaketh alike of all its Commandements even of the least of them and so
simply or by that which is such in some respects as by unlawful callings and such like All which unlawful wayes may be reduced to these three rapina furtum and turpe lucrum rapine theft and filthy lucre of which more afterward Again this inordinateness we say is when either our Neighbours estate or our own is wronged his may be wronged when ours is not advantaged as by destroying firing and the like out of hatred and malice yea it may be wronged by our negligence when possibly he and our selves are both wronged yet this is condemned in Scripture and Exod. 22.5 sequent the Lord provideth Laws anent it It may be also in reference to the profiting our selves or our neighbour or bettering of our own estate or his there is no doubt inordinateness in getting keeping and using that which belongs to us or to our neighbour as when we get it without right or its due price by anothers folly or negligence c. To proceed a little we shall consider the sin forbidden in this Command as drawn to these three forementioned heads rapina furtum turpe luerum Rapine includeth violence of all sorts both by land and that either by more petty parties as robbers plunderers c. or such as are more strong and able to carry their point as Conquerors Generals of Armies c. medling with that which is not theirs which is robbery in the Lords account Hab. 1.6 And by Sea this is called piracy It was a true and sharp answer which a Pirate did give to Alexander as is recorded who being taken by him and asked How he could or durst live that way replyed He did only what he himself did save that Alexander bereft men of kingdoms he but of a little of their means he with more strength on the land followed his point he with less upon the sea Of which Piracy whether raping or robbing poor innocent Sea-faring-mens goods as it is now used by many I wish all Capers and their Confederates in all Christian Kingdoms and Common-wealths would seriously consider and would to this purpose take notice of what the eminently learned Grotius saith in his Book de jure belli pacis lib. 3. cap. 18. sect 2. but more especially sect 4. where he doth vvith much reason whereof he vvas a great Master and religion assert That when justice strictly so called is not hurt yet a man may sin against that duty which consists in the loving of others and more especially what the Christian law prescribes which yet here is only corroborative of the moral law that perfect and perpetually binding Rule of life and manners so that if it be manifest that such raping robbing or spoyling will chiefly hurt and indammage not the whole body or generality of the Enemies or of the King or such as are of themselves guilty but the Innocent and that in such a measure as will thrust them into the very greatest calamities and miseries wherein to cast even such as are our private and proper debtors were a merciless and cruel act But if to all this it be added that such spoyling or robbing is found to be of no considerable moment or importance neither to put an end to the war nor to cut short and consume the publick and main force of the Enemy then and in that case such gain ought to be accounted unworthy of a morally good man and more especially of a Christian as being made only of the calamity of the times On vvhich account Plutarch blames Crassus that he had made purchase of the most part of his riches by robbing and spoyling in times of fire and svvord looking on the calamities of the times he lived in as his greatest gain Grot. annot ad idem illud cap. 18. Whatever vvill be said for pressed men and other Subjects vvho on the express call of the Magistrate go to Sea-sights their non-obligation to inquire narrovvly and scrupulously into the justness of the War vvhen it doth not appear to them unjust yet unquestionanably such persons as go a raping and their Compartners for a share of the gain are obliged to a strict and accurate examination of the justness of the vvar since they vvillingly offer themselves to such vvork yea seek for access to it as a special favour and priviledge vvhich they may let alone if they please and so in this case ought on the least scruple or ground of haesitation to let it alone and if they go on and seek not satisfaction to their consciences to the yondmost anent the justness of it they make themselves as guilty in their station as the Prince State or Common-vvealth do vvho ingage in an unjust War since vvhatever is not done in faith and from a persvvasion of the vvarrantableness thereof is sin And though a War vvere uncontravertibly just yet Grotius his grounds before laid dovvn vvould be considered by such especially vvho out of a covetous humour and desire to make gain though under the silly pretext of vveakning the Enemy the least thing ordinarily intended by them ingage themselves in this course vvhich not only crusheth many poor Innocents but is also often vvaited vvith bloodshed and taking of mens lives vvho it vvill not it seems be readily denyed may defend themselves and their goods the means of the livelyhood of themselves and their families vvon vvith much toyl and hazard and if they may endeavour the preservation of these goods and defend themselves against such as vvould spoil and bereave them of them then it 's vvorthy of very grave consideration if in this case the assailants vvounding mutilating or killing poor private men quietly follovving their callings for their bread in their ovvn lavvful at least hitherto in this so circumstantiated case by Grotius not judged and determined unlavvful defence vvill be found altogether free especially if the justness of the War be doubtful or not conscientiously inquired into of murther And if the aggressors themselves should be vvounded or killed by these self-defendants vvhether they vvill be vvithout all culpable accession to their ovvn self-murther and so vvhether they vvill not be involved in the guilt not only of the breach of this Eighth but also of the Sixth Command And vvhether goods and an estate acquired or increased by such means may be brooked and possessed vvith solid peace and vvith the vvell-grounded expectation of Gods blessing vvhich maketh rich and addeth no sorrow therewith This I say calls for grave consideration Beside that it hath been observed that such courses h ●ve sometimes not only made these estates that were acquired by them quickly to melt away but also to have been a moth in the estates for the time bettered by them Observable and not altogether alien from this matter is that christian and grave Act made against Prize-goods in the Town-Councel of Edenburgh the head City of this Kingdom in great Mr. Knox his dayes as one blessed fruit of the Gospel amongst many others May 10.
Law and obedience thereto lye on Christians and be called for from them yet it is not laid on them as a Covenant of Works or that by which they are to seek or expect Justification no but on the contrary to overturn self-righteousness by this D ●ct ●ine which manifesteth sin and of it self worketh wrath which is also clear in that he is here called Our God which he cannot be to sinners but by Grace And also it appears from the Lords owning of this sinful people a ● his and his adjoyning to this Law so many Ceremonies and Sacrifices which point out and lead to Christ and from his adding the Law on Mount Sinai as a help to the Covenant made with Abraham Gen. 17. which was a Covenant of Grace and was never altered as to its substance in which the people of Israel as his S ●ed was comprehended therefore it appears that this was never the Lords intent in covenanting thus with his people that they should expect righteousness and life by the adjoyned Law but only that it should be useful in the Hand of Grace to make the former Covenant with Abraham effectual So then though we be bound to obey the Law we are not to seek righteousness or life by the duties therein enjoyned The third Conclusion is that both Ministers in preaching and people in practising of this Law would carry with subordination to Christ and that the duties called for here are to be performed as a part of the Covenant of Grace and of the obligation that lyeth upon us thereby and so all our obedience to God ought still to run in that Channel If we ask how these two differ to wit the performing the duties of the Law as running in the Channel of the Covenant of Grace and the performing of them as running in the Channel of the Covenant of Works or how we are to go about the duties of the Law with subordination to Christ and his Grace ● answer they differ in these four things which shew that these duties are not only to be done but to be done in a way consistent with and flowing from Grace which also follows from this that in the Preface to the Commandments he stileth and holdeth himself forth as Redeemer to be the object of our duty and the motive of it 1 They differ I say first in the End or account upon which they are performed we are not to perform duties that life pardon or enjoying of God may be meritoriously obtained by them but to testifie our r ●spect to him who hath provided these freely for us that we should not r ●st in duties which are engraven on these Covenant-Blessings 2 They differ in the Principle by which we act them 't is not in our own strength as the works of the first Covenant were to be performed but in the strength of Grace and by vertue of the promises of Sanctification comprehended in the s ●cond Covenant 2 Cor. 7.1 3 They differ as to the manner of their acceptation duties by the first Covenant are to abide their tryal upon the account of their own worth and the inherent perfection that is in them and accordingly will be accepted or rejected as they are conform or disconform to the perf ●ct Rule of Gods Law but by the second Covenant the acceptation of our performances prayers praises are founded on Christs Righteousness and Gods mercy in him in whom only they are sweet-smelling Sacrifices and accepted as our persons are for he hath made us to be accepted as to both only in the beloved Eph. 1.4 4 They differ in respect of the motive from which they proceed for the great motive of our obedience in the Covenant of Grace is not fear of threatnings and wrath in case of disobedience which by the Covenant of Works is the main thing sways men to duties nor is it a purchase of Heaven to themselves by their holiness which also by that Covenant is a predominant motive of mens obedience but it is love and gratitude and that not simply to God as Creator but as Redeemer as the Text here sheweth I brought thee out of the House of B ●ndage it is that we may set forth the praises of him who called us and that we may glorifie him that has bought us where Duties have these qualifications they are consist ●nt with Grace and subservient to it but when those are wanting or excluded Christ is wronged and men turn legal and in so far fall from and overturn Grace These Conclusions as necessary Caveats being laid down we shall propose these distinctions for clearing of them 1 We would distinguish betwixt a Law and a Covenant or betwixt this Law considered as a Law and as a Covenant a Law doth necessarily imply no more than 1. To direct 2. To command inforcing that obedience by Authority a Covenant doth further necessarily imply promises made upon some condition or threatnings added if such a condition be not performed now this Law may be considered without the consideration of a Covenant for it was free to God to have added or not to have added promises and the threatnings upon supposition the Law had been kept might never have taken effect but the first two are essential to the Law the last two to Believers are made void through Christ in which sense it is said that by him we are freed from the Law as a Covenant so that Believers life depends not on the promises annexed to the Law nor are they in danger by the threatnings adjoyned to it Hence we are to advert when the Covenant of Works is spoken of that by it is not meaned this Law simply but the Law propounded as the condition of obtaining life by the obedience of it in which respect it was only so formally given to Adam This then is the first distinction betwixt the Law and the Covenant of Works 2 Distinguish betwixt these Ten Commandments simply and strictly taken in the matter of them and more complexly in their full Administration with Pr ●face Promises Sacrifices c. in the first sense th ●y are a Law having the matter but not the form of the Covenant of Works so Moses by it is said to describe such righteousness as the Covenant of Works doth require yet he doth not propound it as the righteousness they were to relye on but his scope is to put them to a Mediator by revealing sin through the Law Rom. 10.3 In the second sense it is a Covenant of Grace that same in substance with the Covenant made with Abraham and with the Covenant made with Beli ●vers now but differing in its Administration 3 Distinguish betwixt Gods intention in giving and the Believers in Israel their making use of this Law and the carnal multitude among that people their way of receiving it and corrupt abusing it contrary to the Lords mind In the first sense it was a Covenant of Grace in the second it turn ●d to be a
the exercise of the duties enjoyned negatives again oblige both semper ad semper th ●t is always and in all differences of time For instance in the third Commandment the affirmative part is to use the Lords Name and Ordinances holily and reverently in prayer r ●ading and hearing c. So in the fourth Commandment we are r ●quired to sanctifie the Sabbath by waiting on Ordinances c. This makes these still duties so as to pray hear c. are still d ●ties but we are not to be and should not be always exercised in these duties for we must abound in other duti ●s also of necessity and mercy we must eat and sleep c. and when we sleep we can neither act love nor fear Again the negative part is not to prophane the Lords Name in his Ordinances this may not be done at any time The reason of th ● difference is this bec ●use in affi ●mative ● we are not always tyed to the a ●●s of Duties and Graces but to the Disposition and H ●bit Habits are a Spiritual Quality a Vis or Pow ●r fitting and enabling for bringing forth these acts and for the bringing them forth in the due time and season when they shall be called for but in sinful things we are prohibited not only the habits but the acts also the one is always and ever a sin but the other is not always called for as duty If any desire Rules to know when a duty is called for as for instance when we are to pray hear c. it is hardly possible to be particular in this yet we may try it by these Generals 1 Any affirmative Precept binds to present practice when the duty r ●quired tends to God ● glory unto which every thing should be done as 1 Cor. ●0 31 and when the omission of the duty may disho ●our hir ● 2 When it tends to others edification and omitting will some way stumbl ● and offend 3 When some speci ●l Providences meet and concur to give opportunity for such a duty as for instance the giving of Alms when we h ●ve it and some indigent person offers whose necessity calls for it Gal. ● 10 So when secrecy for prayer is offered and no other more ●ecessary duty at that time is called for which we are to watch unto C ●l ● 2 or when we meet with some special occasion or Dispensation pointing out to us this or that as a duty called for such a Providence invites us to the practice of that duty for though Providences will not make these things to become duties which are not duties yet they will serve to time and circumstantiate duties that lye on us by vertue of affirmative Prec ●pts 4 Some special occasions and times are set down in the Word as for praying Morning and Evening for hearing the Word on Sabbath days and in these and other the like duties the examples of the Saints so recorded for imitation in Scripture would be obs ●rved as a Copy and Patern 5 When they have not such inconveniences with them as cross ●nd hinder other Moral duties of Edification love c. for if th ●y do that they must yield and give place to these but if no other duty be called for then they ought to be done for we should be in some duty And though such duties be in themselves Moral suppose praying hearing and such others which might be instanced yet the timing of them or going about them at such a time and in such a manner is not Moral simply but as these are by circumstances called for 6 When without sin such a duty cannot be omitted and although there be not ●●y inward exercise of mind or frame of spirit suitable thereto yet the Conscience calls for it or there is some one special occasion or other that puts us to it 3 Observe that this Rule o ● Negatives tying ad s ●mper or obliging in all circumstances of time is not to be understood but where the matter is Moral therefore we would distinguish again betwixt negative Morals and negative Positives for Positives whether negative or affirmative give still place to Morals As for instance that part of the fourth Commandment is negative In it that is on the seventh day thou shalt do no manner of work yet sometimes when necessity calls for it some manner of works is lawful on that day because it is only a negative Positive and not a negative Moral And so David's eating of Shew-bread was against a negative Command though not against a negative Moral but a negative Positive 4 Take this Rule that in all Commands joyntly and severally we would have special respect unto the scope God aims at by them all in general or by such a Command in particular now the general scope is 2 Cor. 7.1 1 Pet. 1.15 ●6 perfect and absolute holiness even as he is holy and therefore whatever he requires he requires that it be absolutely perfect in its kind as that our love to him be with the whole heart c. and so our love to others be as to our selves our Chastity and Purity all must be absolute see 1 Tim. 1.5 This Rule will teach us what we are to aim and level at And whatever Exposition of the Commandments comes not up to this scope is no doubt defective and by this Rule only can we be helped to the right meaning of every Commandment for each of them his its peculiar scope both as to the duties it requires and sins it condemns And by this Rule it is that our Lord Christ whose Exposition with that of the Prophets is best draws in the least and smallest branches of ●lthiness to the seventh Commandment which dischargeth all things contrary to perfect and compleat Purity 5 The fifth Rule is that the Law is spiritual Rom. 7.14 and that not only outward obedience to such duties or outward abstinence from such sinful acts is called for but the Law having a spiritual meaning calls for spiritual service and that in these three 1. As it requires spiritual duties such as Faith Fear Love to God and to others right habits as well as right affections and outward actions and therefore Paul to prove the spirituality of the Law instanceth in the habit of Lust Rom 7. as a thing thereby discharged 2. The Law is spiritual in that the obligation thereof reaches to the Spirit and very inwards of the Heart affections and thoughts as well as to the outward man the love it requires is love with all the Soul Heart and Mind Hence there is Heart-Idolatry Murder and Adultery as well as outward therein condemned 3. It is spiritual in respect of the manner it requires as to all outward duties that they be done to a spiritual end from a spiritual principle and in a spiritual way opposite to the carnal way to which the unrenewed heart of man is inclined in which sense we are commanded to walk in the
these Rules ● we would be found defective and faulty and what matter of humiliation and repentance we may have for what is past and what challenges we may have hereafter from this Law with what need of continual applications to the Blood of Sprinkling and of Washings in that open Fountain to the House of David and Inhabitants of Jerusalem for sin and uncleanness and what need of endeavours to have our steps ordered more exactly according to it Before we close the Preface I shall first add two distinctions more then two more Rules 3. Give you some Scriptures for your memories cause 4. Give some directions or helps to those who make conscience to study this Law 5. Answer and clear a special case 1 Then ye would distinguish betwixt this Law as given to Adam and as given to Israel for as given to him it was a Covenant of Works but as given to them it 's a Covenant of Grace and so from us now it calls for Gospel-duties as Faith in Christ 1 Tim. 1.5 Repentance Hope in God c. and although it call for legal duties yet in a Gospel-manner therefore we are in the first Commandment commanded to have God for our God which cannot be by sinners obeyed but in Christ Jesus the Covenant of Works being broken and the tye of Friendship thereby between God and Man made void so that now men as to that Covenant are without God in the world and without Christ and the Promises Ephes. 2.12 13. And so our having God for our God which is pointed at in the Preface to the Commandments and Christ for our Saviour and closing with his Righteousness and the Promises of the Covenant which are all Yea and Amen in him must go together 2 Distinguish betwixt the divers Administrations of the Covenant of Grace and of the Law in respect of Positives falling under the second Commandment for that Commandment tyed the Israelites before Christ to Circumcision Sacrifices the seventh day of the Week and other Ceremonies agreeable to the Administration of the Law and Covenant of Grace then but now it forbiddeth them to us and requireth other duties for the Priesthood being changed there is of necessity a change also of the Laws belonging thereto yet that Commandment as a part of the Moral Law doth perpetually oblige and tye to worship God and none other and that according to the manner which he prescribes Next unto the Rules already laid down for the better understanding of the Commandments we add two more The first is that the Commandments are so to be expounded as that none of them may contradict another that is there is nothing commanded in one that is forbidden in another or contrary one duty doth not justle with nor thrust out another but they differ only and then two duties coming together in that case one of them ceaseth to be a duty for that time as is said in that distinction of affirmative and negative Commands The second Rule is that all these Commandments bind and call for obedience from men according to their places and other qualifications and circumstances The fifth Commandment calleth for one thing from a Magistrate another from a Subject a Magistrate is to edifie one way a Minister another a private Christian another a Servant is one way to reprove his Fellow-servant a Master another way The Law requires more from a man of parts power and riches than from another as to exercise and improvement of these gifts The Law being just has in it a proportionableness to places parts c. and sets bounds to stations but alters them not nor confounds them 3 For the help of your memories and that ye may have these Rules more obvious ye may draw them all under these five Scriptures The first Scripture is Psal. 119. v. 96. Thy Commandment is exceeding broad which though it be more extensive in its meaning yet it doth certainly include this Law which in an especial way is the Commandment and in the sense and comprehensive meaning thereof is exceeding broad for it takes in the fulness and extent of the whole Law in its obligation as to all things persons and duties of all sorts The second Scripture is Rom. 7.14 which speaks to the Spirituality of the Law in the obedience which it calleth for the Law is Spiritual The third Scripture is Rom. 7.12 which speaks the perfection of its nature the Law is Just therefore fretting against what it commandeth or wishing it were otherwise is a breach thereof It is holy therefore to be disconformable unto it is to be unholy it 's good and therefore it ought to be loved and delighted in The fourth Scripture is 1 Tim. 1.5 and it speaketh the great end of the Law The end of the Commandment is Charity out of a pure Heart and a good Conscience and Faith unfeigned which threefold End speaketh out the absolute purity and holiness called for in our love to God and others so as to have a good conscience in this before God all which must slow from unfeigned Faith without presumption resting on Jesus Christ who is in this sense the end of the Law The fifth Scripture is 1 Tim. 1.8 The Law is good if a man use it lawfully and this guards against abusing of the Law and putteth us to the lawful use of it There are extreams in abusing the Law as 1. When it is used to seek Righteousness by it Again 2. When the Authority of it is pretended for something it Warrants not such as the Traditions of the Fathers Mat. 15. seeking of Salvation by the observation of Circumcision c. 3. When its Authority in practise is denied 4. When it is turned from practise to vain speculations and questions 5. When it is so used as it deters and scares from Christ 6. When it is so made use of as it oppresses and discourages a Believer for whose sake 1 T ●● 1.19 it was never made or appointed as to its threatnings and condemning Power And lastly in a word when it is not used to the ends and in the manner expressed in the former Scriptures Fourthly Because the study of this Law is so singularly useful we not only press and commend it but add further some few directions whereby we may be helped rightly to use it and to guard against the abuse of it in our hearing and reading of it 1 The first direction is ye would look on it as God's Word and take it as if ye heard himself from Sinai pronounce it that so ye may tremble and be more affected with holy fear when ever ye read hear it or meditate upon it for so was the people affected when it was first promulgate 2 Be much in prayer for grace to take up its meaning David Psal. 119.18 c. prayed often for this and thought it not unbecoming a King yea a believing King and a Prophet to study this Law and pray much for opened eyes to understand the
God as if it merited somewhat nor yet more strengthned by making of it but more ingaged to perform and keep what we have vowed 6. There should be Diligence in doing going on and helping and inciting others to joyne with us that so it may through Grace be made irrevocable which is the practise of the People of God Jer. 50.4 5. 7. There should be Ingaging in the Lively Exercise of Faith drawing Strength from Jesus Christ according to His own promise and of our selves to make use of him for that end Yea that should be Laid for the Foundation of our undertaking Therefore every such ingaging is a Covenanting with God and there is no Covenanting with Him but by interposing of Jesus Christ both for the procuring of Pardon for by-past failings and guilt and for Grace and Strength to perform called-for and ingaged into Duties ●or the Future See a frame of Spirit ●it for Covenanting when seriously and suitably gone about Jer. 50.4.5 Concerning these Ingagements we say 2. That they are of themselves Obligatory and binding to those who come under them as Numb 30.2 3. Vowing is called the Binding of a Man's Soul And Psal. 36.12 it 's said Thy Vows are upon me O Lord as pressing him with a Weight till they were payed If it be asked 1. How Vows bind We Answer 1. In Moral Duties they make the Obligation no greater for they being laid on by the Command of God and having his Authority there can be no Addition to that in it self But there is a twofold Addition 1. In respect of us so that though the Obligation be not greater in it self yet we joine our Approbation or Consent unto that whereby as by a positive Superadded Voluntary Consent we bind our selves so that in some respect we have two Bonds the Law and our Oath both for one 2. Though it make not the former Obligation to bind more strongly in it self yet it maketh that Obligation to have a more deep Impression upon us so that a man by Vow bound to a commanded Duty will think himself more bound to it than before and that Command will have a deeper Impression and a more weight on him to perswade him to do and to challenge him when he hath omitted than before Again in things that are meerly Accessaries to a Religious end as Extrinsick Means for Instance Fasting Staying at Home Vowing c. never maketh the doing of these of themselves to be Acts of Religious Worship but it maketh our keeping of them to be by a Religious Tye so that without Prophanity they cannot be altered out of the case of necessity If it be asked 2. What is to be thought of our Common and Ordinary Ingagements 1. By Baptism 2. At the Lords Supper 3. By Oaths in Covenants 4. Ingagements in Private to God by Vows Purposes Promises Resolutions in thoughts within or expressed in Prayer I suppose it doth not a little concern all of you to know how they bind and when they are broken We Answer 1. That All these are binding and still accounted so Psal. 119.106 Psal. 67. is not to be doubted yea binding in an Eminent Degree as being made To God and not only Before Him The Nature of the thing and our consent also bindeth For 1. If interposing the Name of God to men doth bind much more to God 2. If a Promise solemnly ratifyed bind to men much more to God Hence 3. Our Obligations in Baptism and the Lords Supper receive Strength and Conviction against us from the Covenant which we solemnly Ratifie and renew with God therein and that before the World And our Breach of these Vows is charged on us by the Lord as an open Breach of his Covenant the Obligation whereof is pleaded from them Genesis 17. ver 10. and 14. and else-where 2. Yet do they not bind absolutely as the Duty lyeth upon us and as we should aim at it for though we be bound by the Law to be perfectly Holy and without sin yet doth not a Vow so tye us or that Obligation is not from our Vow but from the Law because our Vow is to be understood 1. With Respect to our Nature now Corrupt and sinful and therefore to Vow Absolutely to be without Sin or absolutely to abstain from it is injurious and impossible 2. With respect to our aim and desire 3. With respect to our not Approving or Dis-approving our selves in any thing wherein we come short 4. In respect of the Obligation to endeavour it which is Alway and by all suitable means to presse at it and to leave nothing undone which may further it So then 1. They do not bind Absolutely or Simply but Respectively 2. Not as to the Victory but as to the Wrestling and Fighting for Victory 3. Not as to the Event but as to the Means which are in our Power and therefore some plead That they had not broken Covenant though they had Sins Psal. 44.17 3. Though they bind not Simply or Absolutely and are not therefore to be so taken or understood yet they tye Absolutely 1. To the main of having God ours in Christ. 2. In other things thus 1. They tye us to live in no known Sin especially Outward Sins and to delight in none 2. To omit no Known Duty but to essay the doing of it 3. As to the Manner to essay it seriously so that though a man cannot swear that he shall ●ave no Corruption in him while he is upon Earth Yet in so far he may As 1. Not to approve of it 2. To leave no means unessayed consisting in his Knowledge that may help to mortifie it 3. Seriously and in good Earnest to be aiming at the Mortification of it in the Use of these And so this Tye of a Vow is 1. As far as in us lyeth 2. As Universal as the Duty is 3. Constant and always binding 4. When it 's taken on we should not let it lye on to say so till the Sun go down but endeavour that we may be free of it it bindeth us to quit Sin as well as to eschew it It reaches not all Infirmities to make them Breaches but known Sins or the least sins stuck to 3. Concerning these Vows we say That the Breach of them is a very great Sin and doth much more aggravate Sin where it is than where it is not So that the Sins of Christians against Baptism Communions Oaths in Covenants Secret Ingagements Resolutions and Promises to God are much greater than the Sins of others Hence the Lord chargeth Israel with Covenant-Breaking by vertue of their Circumcision which they had received as a Seal thereof and aggravateth all their Sins by that and looketh on them in that Respect as singularly sinful Deut. 29.24 Jer. 22.8 c. which could not so well be if there were not some Peculiarity in that Obligation Our Baptism doubtless is no less binding unto us nor the Breach of our Baptismal Vows less sinful Col. 2.11
and perpetually-binding rule of life and manners that short summary and abridgment of all calle ●-for duties and forbidden sins whatever Socinians with whom Anabaptists and Arminian-Remonstrants on the matter joyn hands on a wo ●ful design to transform the Gospel into a new Law or Covenant of Works that thereby in place of the righteousness of Faith a righteousness of Works may be established by their alledged Supplements and Amendments of and Additaments to it to be made in the New Testament and Papists by their v ●inly boasted-of Works of Super-erogation and Counsels of Perfection whereby they would have the Law out-done by doing more than it requireth audaciou ●ly averr to the contrary even these Ten-words afterward contracted by the Lord Christ into two Words or Commandments immediatly pronounced by God himself and twice written with his own singer on Tables of stone comprising a great many various matters and purposes so that it may without any the least hesitation or Hyperbole be asserted There was never so much matter and marrow with so much admirably-holy cunning compended couched and conveyed in so few words by the most Laconick concise sententious and singularly significant spok ●sman in the World And no wonder since it is He that gave men tongues and taught them to speak that speaketh here who hath infinitly beyond the most expert of them being all but Battologists and Bablers beside Him the art of speaking much marvellously much in few words and would even in this ●ave us according to our measure humbly to imitate him And no doubt it is one of the many moe and more grosse evidences of the d ●cl ●nsion of this Generation from the ancient lovely and laudable simplicity that many men forgetting that God ●● first appointed words to be the external signs of the ●●●●rnal ●concep ●●●●s of their minds and foolishly fancing that because they love and admire to hear themselves talk others do or are ob ●●ged to do so affect to multiply words if not without knowl ●dg yet without necessity and with vast disproportion to the matter And whereas a few of their words rightly disposed might sufficien ●ly serve to bring us to the very outmost border and boundary of their conceptions and also to make suitable impressions of them all the end of words yet ere we can come that length we must needs wear away our time and weary our s ●lves in wandring through the wast Wilderness of the unn ●c ●ssary and superfluous remainder of them And this doth usher in or rather is ushered in by an other piece of neighbour vanity whereby men wearing of wonted and long-worn words though sufficiently significant grow fond upon novel new-coyn'd and never before heard of ones stretching their wit if superfluity of words though both new and neat be worthy to be placed amongst the productions of wit for thereby we are made never a whit the wiser nor more knowing and putting their invention on the Tenters to find out no new matter but new words whereby often old plain and obvious matters are intricated and obscured at least to more ordinary Readers and Hearers a notable perversion of the end of words for which the institut ●r of them will call to an account neither are they satisfied with such curiosity in coarser and more comm ●n matters but this Alien and Forraign yea even Romantick and wanton stile of language is introduced into and male-partly obtruded upon Theologicks and most sublimely spiritual purposes whether discou ●sed by vive voyce or committed to writing which ought I grant to be spoke as becometh the Oracles of God with a grave appositness of phrase keeping some proportion with the Majesty of the matter that they may not be exposed to contempt by any unbecoming incongruity or baseness by which it cometh to pass to the inspeakable prejudice and obstruction of Edification that many in their niceness nauseating the form of simple and sound words are ready to hiss and how ● off the Theater of the Church the most precious and profitable points of Truth though abundantly beautiful Majestick and powerful in their own native spiritual simplicity as un ●it to act their part and as being but dull and blunt things if not altogether unworthy to be owned and received as truths if they appear not whether in the Pulpit or Press cloathed with this strange and g ●udic attire with this Comaedians Coat dressed up with the Feathers of Arrogant humane Eloque ●ce and be-aa ●b ●d with this Rethorick and affectedly-belaboured Elegancy of speech which our truly manly and magnanimous Christian Author did undervalew And no great wonder since even the Heathen moral Philosopher Seneca did look at it as scarce worthy of a man for writing to his Lucillius he willeth him in stead of being busied about words to cause himself have a feeling of the substance thereof in his heart and to think those whom he seeth to have an affected and laboured kind of speech to have their spirits occupied about vain things comparing such to diverse young me ● w ●ll trimmed and frizled who seem as they were newly com ●●●●t of a box from which kind of men nothing firm nor generous is to be expected And further affirmeth that a vertu ●●● man speaketh more remisly ●ut more securely and whatever he sa ●t ● hath more con ●idence in it th ●n curiosity that speech being the Image of the mind if a man disguise and polish it too curiously it is a token that the speaker is an Hypocrit and little worth And that it is no manly Ornament to speak affectedly nay this hath of late with other extravagancies risen to such a prodigious hight amongst the wisdom of words or word-wisdom Monopolizing men of this age that if the great Apostle Paul who spoke wisdom though not of this sort nor of this world amongst them that were perfect and did upon design not from any defect decline all wisdom of words all in ●icing words of mens wisdom and excellency of speech that the cross of Christ might not be made of none effect and that the faith of his hearers might not stand in the wisdom of men but in the power of God and who loved to spea ● in the Demonstration of the Spirit and of power wherein the Kingdom of God consisteth and not in words if that great Apostle were now Preaching he would probably be looked at by such wordy and wise heads as but a we ●k man and of rude and contemp ●ible speech as he was by the big-talking Doctors of the Church of Corinth ● if not a mere Babler as he was by the Philosophers and Orators at Athens The subject matter I say of this Treatise must needs be ●ost excellent being the Spiritual Holy Just and good Law the Royal Law binding us to the Obedience of God our King the Law which Jesus Christ came not to destroy but to ful ●il whereof he is the end for Righteousness to every
Whether we ought to Love all men alike 317 In what respects may we make a difference ibid. What are the grounds of a lawfull difference in our Love 318 How love to the Godly differeth from common love to others 319 How we may love wicked men ibid. What self-Love is lawful what not 320 ●ust how early it entred into the world 350 Several degrees of unnatural Lusts 353 See Concupiscence Lye what it is and when is one guilty of it 437 Four sorts of Lyes 438 How many wayes we wrong our neighbour by Lying 439 440 441 Of Lying in Court of Justice how the Judge how the Advocate may be guilty as well as a false witness 444 445 Life the taking away of our own cleared to be forbidden in the 6 Command 342 How many ways one may be guilty of this ibid. How we may sin against the bodily Life of others 343 How against the Life of their souls 344 345 How against their Life of contentment 346 M MArriage how many wayes men sin in Contracting of it 356 How one may sinne against the 7 command even in a Married state 356 357 How on may sin in dissolving of Marriage 358 Mother why mentioned in the first Command 313 Moral all the precepts in the decalogue not moral in the same sense 7 See Sabbath Murther several distinctions of it 347 How its committed in the heart how in words gestures deeds 348 349 How Magistrates may be guilty of it 349 Self-Murder how forbidden 342 See Life N NAme what is meant by the Name of God 121 What it is to take this Name in vain 122 What is necessary to the reverent mentioning of the Name of God 123 Why the taking of this Name in vain is so peremptorily prohibited 124 Eight ordinary wayes of taking the Lords Name in vain 161 How the Name of God is taken in vain in ordinances and duties 162 How to prevent this sin in duties 163 164 How we know when guilty of it 165 166 Why the taking of Gods Name in vaine is so threatened and punished even beyond other sinnes 180 181 How it comes that this sin is so ordinary 182 183 Directions for the prevention of it 184 Neighbour to be honoured and loved 313 How we should love and honour our neighbour 316 See honour and love O OAth five things to be considered in it 126 How one Oath differs from an asseveration 127 That its unlawfull to swear by Angels Saints or other Creatures proved ibid. The difference between promissory and asse ●tory Oaths and between promissory Oaths and Vows shewed 131 A threefold matter of an Oath and a threefold occasion of Swearing 131 132 Of expresse or tacite conditions in all promissory Oaths 133 Whether indefinite Oaths such as these imposed in Colledges in Corporations or such as Souldiers take to their officers be Lawfull ibid. What does not lose the Obligation of promissory Oaths thirteen particulars instanced 136 137 What Oaths are null and of no force 138 Four cases wherein the obligation of a lawfull Oath ceaseth 139 Why wicked men keep their sinful Oaths much more strictly then they doe lawful oaths 140 What an Oath super addeth to a promise ibid. Obedience The difference between obedience to the morall law as it respects the Covenant of grace and as it respects the covenant of works 4 5 See Duties Command Law Omens and observations when sinfull and superstitious 175 176 How superstitious Observations may be made of a Word of Scripture 177 Oppression shewed to be a sort of rapine and against the 8 command 400 Obtestations when lawfull and binding and how we may also sin in them 141 142 P PErjury several sorts of it and several wayes how one may become prejured 134 Whether one that necessitates another to swear when he has a suspicion that that other will for swear himself become Acessory to his perjury 135 See Oath Poligamy how a breach of the seventh Command 255 Poverty how men sinfully bring it upon themselves and so violate the 8 Command 411 Punishment of the iniquities of the Fathers upon the Children threatned in the 2 Command proved to mean spiritual and eternal punishment especially 114 115 Three considerations for clearing how the Lord does thus punish Children for the Parents sin 117 Five ends for which the Lord threatness the Posterity of wickked men 117 118 How children become guilty of the Parents sin and what special need some have to repent of the sins of their ancestors 120 Praising of God required in the ● Command 82 Our ordinary failings before the going about this duty ibid. Many failings in the performances of this duty enumerated 82 83 Our failings after praising 84 Prayer required by the 2 Commandment 79 Many sins before Prayer instanced ibid. Many ordinary sins in Prayer 79 80 Many sins while joyning with others in Prayer enumerated 81 Many ordinary sins after Prayer instanced in 81 82 Preface I am the Lord thy God a preface to all the Commandments but more especially to the first command 25 Pride in what things it appear 339 See Humility Promises why annexed to some Commandments rather then to others 27 Why the first Command is called the first Command with Promise 312 What Comfort the Promise made in the 2 Command to the thousand generations c. affords to believing Parents and their children 119 What is the meaning of the Promise annexed to the 5 Commandment and how to be understood 330 What Advantage a Believer under the New Testament has by such temporal Promises 331 See Vowes R RApine what it is 397 Religion how concerned in the duties we ow to others 310 Riches ten prejudices that come by them 416 Right whether a wicked men has it to any thing here 330 S SAbbath the observation of it a moral duty 188 Three considerations for clearing the morality of it 189 The morality of it proved from the Scriptures way of speaking of it in general 190 The Prophesies Ezekiel 43 44 45 46 ch Considered 192 194 Math 24 20 considered 194 2 Proved that all the 10 Commandments are moral and consequently this 195 This cleared from Mat. 5.19 Jam. 2 10. 796 3 Several peculiar remarks upon the 4 Command confirming the morality of it 119 120 4 Four Arguments drawn from Scripture to prove this 201 202 203 Four Nota ●●e Witnesses to this truth 203 204 Objections answered 205 206 207 Remembring of the Sabbath imports four things 237 238 How to reckon when the Sabbath begins and ends 239 What proportion of it should be bestowed on spiritual duties 239 240 Severall Considerations tending to clear that the 4 command intended not the Seventh but a Seventh day primarily 241 242 Six Arguments for Evincing this 243 to 248 Some objections answered 249 Several Considerations for clearing when the Sabbath begins 249 250 Divers arguments to prove that the Sabbath begins in the morning and continues till next morning 251 to 255 1 That the Sabbath may be
changed from the Seventh day to the first proved not derogatory from the 4 Commandment 255 2 That it was Convenient that the day should be changed proved 256 3 That the change should be to the first day of the week proved most convenient 260 4 That the Seventh-day-Sabbath was actually changed to the first day proved 262 to 271 5 That this Change is not by Humane but Divine Institution proved 271 to 275 6 That this change was made by Christ from the very day of his Resurrection proved to be probable 275 How the Lord did Sanctifie the Sabbath and we ought to sanctifie it 276 What works are Lawfull on the Lords day 277 279 Eight Caveats for preventing the Abuse of what liberty God allows on that day 280 281 What is meant by a Sabbath days journey 278 What resting on the Sabbath imports and from what we must rest 282 283 284 That we are equally oblidged to the sanctification of the Sabbath as they were of old 285 An Objection answered 286 Wherein the peculiar holiness required on the Lords day consists 287 288 289 What preparation is necessary for the Sabbath 290 Particular directions for Sanctifying the Lords Day from morning to evening 291 292 293 What 's to be done when the Sabbath is over 294 How the Lord Blesses the Sabbath 299 Why he has set a part a day to himself 300 How Magistrates are by the letter of the 4 command oblidged to take care that the Sabbath be observed by all that are under them 296 298 Six aggravations of the Sin of Sabbath-breaking 301 302 In what sense Sabbath-breaking is a greater sin then the breach of any command in the second table 303 Several wayes whereby the Sabbath is prophaned 304 305 Some Directions for preventing this sin 306 Sacraments the right administration of them required in the 2 command 85 Eight observations ● Concerning the Sacraments in general 85 86 87 Five ends and uses of the Sacraments 87 88 How the Sacraments seal the proposition of a practical Syllogisme how the assumption and how the conclusion 88 89 How we sin by laying too much weight on the Sacraments ten several failings instanced in 92 How we sin in undervaluing of of them seventeen wayes enumerated 93 How we sin in not receiving the Lords-Supper 97 Many ordinary failings before the participation of this ordinance enumerated 98 Many sins on the receiving of the Lords-Supper instanced 99 100 Many sins after partaking of this ordinance instanced 101 102 Whether the admission of scandalous persons does pollute the ordinance 102 to 108 Sins forbidden in the 1 command 30 39 40 41 How we may find out the sins against the 1 command 42 43 Sins forbidden in the 2 command 70 71 72 Sleep whether we may not Contract the guilt of sin when Sleeping Answered affirmatively 19 The difference between the case of Sleeping-men and mad-men 19 20 Seven arguments to prove the affirmative answer to the question 21 22 23 24 Swear see Oath Superstition see omens and observations superiours why called Fathers and Mothers 314 T TAbles of the Division of the Moral Law into two Tables 7 8 Three observations on the Connexion of the two Tables 310 Four Scriptures that help to understand the second table 311 Temperance in eating and drinking stands not in an indivisible point 377 See drunkenness Theft what that forbidden in the 8 Command is with the several sorts of it 396 Four sorts of theft more strictly taken 401 Twenty five wayes of stealing or wronging the goods of others 404 to 410 How men sin against the 8 Command in reference to their own goods 411 Whether theft ought to be punished with death 427 Threatnings why annexed to some Commands and not to others 27 What the meaning of the threatning annexed to the 2 command 114 115 How the threatning annexed to the 3 command is to be understood 179 See punishment Trading the lawfulness of it and how to be managed 417 Some general rules for right buying and selling 41 ● W WOrd the right hearing of it required in the 2 Command ●5 How many wayes we sin before the hearing of the word ibid. Many sins while hearing the word instanced 76 77 Many instances of sin after the hearing of the word 77 78 How a word of Scripture may be superstitiously abused 177 Worship of God the difference between that enjoyned in the 1 command from what is enjoyned in the 2 command 52 53 Worship of Images among the heathen two-fold 58 Some distinctions of divine worship 59 How religious worship differeth from evil or politick ibid. Worshiping of God by Images proved unlawfull 61 The heathens way of worshiping Images Considered ibid. The place Deut 12.31 considered 62 The Israelites worshipping the Calf in the wilderness Mica's Image Jeroboams Calfs the high Places in Juda Considered 62 63 64 That such a way of worshiping God is forbidden in the 2 Command proved by five arguments 67 Exceptions answered ibid. Will-worship prohibited in the ● Command 72 See more in Idolatry Images Onbelief how ● breach of the 1 command 47 Vsury how forbidden 428 All gain by Lending of Mony neither contrary to equity nor charity ibid. Six considerations for clearing this 429 431 On what grounds Vsury might be forbidden peculiarly to the Israelites 430 Several inconveniences that follow the asserting the unlawfulness of all profit by lent-mony 432 Whether one that lends Mony may contract for so much gain 433 Some Cautions to prevent abuses in this 434 Vowes not only lawfull but in some cases necessary proved 144 In what cases and what things lawful and how to be gone about 145 146 How they bind in moral duties and how in accessory helps to duties 147 How and in what respects Vowes against sin and for holiness at baptisme or other occasions bind 147 148 How the breach of them aggravats si ● 149 Whether these aggravations render it more eligible not to Vow at all 150 Whether the Simple omission of duty be a lesser sin then the doing Contrary to our Vow 150 151 Whether one under Conviction of failing in performing Vowes can keep up his peace 151 152 How we may be helped to perform our Vowes to the Lord 152 153 ERRATA Reader Please to take Notice that there are two Marginal Notes of the Publishers thorow the Printers inadvertency slipt into the Body of the Book the one is PAge 3. line 2. the other is p. 333. l. 2 Some other Mistakes the Judicious Reader will easily correct as in p. 75. l. 3. trust for tryst i. e to meet p. 253. l. 3. trusted for trysted and elsewhere p. 231. l. 9. private for family p. 234. as for has p. 287. l. 2. needless by for needl ●sly p. 289. l. 7. e ●ealting for exulting p. 30 ● l. 23. statutes for statu ●s p. 320. l. 7. mediate for immediate idem p. 344. l. 6. p. 341 l. 5. dead for dear p. 358 l. 19. walking for waking p. 382.
us lay we are not freed from the guilt of Perjury though the thing Sworn do now by our own sloathfulness become impossible or if the thing Sworn might have been performed before any such impossibility came on or if we might have prevented it by our sutable circumspection and diligence 10. Though a sinful Oath to wit being made on a sinful promise in it self bind not yet the sinful condition being fulfilled it bindeth as in the case of Judah his promising a Kid to Thamar upon that wretched condition of prostituting her self to his sinful Lust who did offer the performance of what he had engaged to upon that most sinful condition now fulfilled for the condition being fulfilled the promise is absolute and the sin was not in giving the Kid but in the condition that was made which is past 11. Much less will it exempt any man from the guilt of Perjury that in Swearing he had a meaning of the words of the Oath contrary to what in common sense they bear in the construction of all indifferent persons or to their meaning sine juramento or extra juramentum or that he had any reservation in his own mind the first is Aequivocation the second is mental Reservation that have no place in such an Oath which should be plain single and clear Neither 1 ● will a dispensation from any other as for instance from the Pope who hath no power to dispense in Oaths nor from lawful Superiours except it be in things wherein by our relation to such Superiours we are subjected to them loose the obligation of our Oath nor free us from the guilt of Perjury if I say the matter of the Oath be in things to which their power over us doth not extend in such things doubtless they cannot dispense 13. The obligation of an Oath cannot be loosed nor the guilt of Perjury evited by commutation of the thing sworne for it must be according to what has proceeded out of our mouth Numb 30.2 Psal. 15.4 14. Nor can it be loosed and Perjury eschewed by any posteriour tye and Oath for thereby the prior or former Oath is not made null but the posterior or latter is made null by the former for juramentum non derogat juri alieno because God is party and we cannot reverse an obligation to him which Hee or other hath by a prior right and tye But they are null and of no force 1. When the thing sworne is sinful and unlawful in it self because there is nullum vinculum iniquitatis there is not neither can there be any obligation to Iniquity 2. When it is unlawful to him that sweareth as suppose one would swear to do that which were incumbent for a Magistrate or Minister he himself being but a meer private person and it no ways belonging to his station it tyeth him indeed to endeavour by all sutable means the effecting of the thing by them but not to do it himself for it altereth not stations 3. When the thing is simply impossible Oaths cannot bind in that case 4. When the Oath is engaged in by any in whose power the thing sworne is not as by Children Wives Servants or Subjects in such things wherein they are subject to others and of which they are not Masters it tyeth them only to endeavour it with their approbation or permission see Numb 31. 5. When the deceit is not in circumstantials but in essentials as suppose one should swear to such another person to pay him such a debt or to give such and such obedience thinking him to be the very person to whom he oweth these things who yet is not the person we suppose him to be the ground of the Oath is null and its obligation accordingly ceaseth as when Jacob was deceived by his getting Leah first for Rachel because such an Oath wrongeth another to whom that which is sworn is due and supposeth the condition of being due 6. When the Oath is impeditive of a greater good or of a moral duty as suppose a man had sworn not to go to such a place nor to speak to such a person nor to eat such meat that Oath being at first rash and without judgment if duty and necessity call him to the contrary of what he hath sworn bindeth not because a moral command may require him to go thither to take on such a charge there or to speak to that person for his edification c. yet this would be tenderly applyed and with great circumspection 7 When the Oath is interposed to oblige to the performance of some thing which hath a tendency to an ill end as for instance if a Man should swear to meet with a Woman for committing filthiness to give armes for helping to oppose an innocent or any such like thing for though coming to such a place or giving such armes may be lawful yet as so circumstantial this coming and this giving of them with such an intention is unlawful and therefore the Oath is null For loosing from the obligation of an Oath which is lawful there are these cases granted 1. When it is contradicted by a Superiour having power in that very particular as Numb 31. 2. When the case materially altereth as if one should swear to give such a man armes who afterward turneth mad or an Enemy to give obedience to such a Commander who afterwards becometh a private man and ceaseth to be any more a Commander because in such cases the relation upon which the duty and Oath is founded ceaseth 3. When the party sworn unto relaxeth us for though none can absolve from a Vow yet in a promissory Oath whereby some right accrcrueth to one from another a man may dispense with his own right as for instance he may in whole or in part forgive and discharge such a sum of money that another by Oath has sworne to give him which when he doth in so far the Oath and its obligation is loosed he having as himself thinketh fit accepted satisfaction for whole or part but in Vows to God no man can dispense He being party there 4. When by some after and unforeseen intervening Emergent the man is quite disabled from performing his Oath as by Sickness Plundering c. In that case so far and so long as he is disabled in so far and so long is he loosed that condition being necessarily presupposed in giving the Oath at first though the obligation to performance layeth still on him so far and so soon as he shall be able It may be marked by the way that often prophane men are more strict in keeping sinful Oaths than those which are lawful the Devil putting home that obligation on them as a snare and their own corruption siding with the Oath in its matter maketh it appear strongly binding to them If it be asked Wherein it is that an Oath bindeth more than a Promise doth Answ. An Oath bindeth to nothing but what is in the Promise but it bindeth
peace and say in a Gospel-sense We have not turned back from thee nor dealt falsely in thy Covenant as it is Psal. 44.17 18. which certainly implyeth not absolute holiness or exact performance of all the Articles of the Covenant but that 1. In the great and main Articles they were honest and did not put another God in his room to provoke him to Jealousie 2. That they intended truly the keeping of all and said nothing by their profession or engagements which they minded not to perform 3. That they had some testimony as to what was past that they had in some measure walked according to their engagements and had left nothing undone at least willingly and with approbation of themselves therein that might have furthered them in keeping Covenant but had stuck to Him in doing and suffering honestly a man sincerely and in the strength of grace studying this may attain to such a testimony from his own Conscience and to a good measure of peace yea a man that may have quietness in his performing duty upon the account of other tyes without engaging may also come to have quietness in his engaging to it If then there be a necessity to engage it may be asked How peace may be attained in it and how we may be helped to perform Answ. 1. We should endeavour to be clear and quiet as to the soundness of our by-past engagements and of these we presently enter in as to the motives grounds ends and manner of engaging that all be right there 2. If any thing be seen to be wrong it should be taken with and mended that we use not Vows mainly to put by a challenge for the time without any more of it 3. Ye should seriously mind these directions 1. Forget not your Vows and Engagements be minding them often and thinking of them so as they may never be forgotten Jer. 50.4 5. 2. Defer not to pay them Eccles. 5.4 Deut. 23.21 Delays make the impression of the weight of the Vow and of the dread of Him to whom it is made much to wear out and taking liberty to be slack in paying of it for but for this once or for a little while is a direct breach of it self and maketh way for more 3. Keep in mind and entertain such a frame of spirit as ye were in when they were at first made such humility tenderness awe of God c. We often alasse take on Vows in a good frame to be on the matter a sort of excuse for us in letting such a frame go or at least to ease us a little for the time as if engaging were performance which is not the least part of the deceit of our hearts 4. The performance of the thing would be followed as it is undertaken to wit in the strength of grace and by virtue of life derived from Jesus Christ quickning and strengthening us both as promising and performing 5. We should be often considering the fearfulness of the sin of Breaking and examining our selves about our keeping of them making breaches that are particularly observed the matter of confession to God and of serious repentance before him If we would suffer these things to sink down deep in us as in the sight of God this no doubt would make them have a quite other impression 6. We should still keep the knot fast and if one promise or resolution seem to be loosed we should forthwith cast another or if one obligation given seem to be weakned we should give another that there may be still some obligation standing over our heads and following engagements not formally but soberly and seriously renewed may be made use of to bind on the former upon us and to make th ●m more effectual so say they Jer. 50.4 5. going and weeping as they go Come let us joyn our selves unto the Lord in a perpetual Covenant 〈◊〉 to be forgotten This is to be understood mostly if not only of private engagements as for publick solemn Oaths and Covenants we neither find in Scripture that they have been frequent but on some great and very grave occasion neither could they well be so great multitudes engaging in them without diminishing from the weight of them and so without wronging of God's Name 7. We should by no means suffer breaches though never so small to lie long on but should get us to the Fountain with them as foul and loathsome lest they bring on more and greater Now then try Perjury and breach of Vows and Oaths to God 1. In Baptism which extendeth to engage professing Believers to the mortification of sin and to the study of holiness as to both Tables of the Law and to a conversation as becometh the Gospel 2. In and at Communions where the same Covenant is Sealed 3. In your Oaths solemnly taken in Covenants 4. In your more private engagements to God and for him to others Beside these which are common some come under particular Oaths and Engagements by vertue of their stations as Ministers Elders Magistrates for the faithful discharge of their respective duties some by their Relations Office and Place as Husbands and Wives each to other as Parents in reference to their Children to bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord and in his fear some by vertue of their common Trades and Callings have come under particular Oaths to such and such Incorporations Trades c. And some on more particular occasions have come under engagements O look well what you do and have done there will I fear many be found Perjured I do not here speak of every particular infirmity but certainly there is sin against God and Perjury before him which cannot easily if at all be interpreted so with men in which respect Mal. 2. the Lord condemned putting away an innocent Wife even though it seemed to have a permission by Law in these things when men do not what they may do or if there be yet more in their power than is done or if the obligation of the Oath on them awe them not or weight them not it cannot but be a prophaning of the Lords Oath Many alasse according to their several relations and stations are found guilty here who have little or no awe of God on them in these things In sum This Command is broken these three ways in reference to such engagements 1. In shunning to make them when we are called to it 2. In not making them rightly 3. In not performing of them when made and it bindeth 1. Absolutely to many things which cannot come within the compass of ordinary infirmity 2. To eschew all known sinful deeds as Swearing and what may be inductive to it Drunkenness unlawful Gaming needless Contentions c. 3. To do all outward duties as to Read Hear Pray c. 4. To do them as seriously as we may 5. Not to lye in any seen or known sin here forbidden nor to delay Repentance though for never so little a while it
Lord's day standeth in reference to this Command and whether thereby the same sanctification be required as to it though its institution arise from another ground than is required to the Seventh-day-Sabbath Somewhat of all these must needs be spoken unto and we begin to speak first of its morality before we speak of its meaning because all dependeth on this both in respect of exposition and practise for if it be not moral and perpetually binding it 's not necessary either to explicate it or to study and press the practise of it but if it be found to be moral then no doubt it concerneth us and requireth the same moral sanctification of a day now as it did before Our Assertion then in reference to this is that The duty of setting a-part and sanctifying of a portion of time as it is limitted in the fourth Command for God's Service as it recurreth is moral and the obligation thereunto perpetual even as in the duties of the other Commands the obligation to this being no more dissolved than to those though there may be difference in the degree of the obligation which they lay on in respect of the matter contained in them my meaning in a word is that a day or one of seven is as necessary to be kept holy unto God now upon supposition of his determining the particular day as it is necessary to hold and keep up the worship prescribed by God neither without sin can another day be put in the room of it more than other worship can be substituted in the place of divinely prescribed worship for the time is set and fixt by the Fourth Command pointing at a solemne and chief time as the worship it self is by the second For clearing of this consider 1. That we mean not here moral-natural as if without any positive Law such a thing had been binding no but moral-positive that is laid on by a Command which is standing unrepealed and so bindeth by vertue of the authority of the Law-giver as several other commands and precepts do as namely those concerning Sacraments belonging to the second Command and those concerning one Wife and forbidden desires of Marriage belonging to the Seventh which being so often broken by many Saints and dispensed with in some cases cannot be thought to be morally-natural since the Lord dispenseth not so in these nor can it be thought in reason that his Servants would have been ignorant of such a natural thing It is then moral-positive that we mean to wit that which is binding by a positive Law 2. Consider in this question that there is a great difference betwixt these two to say the Seventh-day-Sabbath which the Jews kept is moral and to say the Fourth Command is moral the one may be and is abolished because another is brought in its roome The other to wit the Command may stand and doth stand because it tyeth morally to a Seventh day but suc ● a Seventh day as the Lord should successively discover to be chosen by him and though the Seventh be changed yet one of seven is still reserved 3. There is need to distinguish betwixt the moral substance of a Command and some ceremonial appendices belonging to it So the Fourth Command might then possibly have had something ceremonial in that Seventh day or in the manner used of sanctifying that Seventh day which now is gone as double Sacrifices c. or in its reasons whereby it is pressed as there is somthing peculiar to that People in the Preface to all the Commands as there was in the Sacraments of the old Law belonging to the second Command yet both a Sabbath day and Sacraments may be and are very necessary and moral in the Church it is not then every thing hinging on this Command as proper to that administration and so but accidental to the sanctifying of a Sabbath that we plead for but this is it we plead for that the Command is as to its main scope matter and substance moral-positive and that it standeth as still binding and obliging unto us and cannot without sin be neglected or omitted it might be enough here to say that if this Command were never repealed in the substance of it nor did ever exspire by any other thing succeeding in its place then it must needs be still binding for certainly it was once as obligatory-proclaimed by the Law-giver himself and was never since in its substance repealed nor is it exspired or found hurtful in its nature but is as necessary now as then it is true the Seventh day Sabbath is repealed by instituting and substituting the First day Sabbath or Lord's day in its place but that doth rather qualifie the Command than repeal it for 1. It saith that a day is moral and necessary 2 It saith a day of seven is moral and necessary which is all we say and why necessary as agreeable to this Command no doubt whence we may Argue if the substance of this Command be kept even when the particular day is changed then is the Command moral which this very change confirmeth but the former is true as is clear in experience therefore it followeth that the Law stands unrepealed for it 's palpable that the day as to its number or frequency and duration with the manner of sanctifying of it belongs to the substance of the Commandement but what day as to its order first second or seventh doth not because the first cometh in immediately upon Religion God's Honour and the good of Souls which the other doth not This Argument will stand good against all who acknowledge this Law to have been once given by God till they can evidence a repeal To speak somewhat more particularly to this the way we shall make out the morality of it is by considering 1. How the Scripture speaketh of it in general 2. How it speaketh of the Decalogue 3. How it speaketh of this Command in particular 4. By adducing some Scriptural Arguments for it As for the 1. To wit the Scriptures speaking of it in general we say If the Scripture speak as frequently in clearing the Fourth Command or the Sabbath which is the morality of it and press it as seriously and that in reference to all times of the Church as it doth any other moral duty then for substance this Command is moral and perpetually binding for that seemeth to be the Character whereby most safely to conclude concerning a Command to consider how the Scripture speaketh of it but the Scripture doth as often mention and is as much and as serious in pressing of that Command and that in reference to all states of the Church as of any other Ergo c. We shall make out this by shewing 1. its frequency in mentioning of it 2. It s seriousness in pressing it 3. It s asserting of it as belonging to all times and states of the Church 1. Look through all the Scriptures and ye will find the sanctifying of a Sabbath mentioned as
of this 4. Also that he came not to destroy it which yet the Lord never did of Ceremoni ●ls but rather foretold the Abolition of them as he did of the seeking and worshiping of God in the Temple at Jerusalem c. Yea when he cleareth the Doctrine of the Sabbath from the Pharisies corrupting Traditions he doth never weaken its former Obligation nor insinuate its weakness but sheweth the true meaning thereof which from the beginning made it not only consistent with the works of Piety and mercy but exceedingly helpful to both A Second place Confirming the whole Decalogue or rather Asserting it's Authority is in the Epistle of James Jam. 2.10 He that Offendeth in One is Guilty of All Why Because He is the same God and Law-giver And no Servant nor Angel who spake them All one as well as another of them And it being clear there that he speaketh of the Decalogue called the Royal Law there being no Law instanced in nor any other that can be of a like Authority in these Laws instanced but only it nor that could be pleaded for by James on such Grounds on such a time and it being also clear That he giveth to all those Laws which the Lord spake at that time alike Authority other-wise his reasoning would not be good if any one Law or Command could be instanced to him of the Ten which the Lord spake and was abrogated and not binding it necessarily followeth that this 4th Command being one of the Ten must be of equal authority with t he rest It may be noted also That James here doth not as neither doth our Lord nor any of his Apostles when they cite the Law give New Authority to the Laws he citeth but supposeth them to have it already and maketh use of them as Confirmations of the thing he pressed which could not be if their Authority depended on or flowed from the present Citation of them Thirdly we reason further thus Either there is some Moral Duty contained in this Command and laid on by it which is not in any of the former or there is but some Ceremonial thing in it reducable to one of them For the Perfection of this Law requireth that all things needful to the Worship of God should be summed in it and the Scope thereof which is Briefly to compend all requireth there should be nothing in it that 's needless superfluous or that might have been left out Now if the matter be Moral not contained in any former Command then is the Command it self Moral seeing a Moral Substance and Matter Denominateth the Command so Yea it must be Moral other-wise some-thing Morally necessary to Gods Service such as the Determination of its chief time should be omitted It may be assumed yet further It must be Moral be it what it will to eschew a Tautology in this short Compend of Duties and that of Moral Duties too Again If it be not Moral but contain some Ceremonial thing reducible to one of the three former Commands Then 1. It might have been put amongst other Ceremonials 2. Other Ceremonials might have been put in with it Or 3. A Reason given Why all are not Reducible to some Moral Command 4. If the matter of this be Reducible to another Command then can it not be accounted a Distinct Command neither ought it here to have been given as such but sub-joyned to some other as the Servants and Beasts resting is sub-joyned to this 5. It would be shewn to what Command it 's Reducible as to the Substance of it if it be Ceremonial 6. A Reason would be given Why amongst Ten One and Only One is set down so far different from all the rest And if all these Absurdities follow the Denyal of it's Substance to be Moral then for eschewing of them we must conclude it to be Moral and so the Fourth Command is Moral Fourthly we reason thus If it be not Moral it must either be Judicial or Ceremonial for the Matter and Substance of it but it is not Judicial that is it belongeth not to External Policy and Civil Society principally and especially in that one Nation because no such Duties are Comprehended at least Primarily in any Command of the First Table but in the Second which teacheth Duties to others as this First doth ●o God Neither is it Ceremonial For All Ceremonies that are Typical have their Rise since the Fall and relate some way to Christ to-Come But this of sanctifying One Day of Seven had it's Rise in the State of Innocency and was enjoyned to Adam in Paradise before he fell and therefore cannot be called Ceremonial Properly more than the Command of a Man's leaving Father and Mother and cleaving to his Wife so that they too should be one Flesh which the Apostle Ephes. 5. maketh use of Besides if it were Ceremonial in the Substance then were it Typical and Significant of some-thing to-come which is hard to shew Then also had it not been Lawful to have retained it for Ceremonials now in their use are not only Dead but Deadly But this Morality in Substance the same with the Command which we plead for was retained by the Apostles and Primitive Church to say no more There-fore it is not Ceremonial And so this Law must needs be Moral To say That the Command is partly Moral partly Ceremonial if we respect it's Substance will not hold For 1. There is no such other Law 2. That were to make Confusion betwixt Ceremonials and Morals which it seemeth the Lord himself hath aimed and resolved to keep clearly Distinct 3. What ever be Ceremonial That which was allowed and injoyned to Adam in Paradise and wherein we may agree with Him under the Gospel cannot be Ceremonial For neither of these States are Capable of Proper Ceremonies but both agree on a Seventh Day Therefore it is not Ceremonial The Third way we make out the Morality of this Command is By particular considering of it self and here we argue thus If it be not only put into the Decalogue with the other Moral Commands but more singularly explicated and pressed even in it than they then it is certainly Moral that is perpetually Obligatory with the rest But so it is put and set down in the Decalogue and pressed even more than the rest of the Commands as on other Accounts so possibly in this because it 's Ground is Positive and Men need the more Words about it Just as in the Second Command Ergo c. Now that it is thus put and pressed apeareth these several wayes 1. It shareth of all Common Priviledges with the rest of the Command set down in the Decalogue that were all spoken yea Written by the Lord immediatly and l ●id up in the Ark. 2. It is proposed and set down in it's Form both Positively Remember the Sabbath to keep it Holy and Negatively in it thou shalt do no manner of Work c. Where-as all the other Commands are but
one of these wayes set down 3. It hath the Particularity in it that all the rest have to wit To be in the Singular Number Thou shalt c. To shew That it speaketh to every one in particular Yea though all the Commands concern all Ranks yet only here are Son Daughter Man-Servant Maid Servant and Stranger expresly mentioned as comprehended in it 4. There is a special Equity holden out here in the Proportioning of this time There are Six Dayes given us to Labour on and therefore it is all the Reason in the World that the Lord have the Seventh And if this Concession of God's of Six Dayes to work on be Moral For all the time is God's and we cannot for our use take any part of it but by His grant and there is no other Grant But this dividing and proportioning of Time betwixt him and us in which Division too he hath given us by far the large ●t Share to wit Six parts of Seven Then must the setting a part of a Seventh Day be Moral also And so the Command it self wherein both are comprehended viz. The Sixt given to us and the Seventh reserved for him they must needs stand and fall together For they Mutually put each other Thou shalt labour Six Dayes and Rest on the Seventh Thou shalt Rest on the Sabbath Day and Labour Six 5. This Day is claimed by the Lord as a thing wherein he hath a special Propriety It 's the Lords Day ●or though he did give Six yet he reserved a Seventh And can or dare any say That he discharged that or dispensed it away from Himself to any other If not it must be His still and cannot without Sacriledge be other wayes applyed Obedience to this Command is pressed by an exceeding Weighty Reason drawen from God's own Example which maketh it clearly Relative to it 's First Institution Gen. 2. Where it is said That He Rested after Six Dayes Work the Seventh Day viz. the whole Seventh Day and so should we which is the more effectual for proving the Morality of this Command Because 1. It 's a Reason that took place even in Innocency and so respecteth no Type or Ceremony 2. It is Universal belonging to all Men who are God's Creatures And therefore since the Reason is perpetual so must the Command be like-wise 7. This Command alone and beside all others is expresly pressed in the observation of it not only on Masters and Rulers for themseves but as taking burden on them for all under them and within their Families to endeavour the sanctifying of the Lord's day with them and by them as well as by themselves whereby the extent of this Command is clearly and earnestly holden forth in more express terms than in any other of all the Commands though this be implyed in them also 8. The observation of it is pressed and encouraged unto by a special blessing which He hath annexed to the time set a-part by himself He blessed it that is He made and still maketh it useful and refreshing as a special blessing to his people who keep his Ordinances seeking Him therein this day has a double portion and increase beside any other day for his Peoples Repose Edification Comfort finding of His Presence c. And to say now that this Solemn-time were not moral were to ●ob the Church of a great blessing seeing this day set a part by God for his Service hath the blessing beyond any other day commanded on it and in the experience of his People often hath it been found to be so 9. It is specially and singularly ushered in with a M ●mento or Remember which is not expressed in any other Command and Shall we think that where God saith Remember there is nothing to be taken notice of or shall we think that it saith not Remember now as well as then and if so Who can warrantably forget that which he biddeth remember which is not to keep the Seventh day but the Sabbath holy unto the Lord And may not all these Characters putt together in one Command so many not being to be found in all the other Commands if put together May not all these I say convince us that it is the Lord's purpose to have this Command standing obligatory in its substance to the end of the world Which is so pressed that if there be little help from Nature's light to determine the day or to press its observation it may be strongly born-in by the more clear and weighty reasons And so we come to the fourth way proposed for making out the morality of this Command which is by adducing some Arguments drawn from Scripture The first whereof is If the Law bind under the New-Testament not only in respect of its matter as its natural nor only as it is repeated in the New-Testament but also by vertue of the Authority enacting it then this Law of the fourth Command though not explicitly determined by nature and though it were not mentioned particularly in the New-Testament must be binding also for it hath that same Authority But the first is true and is acknowledged generally by Divines excepting a few and is clear by Christ and his Apostles their citing of it as supposing it to be binding Therefore the last must be true also 2. Arg. If this Command be founded on moral grounds then it self must be moral But the grounds on which it is founded are moral Ergo c. 1. It is moral that God should have a solemn and chief set-time 2. That he himself and none other should determine that time seeing no other could do it and bless it 3. These reasons-in the Command it self dividing time into six parts of it to us and a seventh part to God and God's resting after six days working with his making only seven days in the week and employing six of them to work c. these reasons I say are all moral and bin ●ing now as before 3. Arg. If all moral duties be contained in the ten Commands then this Command must needs be moral But the first is true Ergo c. This Command containeth a moral duty which is in none of the preceding Commands to wit the stinting and determining of the solemn and chief time to be set a part for God's worship to be one day of s ●ven It is true Time is commanded to be allowed to God's worship in those other Command ● wherein the duties of worship themselves are commanded for worship cannot be performed more than any other duty without some time but that the chief time should be so much and so often is only determined in this Command from which it appeareth 1. That an indefinit time of worship or for it is not the morality of this Command because this followeth necessarily as being supposed needful for the performance of every positive duty contained in the other Commands its morality therefore must be The determining of ●hat definit time 2. We may hence
and pressed The 1. is Remember the Sabbath day to sanctifie it or keep it holy For the opening up and winning at the clear meaning whereof we would consider three words The first is what it is to remember or as it is infinitively set down remembring to remember this is prefixed and would look rather like the inferring of something commanded already then the new instituting of a command and so indeed it seemeth to suppose a day formerly institute and set apart for God as was hinted before which by this Command his people are put to mind It doth beside import these four with a respect as it were to four times 1. A constant and continued Duty at all times and in all dayes that is that we would remember that God has set apart a seventh day for himself and therefore every day we would remember to cast our Affairs so as they may not be impediments to us in the sanctifying of that day and we would endeavour alwaies to keep our hearts in such a frame a ● we may not be discomposed when that day shall come and this affirmative part of this command bindeth semper or alway and its negative ad semper on other dayes as well as on the Sabbath 2. It importeth a timely preparing for the Sabbath when it is a coming or when it draweth near this remembring it calleth for something to be done in reference to it before it come a man by this is obliged to endeavour to have a frame of heart that he may be ready to meet the Sabbath and enter kindly to the Duties of it when it ●hall come otherwayes if it come on him while he is in his common or course frame and not fitted for it it will say he has not been remembring it before it came 3. Remembring importeth an intenseness and seriousness in going about the Duties of the day when it cometh and that it should be with all carefulness sanctified and that men should be mindful of the duties called for lest their hearts div ●rt from them or slacken bensil and grow formal in them whereby mens inclination to forget this duty or to be superficial in it is much hinted at this word we take to be moral being a mean ●or furthering the great Duty aimed at of sanctifying the Lords day or Sabbath coming 4. Remembring may import this that the Sabbath even when it is past should not be soon forgotten but that we should look on the Sabbath past to remember it lest by loosing the fruits of it vvhen it is by we make our selves guilty of prophaning it The next word is the day of the Sabbath By Sabbath here is meaned rest as it is exponed by the Apostle Heb 4. and that not every Rest but a Holy Rest from our own Works that there may be access to positive Sanctifying of that day for the Sanctifying of that day is the end and this is but a mean and necessary supposed help without which the day cannot be sanctifyed in Holy Duties holy Duties and our own Works being for the time inconsistent besides that Rest on this day is not only called for as ceasing from our ordinary affairs in the time of Worship is called for on any other day but more especially and solemnly in respect of the day it self for at other times our duties require a time for them and therefore that time cannot be employed in another ordinary Work and in Worship also but here the Lord requireth time and rest to be sanctified and therefore we are to perform holy Duties in that time because it is to be sanctified other times and rests are drawn after worship this time and rest draweth Worship necessarily after it hence it was that only the Jews feasts were called Sabbaths I mean religious Sabbaths not civil or politick as their years were because they included a rest upon Destination to an holy Use. That which is mainly questionable here is concerning the day expressed in this Command concerning which may be asked 1. What sort of day or the quamdiu 2. How often or the quoties 3. What day of the seven or the quando 4. When we are to reckon its beginning For Answer to the first we say There are two sorts of dayes mentioned in the Scripture one is Artificial of twelve hours so the Jews divided their day making their hours longer or shorter as the day was long or short but they kept up the number of their hours alway the other is a natural day which is a seventh part of the Week and containeth twenty four hours taking in so much time as interveneth betwixt the Suns begining to ascend after midnight the nocturnal Solstice till it pass the Meridional altitude which is the Suns Vertical point for that day till it come to that same very point of Midnight again which is the Suns natural course every twenty four hours comprehending both the artificial day which is from midnight to midday and the artificial night also which is from midday to midnight again The day mentioned here is the natural day because it 's a seventh day proportionable to each of the six dayes given unto us and they with the seventh making up the Week it must contain as many hours as any of the rest doth but the six dayes wherein God made Heaven and Earth c. are natural days therefore the seventh to wit the day of rest must be so also Let us only for further clearing and for directing our own Practise speak here a word or two more 1. We say it is a whole natural day that is as it 's usually employed by us on any of the six Dayes for our own Works that as we spend so much time in our ordinary Callings on other dayes so would we employ so much in Gods Worship secret private and publick on that day what proportion of time we use to give or may and should give ordinarily to our Callings on other dayes we would give as much to God and his Worship to our Souls and our spiritual state on the Lords day or Sabbath Therefore 2. there is not to be understood here a rigid pressing of all these hours to be spent in Duties of immediate Worship but our Working and Waking time having a respect to our infirmities and also to our Duties lest under pretext of infirmity we incroach upon Gods day and give him less then we give to our selves or should and may give him And so in Scripture they accompted what is betwixt rising and going to bed as still the Work of one day or one dayes Work for as God in conceding six dayes to us hath yet so done it as there may be a Reserve of particular times for Worship called for from us to him every day for keeping up our Communion with him so on the seventh day doth the Lord allow so much conveniency of sleep and other refreshing as may be subservient for the main end of the day these being Works
end wherefore God did it to vvit that there might thereby be an excitement left to men to imitate God and that man might not only have Gods command but his example also to bind this duty on him If it be asked here vvhy God vvill have a day set apart for holy Exercises beside other days It may be answered 1. It 's meet that God be acknowledged Lord of our time by this Tribute being reserved to himself 2. Because man having but a finite understanding beside the now corruption of it cannot be intensely taken up with spiritual and heavenly things and with temporal and earthly things both at once o ● at the same instant for even Adam in innocency could not do that therefore the Lord hath graciously set apart a day for mans help in that 3. It 's to teach man that his chief end is to converse with God and to live vvith him and that he ought to care in his own affairs along the week and order things so as the Sabbath may be duly sanct ●fied vvhen it shall come in that sweet soul reposing converse with him 4. To shew man wherein his happiness consisteth it 's even in this to vvalk and converse with God and to be in his worship this i ● his rest 5. To shew the excellency of Religion and of the Works of Piety or of Gods Worship above mens Employments in earthly and worldly things It vvas a Sabbath to Adam in innocency to be abstracted from his labour for the worship of God the one is mens toyl the other is mens spiritual rest and ease far contrary to that which men in the vvorld ordinarily think and judge We see now how great and grievous a sin it is to break this command and vvith vvhat care this day should be hallowed For 1. It 's a Command of the first Table and so the breach of it is in some respect more then murther Adultery Stealing c. it 's included in the first and great Commandement 2. Amongst all the commands of the first Table yea all the commands this religious observance of the Sabbath is most forcibly pressed vvith more reasons and vvith more full and particular explication Because 1. All the commands hang some vvay on this and obedience is ordinarily given to them vvith the same readiness as this day is employed in Gods Service 2. It keepeth life as it vvere in all the rest and vvhen men are could in this so are they in all the rest 3. This tryeth men in their love to God best If indeed his company and service be more delighted in then the World And is a notable indication of the frame of the soul it maketh proof both of their state and frame as men are usually and habitually on the Sabbath so in effect are they as to these 3. No breach of any command hath more aggravations for 1. It is against reason and equity vvhen God hath given us so many and so good reasons for it 2. It 's high Ingratitude the Sabbath being a Mercy and a great Mercy indeed it is to be priviledged vvith access to converse vvith God a vvhole day of every vveek in duties of vvorship 3. It 's against Love God's Love hath instituted it and our Love should in a special manner vent it self to him on it 4. It 's cruelty against our selves for the Sabbath kept holy is backed with the promise of a special blessing and we by this sin prejudge our selves of that yea the Sabbath rightly spent is a mean both of holiness and of nearness to God of conformity to him and of communion with him it promoteth both So that it is eminently verified here that these who sin against this command ●in against and forsake their own Mercy 4. No sin doth more evidence universal untenderness and as it 's a sin in it self so it evidenceth especially when gross a very sinful and some way Atheistical frame and disposition as may be gathered from Neh. 13. Yea 5. It occasioneth and breedeth other sins it habituateth to sinning and hardneth against challenges so that men ordinarily become very gross and loose and fall in scandalous sins who neglect the sanctification of the Sabbath which is the quickner and fomenter some way of all duties and knitteth the two Tables of the Law together hence it cometh to pass that vve often hear men that have turned to be very loose gross and scandalous and some of them on Scaffolds and at Gibbets cry out of Sabbath-breaking imputing the one to the other as a main cause for by this sin men grow stout against challenges and formal in secret duties a ●d so at length sit quite up 6. No sin hath more sharp challenges for it and more sad Judgments avenging it then sins against this command have there been any men deeply challenged for sin or at death whether ordinary or violent brought to express and utter their challenges but sins against this command have been main ones The slighting of the Lords Sabbath made Jerusalem to be burnt with fire Jer. 17. last for this sin they are threatned with terrible plagues Ezek. 20.21 24. not only in temporal things v. 23. but with spiritual plagues to which they are given up v. 25.26 You know that a man was stoned for gathering of sticks on the Sabbath Numb 15. see also Exod. 16.28 and Ezek. 22.8 where the Lord accounteth Sabbath-breaking a refusing to keep his Commandements and Laws and a despising of his holy things O is it possible that a man can be well that breaketh the Sabbath or to vvhom it is not a delight If any should ask here if indeed the breaches of this command be greater sins then the br ●aches of the comm ●nds of the second Table and if so if God will be avenged on these severely For Answer premitting this one word that in comp ●ring breaches of the commands of the two Tables vve vvould compare sins of a like nature together that is sins of presumption vvith sins of presumption and sins of infirmity vvith sins of infirmity vve say that a presumptuous sin against the fourth Command if it vvere but to go unnecessarily to the door or to gather sticks is a greater sin then a presumptuous murther because it s ●riketh more immediately against God And that a sin of infirmity against the fourth command is greater then a sin of Infirmity against the sixth Yet we grant that presumptuous Murther is a greater sin then a sin of infirmity against the fourth command because presumption and high handedness in the manner of sinning in a sin little on the matter comparatively dareth God as it were and striketh immediately against him and so is an additional high aggravation of it beside vvhat it is in the nature of it And though our censures against presumptuous breaches of the Sabbath which are now as great sins as formerly as is clear from what is just now said be often more mitigated now under the
Piety Acts 7.2 or for their worldly means and outward estate as Joseph was Gen. 45.8 or for their age and the reverence due to them on that account 2 Kings 2.12 in a word any sort of em ●nencie putteth one in that roll of Fathers largely taken though they be not properly such 3. We are called in the first place to look to the duties of this relation as it is domestick such as of a Master over the Servant of a Husband over the Wife c. and then cometh the carriage of one toward another in general and though most properly the duties of Parents mediate or immediate over their Children or Nephews be here pointed at which is most literal yet the former also is included all particulars of that kind being by a figure comprehended under one If it be asked here Why the mo ●her is added Answ. 1. Because although the mother be not so qual ●fied for the rule and government of the Children yet she is no less intituled to their acknowledgment and this parental honour by the labour toil and tenderness of their birth and education and in this as well as in the disposition of the members of the body mentioned 1 Cor. 12. v. 22 23 and 24. the excellent attemperation of Gods wisdom is very conspicuous by ballancing the greater authority of the Father with the greater pains and care of the Mother that the Childrens duty of love honour and gratitude may return to both with a suitable equality 2. She is added to shew that it is not only the most eminent Superiour or Neighbour to whom honour is due but even these who have more weakness and especially the Mother Hence it is that alwayes almost in the Proverbs where duty to the Father is pressed the Mother is also named with him to shew that Children should not think that less respect is due to the Mother than to the Father yea sometimes the Mother is prefixed to the Father as Lev. 19.3 Ye shall fear every man his Mother and his Father which is done to meet with the humour of many who are ready to lessen their duty to their Mother and therefore we are called to it even in her old age Prov. 23.22 and to guard against despising of her then which is too readily and frequently incident Thus doth the Lord provide in his word against our corruption which is ready to take advantage of debording and outbreaking at the weakest part If it be further asked Why all Superiours yea all Neighbours are spoken of as Fathers and Mothers Answ. These reasons are obvious from the scope It is 1. to shew that the duties of this Command are mutual amongst all relations it giveth Superiours their due yet so as that it teacheth them also how to carry toward their Inferiours that is to be Fathers to them and that the relation necessarily implyeth a mutual tye therefore this Command doth not only direct inferiours in their duty towards Superiours but also Superiours in their duty to their Inferiours 2. They get this name to make their subjection to each other and their mutual relations and duties the more sweet and kindly when the subjection is to be given as by a Son to a Father and when it is exacted and expected as by a Father from a Son which consideration should be a kindly motive to all mutual duties and also an inducement to hide infirmities and to construct tenderly of failings And thus the denomination of the natural relation seems to be borrowed to establish and strengthen the positive Relation which of its self is not so binding of the Conscience by Nature's light So much for the Object of this Duty The Duty itself here called for is honour which is also largely to be understood both as it taketh in the inward esteem of others in our heart and also the evidencing of this in outward expressions in our conversation For by this Command it appeareth that there is 1. Some eminencie in every man 2. That every one should observe that and honour it in another What is it then to honour them It is not to complement them and only seemingly to reverence them but it consisteth especially in these 1. In observing and acknowledging what is eminent in any for nature grace station or other accidental things and if there appear no more in a man yet as he beareth any thing of Gods Im ●ge or is a Christian and Member of Christs Church he is thus to be honoured 2. There ought to be an esteem of him and we should really have an honourable account of him and that in some respect beyond our selves in some one thing or other 3. It lyeth much in love and kindly or affectionate reverence as is hinted Rom. 12.10 4. It taketh in obedience according to our stations flowing from a disposition of heart to obey Heb. 13.17 5. It reacheth both to the thought of the heart and to our secret carriage there should not be in our secret chamber any despising or wishing ill to him Eccles. 10.20 6. It comprehendeth a holy fear and awe that should be joyned with it Lev. 19.3 Honour being thus fixed in the heart it is to be expressed 1. In words by respective and reverent speaking and giving answers or making suits Sarah called her Husband Lord 1. Pet. 3.6 2. It is expressed in gestures by bowing rising up keeping silence sometimes before others Job 29. not answering again Tit. 2.9 saluting c. Col. 4.15 3 In deeds by obedience and testifying respect that way which is generally called gratitude therefore obedience to Parents Eph. 6.1 is dravvn from this Command vvhich presseth obedience upon men according to their relations 4. In our means communicating thereof vvhen it is called for so tribute to vvhom tribute is due Rom 13.7 and double honour to the Elders that rule vvell 1 Tim. 5.17 according to the acceptation of honour used in that precept Honour the Lord with thy substance Prov. 3.9 5. In our Prayers for them 2. Tim. 2.1 6. In covering their infirmities Gen. 9.21 22. As the breaches of this Command may be easily gathered hence as being opposite to these so this rule is alvvayes to be carried along in practice that this honour and obedience must be still in the Lord that is there must be a reserving to the Lord his due for God is the supreme F ●ther and all our re ●pect to under-fathers of the flesh is to be subordin ●te to the Father of Spirits Heb. 12 9. so as he may have the first place for vvhose cause vve give reverence to them and so that vvord is still true Acts 4.19 It is better to obey God then man m ●n is only to be obeyed in the Lord Ephes 6 1. And thus refusing to comply vvith unjust comman ●s i ● not d ●●obedience to Parents but high obedience to God the re ●usal being conveyed respectfully and after the due m ●nner Again the branches of this Command
be done to all yet especially to this houshold of Faith And the manifestation of our love even towards the godly may be less or more according as less or more of God appeareth in them or in their way If it be further asked How we can love wicked men and if their being such should not marr our love to them Answ. We speak not here of such as are debarred from the prayers of the people of God and who are known to have sinned the sin which is against the Holy Ghost nor do we speak indefinitely of final enemies these according to all being excluded from our love But we say that other particular wicked men as to their persons whatever hatred we may bear to their evil deeds are to be loved in the forementioned sense yet their wickedness may 1. marr complacencie in them that they cannot nor ought not to be delighted in nor with pleasure conversed with 2. It may marr the effects of love in the evidences and manifestations of them for that Christians may yea and sometimes should keep up all or most testimonies of it from some is clear from the Apostles direction enjoyning the noticing of some that they may be ashamed 2 Thess. 3.14 3. It may marr love in ordering its exercises yea and occasion the seemingly contrary effects as their wishing for and doing of some things temporally adverse and cross to them for their greater shame and humiliation as is evident in the Psalmists prayer Psalm 83.16 Fill their faces with shame that they may seek thy name O Lord so some out of love are to be corrected yea punished temporally yet with a desire of and respect to their eternal welfare If it be yet asked If and how one is to love himself Answ. Self-love is so connatural to us that in effect it is the mediate result of our sense of life and consequently the very relish and endearment of all enjoyments the spring of self-preservation and the best measure pointed out by our Lord himself of the love and duty that we owe to others which as it is the mean whereby we taste and see that God is good and how great his goodness is to us so it ought principally to referr it self and all its pleasing objects to him as the fountain of all who is indeed Love but yet it is that wherein ordinarily men do much exceed as especially these following wayes 1. They exceed in it when themselves are proposed as the end of their own actions as it is 2 Tim. 3.2 when their own things sway more with them and are sought more by them then 1. the things of God to which the first place is alwayes due and 2. then publick things and the things of others even in the cases wherein these do require the preference 2. When it is terminated on the wrong object as when they run out in the immoderate pursuit of bodily and temporal things caring more if not only for the body neglecting the better part 3. When it is laid out for the pleasing of corrupt self and the making of provision for the Flesh to fulfil its Lusts Rom. 13.14 Self-love under these considerations is corrupt and ●o be guarded against Answ. 2. Self-love or love to our self is allowable when qualified with the following properties 1. When it is subservient and subordinate to higher ends and can hazard it self and deny it self for Gods honour for a publick good yea and in some cases out of respect to the good of others also so a righteous man should and when at himself will do much though with his own hazard for a Christian friend for the safety or edification of the Godly or in defence of the interest of Christ. 2. When it is drawn out after spiritual things and it 's on these mostly that pains are taken as how to grow in grace to have a good conscience to have the soul saved sin mortified c. 3. When outward things are desired for the former ends as when we pray Give us this day our daily bread that we may promove these ends being willing to want them when they may not stand with these ends desiring life means c. in so far only as they may be useful for the attainment of them As the first self-love marreth duties to God and thwarteth with them so the second advanceth them and sweyeth strongly yet sweetly to them Again This Command is the first in order of the second Table and is peculiarly backed with a promise to shew the concernment of the duty called for the scope of it being to regulate that respect which each one oweth to another that they may give each other due honour as the first effect of love and the great band of all the other commands and enjoyned duties of the second Table God being pleased to provide for that respect and honour that is due from one man to another as well as for the security of their persons and estates yea in some respect he preferreth this Command to wit that one hurt not another in their honour and estimation to these other relating to their persons and estates and therefore he requireth honour in the first place and afterward injoyneth the duties of not killing not stealing c. And although every man doth love respect and estimation among others yet there is nothing wherein more liberally and even prodigally men incroach upon one another then by the neglect and denyal of this duty and by the contrary sin though it be most directly opposite to love and that general equity commanded whereby we should Do to others as we would have them to do to us Therefore we conceive the Lord hath preferred this to the other five Commands and hath so backed it with a promise and also set it down positively Honour thy Father c. for this end that we may know it is not enough not to despise them if they be not also positively honoured by us even as it is not enough not to prophane the Lords day by common and unnecessary works if we do not positively sanctifie it And it is not for nought that this duty is so much pressed being a main bond of Christian and Civil Fellowship keeping folks within the just bounds and limits which God hath set unto them If it be asked What this duty of honouring our Neighbour doth include Answ It doth include these five things 1. Respect to our Neighbours person 2. to his place 3. to his qu ●lifications either as he is furnished with natural or moral abilities or as he is gracious 4. to his accidental furniture in externals as riches credit with others c. so David honoured Nabal 5. in respect of mens actions as they deserve or as they have done or atchieved any thing whereby good cometh or may come to the Church or Common-wealth Honour includeth the giving respect to our Neighbour in all these If it be asked If and how honour differeth from love Answ. It
one that believeth which doth as a School-master lead to Him by discovering the holy nature and will of God and mens duty to walk conformly to it by convincing of the most sinful pollution of our nature heart and life of universal disconformity to it and innumerable transgressions of it of the obligation to the wrath and curse of God because of the s ●me of utter inability to keep it and to help our selves out of this sinful and wrathful estate by humbling under the conviction and sense of both by putting-on to the Renunciation of self-righteousness or righteousness according to this Law And finally by convincing of the absolute and indispensable necessity of an other righteousness and so of this imputed righteousness the law that is so very necessary to all men in common and to every Regenerate and unregenerate man in particular from which ere one jote or title can pass unfulfilled Heaven and Earth must pass and which the Prince of Pastors infinitely skilful to pitch pertinent subjects of Preaching amongst many others made choice of to be a main subject of that solemn Sermon of his on the Mount wherein he did not as many would have expected soar alost in abstruse contemplations but graciously stooped and condescended to our capacity for catching of us by a plain familiar and practical exposition of the Commands as indeed Religion lyeth not in high-flown notions and curious speculations nor in great swellings of words but in the single and sedulous practise of these things that are generally looked on as more low and common as the great art of Preaching lyeth in the powerful pressing thereof insinuating of how much moment the right understanding of them is and how much Religion lyeth in the serious study of suitable obedience thereto not in order to justification but for glorifying God who justifieth freely by his grace through the Redemption that is in Jesus without which Obedience or holiness no man shall see the Lord. And if the Treatise bear but any tolerable proportion to such a Text and Theam it cannot but have its own excellency and that thou maist be induced to think it doth I shall need only to tell thee that it is though alass poschumous and for any thing I know never by him inten ●ed for the Press otherwise it had been much more full for he is much shorter on the commands of the second Table then on these of the first touching only on some chief heads not judging it sit belike at that time and in that exercise to wit Sabbath-day-morning-Lectures before Sermon to dwell long on that subject which a particular prosecution would have necessitated him to especially since he was at that same time to the same auditory Preaching ●abbath-afternoo ● 〈◊〉 the third chapter of the Epistle to the Colossians a subject much of the 〈◊〉 na ●ure but what he saith is material and excellent great Mr. L ●●hams who had some excellency peculiar to himself in 〈◊〉 s ●●k ● or writ as appeareth by his singular and some way-S ●r ●ph ●k 〈◊〉 on the Revelation wherein with Aquiline-sharp-s ●gh ●●d ●●s ● f ●om the ●●p of the high mountain of fellowship with God h ●●ath d ●●ply p ●y ●d into and struck up a great light in several myster ●●● 〈◊〉 ●uch hid even from many wise and sagacious men before And by his most sweet and savoury yet most solid exposition of the Song of Solomon smelling strong of more than ordinary acquaintance with and experience of those several influxes of the love of Jesus Christ upon the Soul and effluxes of its love the fruit and eff ●ct of His towards Him wherewith that delightful discourse is richly as it were imbroydered The greatest realities though indeed sublime spiritualities most plainly asserted by God and most powerfully experienced by the Godly whose Souls are more livelily affected with them than their very external senses are by the rarest and most remarkable objects and no wonder since every thing the more spiritual it is hath in it the greater reality and worketh the more strongly and effica ●iously however of late by an unparallelledly-bold black-mouthed blasphemous Scribler n ●fariously nick-named Fine Romances of the secret Amours betwixt the Lord Christ and the believing Soul told by the Non-conformists-preachers What are these and the like Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth for his love is better than Wine Thy name is as an Oyntment pour ●d forth therefore the Virgins love thee We will remember thy love more than Wine the upright love thee Behold thou art fair my beloved yea pleasant also our bed is green A bundle of myr ●h is my beloved unto me he shall lye all night betwixt my breasts I sat down under his shadow with great delight and his fruit was sw ●●t to my taste He brought me to the Banqueting-house and his B ●●●●r over me was love Stay me with Flagons comfort me with 〈◊〉 for I am sick of love His left hand is under my head and his right hand doth imbrace me My beloved is mine and I am his I am my beloveds and his desire is towards me I found him whom my Soul loved I held him and would not let him go Set me as a seal upon thy heart and as a seal on thine arm Love is strong as death many waters cannot quench love neither can the ●●oods drown it I charge you O Daughters of Jerusalem if ye find my beloved that ye tell him I am sick of love Come my beloved let us go up early to the Vine-yards let us see if the Vines flourish there will I g ●ve the my loves make hast my beloved and be thou like to a Roe or to a young Heart on the Mountains of Spices How fair and how pleasant art thou O love for delights O my Dove let me see thy countenance let me hear thy voice for sweet is thy voice and thy countenance is comely thou hast ravished my heart my Sister my Spouse with one of thine eyes with one chain of thy neck turn away thine eyes from me for they have overcome me He that loveth me shall be loved of my Father and I will love him and manifest my self to him If any man love me he will keep my words and my Father will love him and we will come unto him and make our abode with him As the Father hath loved me so have I loved you continue ye in my love If ye keep my Commandements ye shall abide in my love even as I have kept my Fathers Commandements and abide in his love The love of Christ constraineth us we love him because he first loved us the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost given unto us whom having not seen ye love and whom though now ye see him not yet believing ye rejoyce with joy unspakable and full of glory That ye may with all Saints be able to comprehend what is the
which we may see what need there is to watch over our selves in these things lest our liberty be turned into licentiousness and lest we grow either idle or carnal on that day Let us then consider how far this rest extendeth and under it we take in 1. The rest of the whole man outward and inward in deeds words and thoughts so is it Isai. 58.13 we should not speak our own words nor by proportion think our own thoughts nor find our own pleasures 2. It goeth through the whole day for though every minute of the day cannot be applyed to positive duties yet in no minute of it is it lawful to do another work inconsistent with the qualifications and scope aforesaid that is the negative part in it thou shalt do no work which bindeth ad semper 3. It is to be extended not only to a mans own person but to all under him children servants c. he must be answerable for it that they rest and must give them no occasion of work 4. It 's to be extended even to the least work of any fort if unnecessary as gathering sticks speaking our own words c. these are all breaches of the Sabbath 5. This rest extendeth to all actions or sorts of actions or cases which are not comprehended under the former exceptions which are permitted or are consistent with the sanctifying of the Sabbath As 1. All works which tend to our external profit pleasure satisfaction c. all works of our callings which make for the increase of outward gain and profit such whereby we ordinarily sustain our lives These Heb. 4.15 are called our own works and here it 's such works as ordinarily are wrought in the rest of the six dayes So it is doing thy own pleasure as well as vvorks Isa 58. 2. Such vvorks as tend to others external gain or profit as the great motive of them as Servants may be vvorking for their Masters profit and yet prophane the day 3. Such as are not necessary on that day as ploughing sovving reap ●ng or gathering in and that even in Seed time and Harvest and so fishing going of mills c. vvhen these are not done for the very preserving of life because they are not necessary out of that case neither is there any thing here of an extraordinary dispensation that maketh them necessary the vveather depending on an ordinary providence or ordinarily depending on providence vvhich is to be reverenced Hence though the vveather and season be rainy yet it is not lavvful to cut dovvn or gather in Corn on the Sabbath their hazard in this case being common and from an ordinary immediate providence yet suppose that a River vvere carrying avvay Corn or that Winds vvere like to blovv them into the Sea it vvere lavvful in such a case to endeavour to prevent that and preserve them because 1. that cometh by some more then ordinary dispensation of providence in the vveather and affecteth and putteth in hazard this Corn more then others 2. Because there is no probability of recovering these in an ordinary vvay though the vveather should alter but there is hope of gathering in of such as are in the fields vvithout that reach of hazard if the Lord alter the season 4. Such as are for carnal pleasure or civil ends thus playing gaming much laughing c. being our ovvn vvorks more especially our ovvn pleasure are unlavvful on that day 5. Consider that all things are prohibited vvhich marr the end of the day and are not consistent vvith the duties thereof such are buying selling c. out of the cases of pressing necessity folks cannot be spiritually taken up and vvith these also so playing and gaming is no less consistent vvith praying reading conferring c. then ploughing or such like yea is much more indisposing for it and so vve do necessarily thereby incapacitate our selves for the duties of the day 6. All things are forbidden vvhich consist not vvith this rest and the duties of vvorship called for from our selves and others thus unnecessary journeying vvalking even suppose one could or should be exercised in meditation is not resting as is required much less is gadding in companies in the street or fields to the neglect of secret and family duties In a vvord vvhatever is not religious and spiritual exercise or furthering or helping unto vvhat is so out of the excepted cases much more vvhatever is sinful scandalous or unsutable on other dayes or doth divert from or indispose for the duties of holiness and the vvorship of God on that day is inconsistent vvith this rest and so prohibited for This rest is not primarily commanded and required for it self but as conducing and subordinate unto the performing of holy duties in it therefore our rest is to be regulated so as may best contribute to that scope and vvhatever marreth that though it should not be vvork strictly but idleness carnalness or playing and gaming and sporting yet it 's a breach of this rest for 1. That is no religious duty nor 2. tending as a necessary help to it nor 3. is rest commanded that vve should play in it but that vve should sanctifie it and 4. playing or sporting cannot be called sanctifying the day othervvayes vve might have mo Sabbaths then one and the prophanest vvould love them hest 5. playing separateth not the Sabbath from other days more then vvork doeth for men play in all 6. playing is neither a religious duty it being amongst the most irreligious and prophane nor a duty of necessity for easing of vveariness vvhich doth not here come by any bodily toyl and labour but if there be any from being exercised in spiritual duties which therefore change and variety will through Gods blessing do so as the person may be born out in them nor is there any place for it except some duty be neglected therefore it 's inconsistent with this We come to the second way of considering the Sanctification required here and that is by comparing it with that strictness called for from the Jews and to which they were tyed We speak not here of Ceremonials for so their whole service might be more burdensom then ours and particularly their Sabbath-Services because they were doubled on that day but of Moral Duties and in that respect we say that the tye and obligation unto the sanctification of this day is equal and alike unto us with them which is clear in particulars for 1. It tyeth us now to as long time to wit a natural day of twenty four hours as it did them then 2. It restraineth from work and requireth holy rest now as much as then for whatever work then struck against the Letter or purpose and scope of the command and marred holy Duties doth so still 3. It requireth positive sanctification by holy Duties as preaching prayer meditation c. and alloweth not Idleness nor indulgeth time to other unnecessary works 4. It requireth as spiritual a manner and as spiritual a
frame in performing of them now as then For 1. If the command be moral then is there no change in moral duties for it is the same command to us that it was to them save in ceremonial things 2. If the same things were allowed to them which are allowed to us and if no more be allowed to be done by us then was allowed to be done by them on the Sabbath then the observation in it's strictness is equal but the first is true for works of piety mercy and necessity are allowed to us and so were they to them as by Christs reasoning against them as being here superstitious may appear yea 3. our allowances are taken from the practise of Christ and his reasonings with the Pharisees who in these disputes aimed not to shew that more was lawful by his coming then was before but to shew what then was lawful though they ignorantly or wilfully misunderstood the command for even then God allowed mercy rather then sacrifice c. which places most clearly vvarrant us in our practise 4. The Service we have now is as spiritual and without all doubt the promise of the spirit for keeping up in holy duties as large as formerly and therefore our improving of it should be no less Before vve proceed there are some Scriptures which seem to thwart vvith and to be cross to this to vvhich vve vvould speak a little for clearing of them as namely Exod 16.23 29. and Exod. 35.3 vvhere it vvould seem that going out of the place dressing of meat and kindling of fire vvere forbidden vvhich are allowed to us To vvhich vve say 1. That vve speak of the meaning of this fourth command if any more vvas forbidden them by peculiar judicial Laws that contradicteth not our assertion these may be abrogated vvhile this command standeth But 2. We conceive that as to these things gathering of sticks kindling of fire dressing meat c. no more is allowed unto us then unto them that is all unnecessary labour in and about these is unlawful to us now and all necessary labour in and about them vvas allowed unto and lawful for them as may be gathered from Christs practice and his reasoning with the Jews and from the allowance vvhich vvas to their Beasts In the third place then vve say that these Scriptures cannot be literally and universally understood for it cannot be thought that they vvent not out of the place kindled no fire dressed no meat in any case yea the allowance for their necessity and Christs going in and partaking vvhen invited on the Sabbath day Luke 14. It 's like to somewhat that was prepared that day vvith his defending of his Disciples practise in plucking ears of Corn and rubbing them as it is Luke 6.1 vvhich vvas a sort of preparing and dressing of that meat insinuate the contrary neither c ●n any thing be gathered from that place Exod. 16.23 against dressing of meat simply but rather the contrary for the Manna that remained over what vvas dressed on the sixth day vvas to be laid up till the Seventh day or the Sabbath but not till the day after the Sabbath and vvill it not suppose that they behooved then to dress it on the Sabbath as on other days by boyling at least for as to grinding of it at Mills or otherways there vvas no necessity for that on the Sabbath ou ● of some extraordinary Case or else they had needless by la ●●●o up and so behoved to have fires to dress it vvith And therefore that of not dressing meat of not kindling fire c. must be of what is unnecessary and for servile vvorks or making gain in mens ordinary particular callings But to the third way if any should inquire what more holiness is called for or can be win at on the Sabbath then a Believer is called unto on other days he being called to endeavour to be perfectly holy every day I Answ Although he be called to be perfectly holy yet not in the holiness of immediate Worship throughout every day He is to be perfectly holy on other days according to the duties and imployments of these dayes but on the Lords day he is called to be holy according to the imployments of that day and its duties The Lords people of old were indeed called to perfect Holiness all the week over but singularly to sanctifie the Sabbath as a part of their universal Holiness 2. Though all the parts of every day should be spent holily yet some parts more especially as what parts are spent in Prayer Reading the Scripture c. and somewhat more is required of these who are called to it on a Fasting day then on other days even so on the Sabbath 3. There is a difference betwixt a person living holily in the general and a person who is holy in sanctifying the Lords day though a man should be holy every day yet is he not to sanctifie every day which is required on this day whereof we shall now speak This days sanctification then we conceive to consist in these 1. That there is more abstractedness not only from sinful things but even from lawful temporal things required on that day then on other days a spiritual frame of heart separating and setting apart a man from ordinary thoughts Hence we may say that as the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifyeth unclean as well as common so a common or every day-frame of Spirit will be found unclean for the Sabbath there must therefore be another frame of heart different from an ilk a day-frame and suited to that day 2. This day is to be sanctifyed in respect of the Exercises 〈◊〉 beyond other days and that necessarily whereas on some other days we may be taken up in some duties of worship arbitrarily but here necessarily And men may and ought to be holy on other days in their plowing and other works but there their Holiness is to be in immediate worship to God in some thing relating to that alway such as praying reading hearing conferring meditating c. 3. The sanctification of this day lyeth in this that it must be wholly sanctified but parts of other days are ordinarily used in religious Service but this whole day is to be used so a man should be this whole day throughout as in the time of praying on other days 4. Duties would be multiplyed that day more secret and private Prayer Reading c. and more publick Worship even as there were double Sacrifices that day under the Law though there were Sacrifices all days 5. There would be in the duties of this day more intenseness of Spirit and a further degree of Spiritual affections then in these duties of other days because this day is purposely set apart for that end and by continuance in Duties we may attain to more of a spiritual frame and because not only the Exercises of worship praying reading and hearing c. call to Holiness on this day as