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A15324 The doctrine of the Sabbath handled in foure seuerall bookes of treatises. The first of which intreateth of the day of rest. The second, of the duties of the day. The third, of the persons whom these duties concerne. And the fourth, the reasons vsed to perswade all persons to the practise of these duties vpon that day. Written by G.W. Master of Arts, and minister of the word of God in Portsmouth. Widley, George, b. 1566 or 7. 1604 (1604) STC 25610; ESTC S119957 129,925 252

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incense And least we should pleade ignorance that wee know not how to pray hee giueth vs his spirit to helpe our infirmities Rom. 8. yea and promiseth that his eares shall stand open whensoeuer we pray Psal 34. 15. This then maketh against those that on the Sabbath or else neuer pray But let such know that it is a certaine token vnto them that they are wicked men For Dauid going about to describe wicked men giueth this as a speciall marke of them they call not vpon the Lord Psal 14. 4. Secondly it stirreth vs vp to performe this dutie especially seeing Christ requires it Cant. 8. 13. My loue let me heare thy voyce And so much for prayer § Sect. 3 The second exercise that is both priuate and publique is the reading of the Scriptures which 2. Reading of the Sriptures appeareth in that Christ willeth vs to search the Scriptures and Matth. 12. Haue you not read in the law as though wee were bound to reade it And in very truth the King himselfe is bound to doe it Deut. 17. 19. Which wee will yet doe so much the sooner if we consider that he is blessed that readeth c. Reu. 1. 2. Which reasons lead the Bereans Act. 17. 11. when they had heard Paul to see whether it were so or no. And as we must reade the word in priuate so must it be read in publique Paul would haue his Epistle read in the Church of Laodicea Coloss 4. 16. And Nehem. 8. the Priests first read the law and then afterwards gaue the sense So Act. 13. they had a lecture of the law And Act. 15. Moses was preached seeing he was read Now it may be many would reade but as the woman answered Christ when hee would drinke thou hast nothing to draw so they would reade but they haue no bookes Of those that come to the assemblie how many can reade I mistake I would say of those that can reade how many haue bookes If a man haue taken a peece of ground he is neuer quiet til he haue his lease or coppie or deeds If he doubt in any clause he will either looke in it himselfe or goe to him that can reade But in these things wee passe not wee thinke wee shall stumble vpon saluation well enough though we neuer seek it It is reported of the Iewes that they Iosephus knew the Scriptures as well as their owne names but amongst vs many scarce know the names of the Scriptures When a booke is named they know not where to finde it This was the policie of popish times to keep the people in ignorance hauing herein followed the policie of the Philistines who because they would keepe the Israelites in slauerie would not allow the vse of any weapons vnto them Ionathan and his Armour-bearer and Saul onely excepted whom forsooth they would seeme to grace nor permit a Smith among them the reason was least they should make them swords and as for their tooles they must come downe to the Philistines to sharpen them So deale the Papists they claspe vp the book of God in an vnknowne tongue and wrest out of lay mens hands the sword of the Spirit which is the word Onely they vouchsafe it to some few of their faction for a mischiefe but as for the people they must come downe to the Popes Decrees and Church-traditions vnwritten truths and vntrue writings and there they must sharpen their tooles but Smith must they haue none no Preacher least hee make them swords Yea but they will say many grow into errors by reading of the word Answ First I know no greater heresie than Poperie that is an heresie of heresies Secondly if this bee a good reason that because many abuse it therefore others may not vse it I see not but that men must forsake their meate and drinke also because some be drunken and some surfet So the Sacrament should be banished because some receiue it to their condemnation Nay so the word yea Christ himselfe should not be receiued because he is put for the fall of many Luk. 2. They must therefore know that in things indifferent in themselues though the abuse doth take away the vse yet not so in things commanded vs yea but shall we giue holy things to dogges No but will you withhold the childrens bread because the dogs catch at it Should a Captaine because some be alwaies quarelling stabbing and killing therefore presentlie commaund that all his souldiers should lay aside their weapons No but rather that they take armes to beate downe the quarellers And so wee say that the wearing of weapons breedes peace and so must we vse our spirituall weapons but whereas they pretend a feare of running into errors God hath promised to giue his spirit vnto his that shal leade them into all truth and better they cannot bee lead than by the word for that is a glasse wherein a man may see what is amisse Friends dare not tell a man his faults for feare of displeasing Enemies will not But reade the word and thou shalt see there is no fault which thou hast committed in all thy life but either Moses or Dauid or Salomon or Peter or Paul or one of the Prophets or of the Apostles will tell thee of it And therefore being that reading shewes a man his error how can it be that it should bring him into error And so much for the second dutie that is mixt § Sect. 4 The third dutie is singing of Psalmes which also is an exercise of the Sabbath as appeareth in The third is singing of Psalmes that all are exhorted and stirred vp thereunto Kings of the earth and all people Princes and all Iudges of the world young men and maides old men and children all must praise the Lord. And againe Psal 147. 1 2 Praise the Lord. Of which he giueth diuers reasons First it is a good thing then what better time than to doe it vpon the Sabbath Secondly because in good things wee are soone wearie vnlesse we delight in them therefore he saith it is a pleasant thing so that it is as it were the Sabbaths recreation Lastly because there are many things pleasant which yet are not seemely therefore he shewes that it is such a pleasant thing that is also comely There are good things that yet are not pleasing as afflictions which are grieu●us for the present Heb. 12. 11. And there are pleasant things that yet are not comely as foolish iesting Ephes 5. 4. But this hath all three it is good pleasant and comely Good in it owne nature pleasant to the hearers and comely to the vser It is good there is no euill in it it is pleasant there is no harshnes in it it is comely there is no affectation in it In regard hereof Paul and Silas sang in prison Act. 16. 25. And Christ after supper sang a Psalme or Himne Matth. 26. It was their exercise and that in publique as well as in priuate as
these my labours vnder the liuerie of your honourable fauour Wherein although there be nothing answerable vnto your greatnes yet if as the finger serueth to point vnto the Sunne and the iuyce of a Limmon to ingraue aswell as Aqua fortis so this may serue to point vnto that which I would but cannot attaine vnto sufficiently to make knowne your Honours worthinesse and something to expresse the thankfulnes of my heart I wanting better meanes to vtter it I shall thinke my selfe not to haue attained the lowest degree of happinesse in my low estate And thus humbly crauing of your Honour pardon for my boldnes I cease any further to interrupt you from your waightier affaires yet not ceasing in my best wishes vpon my knees to pray vnto that God who is good without qualitie great without quantitie infinite without place and euerlasting without time that hee would long preserue your Honour amongst vs that the Prince may long enioy you such a subiect the Common-wealth such a Councellour the Church such a stay the truth such a Champion the souldier such a Leader and learning such a Patron and after this life here ended there to enioy with him another that neuer shall haue end Your Honours in all dutie most bounden GEORGE WIDLEY A TABLE OF ALL SVCH THINGS AS ARE contained in the seuerall chapters of euery booke The first booke CHAP. I. HOw the whole law is distributed pag. 1. 2 How the first table hath reasons annexed which the second for the most part wanteth pag. 3 What force these reasons of the fourth Commaundement haue to perswade vs to obedience 4 What things this Commaundement containeth in it in speciall aboue the rest 6 How this fourth Commandement is analysed or diuided 6 CHAP. II. How many sorts of Sabbaths there were among the Iewes 7 How the morall and ceremoniall Sabbaths differ 8 What vse the ceremonies had vnto the Iewes 10 Whether the Sabbath be perpetuall 13 CHAP. III. The time of the Sabbath or rest changed 31 To what day it was changed 37 Why the time of the Sabbath was changed 38 Whether it may be changed againe 53 Whether we may still call it the Sabbath 52 Whether by the Lords day Reue. 1. 10. be meant our Sabbath or day of rest 43 Obiections against the Sabbath answered 46 CHAP. IIII. Whether the whole day naturall be to bekept 57 How the night is to be kept 60 When the Sabbath beginneth and endeth 61 The second booke CHAP. I. That wee must prepare our selues to sanctifie the Sabbath and why 63 Wherein this preparation doth consist 68. 69 CHAP. II. Rest commanded 72 This rest must be a solemne rest 73 What workes are forbidden to bee done vpon the Sabbath 74. 75. 76. 77 What works be allowed to be done vpō the Sab. 90. 91. 92. 93 With what cautions workes of necessitie must be done 95 CHAP. III. Whether recreations may be allowed vpon the Sabbath 98 Whether pastimes as dauncing c. vpon the Sabbath may be allowed 102 Whether the Sabbath may be broken by our speech 113 Whether it may be broken in thought 118 Whether a man may doe the things commanded to be done vpon the Sabbath and yet breake the Sabbath 117 CHAP. IIII. Whether the rest of the Sabbath must be sanctified 119. and how 120 What these duties are which be required to the sanctitie of the Sabbath 123 Whether we be enioyned to come to the publique assemblie vpon the Sabbath 224. and how to demeane our selues there 126. 127. 128 Whether the word must be preached vpon the Sabbath 130 Whether the people be bound to heare it vpon the Sab. 132 Obiections to the contrarie answered ibid. Whether the Sacraments and discipline bee duties of the Sabbath 136. 137 CHAP. V. Duties both publique and priuate to be done vpon the Sabbath as first prayer 138. 139 Reading of the Scriptures 141 Singing of Psalmes 144 Catechisme 145 Workes of mercie 149 CHAP. VI. Priuate duties vpon the Sabbath which are meditation 152 Conference 156 Sloth pride dumme Ministerie le ts to the sanctification of the Sabbath 150. 161 The third booke CHAP. I. Whether euery man is bound in his owne person to keepe the Sabbath 164 Whether euery man be bound to see those that are vnder him to keepe the Sabbath 166 Whether the father be bound to see that the sonne keepe the Sabbath 169 Whether the master be bound to see that the seruant keepe the Sabbath 171 CHAP. II. Whether wee be bound to see that our cattell rest vpon the Sabbath and why 177 Whether we be bound to see that the stranger rest that is within our gates and why 179 Whether euery man be bound to hinder the iustruments of euill 182 Whether we be bound to labour to bring others to the knowledge of God 186 Whether toleration of a false religion may not be suffered 186 Whether the gouernours be bound to compell Idolaters to worship the true God 190 The fourth booke CHAP. I. In what manner the first reason of this Commandement perswadeth to the keeping of the Sabbath 195. 196. 197 Whether all Gods commandements are grounded vpon reason 199 Whether it bee sinne not to dispatch our worldly businesse vpon the sixe daies 200 Whether it be not lawfull vpon any of the sixe daies to vse recreation for the health of the bodie 203 Whether a man may consecrate any one or more of the sixe daies to Gods seruice 206 CHAP. II. How the second reason of this commandement perswadeth to the keeping of the Sabbath 208 How God is our Lord and how he is our God and what we thence learne 209. 211 To whom we must consecrate daies 215 CHAP. III. How the third reason perswadeth vs to keepe the Sab. 216 How farre we are to follow examples 217 Wherein we are to imitate God and wherein not 221 How God may be said to rest and the vse of the words 222 CHAP. IIII. How the fourth reason here brought perswadeth to the keekeeping of the Sabbath 228 What it is to blesse and ballow the Sabbath namely to blesse the keepers of it 219 Whether the breakers be accursed 219 The end of the Table THE DOCTRINE OF THE SABBATH HANDLED IN FOVRE BOOKES THE FIRST BOOKE TREAting of the Sabbath day CHAP. I. The distribution of the whole law Sect. 1. The Commaundements of the first Table haue their reasons annexed Sect. 2. The reasons annexed to the fourth Commaundement Sect. 3. The contents of the fourth Commaundement Sect. 4. The analysis of it Sect. 5. § Sect. 1 THe whole law which is a doctrine requiring what men ought to be and condemning them for not being perfectlie such as they ought being at large deliuered in the whole volume of the Scriptures is notwithstanding for the helpe The distribution of the whole law of mans memorie abridged by God himselfe in those tenne words which he spake on the Mount Sinai and writ in two tables of stone as it were in a booke of two
eate the Lords Supper And hereupon doth the Church define a Sacrament to bee a publike action And in the Primatiue Church it was vsually deliuered vpon the Sabbath therefore it was called dies panis In regard of this no complaint can sufficiently bewaile the backwardnes of this age whereinto we are fallen that some scarce once in a whole Iubile of Sabbaths nay if law had not prouided to the contrarie scarce once in a whole Iubile of yeeres would bee partakers of the Sacrament which we see euidently in that they come no oftner vnto the Lords table than they are compelled Moses was like to haue bin slaine for the neglect of circumcision What shall wee thinke the neglect of this will bring vpon vs And if vnworthie taking make vs liable vnto iudgement 1. Corinth 11 what shall we thinke of this not taking at all When Christ talked with the Iewes of a bread from heauen euery man would haue it Ioh. 6. 34. This is so and yet no man calleth for it though the price bee vnualuable and the vertue no lesse than the communion of the bodie and blood of Christ And if the very hemme of his garment had vertue to heale vncurable diseases how much more shall this his bodie heale vs if we be truly partakers of it But surely for such as take it onely by constraint and compulsion well they may finde the cloathes where Christ his bodie was but not his bodie And because they receiue it not worthily and with comfort but of constraint therefore in steed of a seale of his mercie they may receiue a pledge of his wrath And so much for the second dutie § Sect. 8 The third publique dutie is the administration of discipline admonition reprehension excommunication The execution of discipline a dutie of the Sabbath c. A publique worke also of the Sabbath to looke vnto the manners of men to admonish them that are vnruly 1. Thess 5. and to deliuer the obstinate sinner vnto Sathan that his soule may be saued And this the Apostle sheweth also to be a worke of the Sabbath 1. Cor. 5. 5. where he willeth them that when they were gathered together in the name of the Lord Iesus they should deliuer ouer the incestuous person vnto Sathan Now their assemblie was vpon the Sabbath as before hath been shewed and therefore that should then also be done as a worke of the Sabbath CHAP. V. Of mixt duties Sect. 1. Namely prayer Sect. 2. Reading the Scriptures Sect. 3. Singing Psalmes Sect. 4 Catechising Sect. 5. And shewing mercie Sect. 6. § Sect. 1 THE next duties that follow to bee handled are such as are mixt of which sorte are prayer thanksgiuing singing of Psalmes catechising almes c. which I terme mixt because they are such as may bee done in publique or in priuate which also are to bee performed vpon the Sabbath as they shal be best fitting with the time and place Now many men when they haue bin at Church they thinke they may doe all the rest of the day what they list As the harlot when she had payed her vowes she thought she might play the harlot Prou. 7. So do many they serue God in the forenoone and the flesh and the diuell in the after-noone But they must know that God doth require the whole day to be spent in holy duties And therefore as thou maist in no part of the day breake the rest by labour so much lesse maist thou breake the holinesse for God commaundeth the one aswell as the other holinesse aswell as rest nay rest should not haue been commaunded but for holinesse And therefore as I haue shewed before it was a sin to breake the rest so is it much more to breake the Sabbath by omitting the duties of holinesse Indeed thou art not tied to spend the whole day in the publique exercises before mentioned neither were the Iewes for they had but their sacrifice euening and morning Numb 28. and prayers with their sacrifice as appeareth Luk. 1. 10 in that the people prayed whilest the incense was a burning Then they had a lecture of the Law and Prophets Act. 13. 15 after that preaching For when they had read the Law they gaue the sense thereof and caused the people to vnderstand the reading Nehem. 8. 8 and then thanksgiuing All which cōtinued not the whole day but the congregation was dismissed at mid-day Nehem. 8. 10. 12. And they returned at three of the clocke at what time Peter and Iohn went vp to pray which is called the ninth houre answering vnto our third at what time also was the euening sacrifice But yet the interim before betwixt and after was spent either in priuate exercises of godlinesse or else in these which are both priuate and publique which are therefore noted and obserued in the practise of the Church that wee might draw them also into imitation which being at other times of the weeke to bee done so much more were they on the Sabbath and the exercises of religion being vpon that day doubled Numb 28 why should God bee now lesse serued vnder the Gospell than hee was vnder the Law § Sect. 2 To come therefore vnto these duties which we call mixt first of prayer Which that it is an exercise The mixt duties are first Prayer of the Sabbath is euident in that his house is called the house of prayer Ioh. 2. and the word cannot be without it Therefore Neh. 8. Ezra before he preached praised God And though Christ would haue vs to pray in priuate Matth. 6. yet God requireth the same to be done also in the assemblies Psal 107. 32 and that not alone by the teacher as Dauid in the midst of the congregation would praise the Lord when hee did declare his name Psal 22. 22. but by the people also Therfore when Zachary was burning of incense within the people were in prayer without Luk. 1. 10 which as it must bee done in the morning so also at night For Dauid would haue his prayer as the incense which was the first thing the Priest did when hee came into the Temple and the lifting vp of his hands as the euening sacrifice Psal 142. which was on the Sabbath at night offered so must our prayers be It maketh me the more to marueile at some kinde of men that thinke if they haue been at seruice as they call it in the fore-noone that God is beholding vnto them for that and that they are not bound to returne againe in the after-noone but that they consecrate vnto some pastimes as though they had been at Church in the morning to aske God leaue to goe to play in the after-noone Now as this is a publique exercise of the Sabbath and must go before and after the word so also at other times or else why are wee commaunded to pray continually 1. Thess 5. 17. and in all things to giue thankes Yea God to shew how well he likes it compares it to