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A17587 A re-examination of the five articles enacted at Perth anno 1618 To wit. concerning the communicants gesture in the act of receaving. The observation of festivall dayes. Episcopall confirmation or bishopping. The administration of baptisme and the supper of the Lord in privat places. Calderwood, David, 1575-1650. 1636 (1636) STC 4363; ESTC S107473 157,347 259

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another time But that will not save the ma●ter For a day is called mystike not onely for shadowing things to come but also for the mysteries solemnely remembred And as for appropriation doe wee not appropriat to the day of Christs nativitie a peculiar kinde of service of epistles gospels collects hymnes homilies belonging to Christs nativitie and thinke it absurd to performe the like service upon another day with the like solemnitie of cessation from worke and sup●rstitious forbearing of fasting Wee thinke it likewise absurd to performe upon the nativitie day that peculiar service which belongeth to easter Yea the Doctour saith the commemoration appointed to bee made upon the five dayes must not bee omitted on these dayes If it bee absurd to celebrate another day after the same manner with the same service and no other service will serve on these dayes is there not a peculiar service appropriated to our festival dayes as of old among the Jewes That shift is of no weight that a minister may preach or wee may meditate upon Christs passion another day then the nativitie For that is not to celebrate with solemnitie To use another day with the like solemnitie in the place of it or both would be thought very absurd The Jewes themselves without the service appropriated to their feasts might remember these same benefites and mysteries upon other dayes but not with the like solemnitie and peculiar service And so the solemnitie is tyed to the time To observed dayes after this manner is not like the appointing of houres for preaching or prayers on weeke dayes or times for the communion according to the policie and order set downe by everie particular congregation we tye not our selves to them not any peculiar service to any of them Wee use time then onely as a circumstance and for order and not as a sacred time let be as a holy festivitie Wee observe dayes after the same manner that the Jewes did howbeit not the same dayes nor with the same kinde of worship The change of the circumstance the day and manner of wotship doth not free us of Judaizing Non sublata sed mutata est significatio dierum saith Bellarmine and so it is with the Formalists Wee doe not say that the anniversarie revolution made the Jewish festivals ceremoniall for in the revolution of time there was no mysterie but the tying of such a peculiar service to the time of anniversarie resolution with such solomnitie To performe the same duty in substance upon the morall sabbath as occasion served had not beene ceremoniall What then they say ought not Christs inestimable benefites and notable acts to be remembred I answer Yes and so they are for where the gospell is preached his acts are published Christ is set forth crucified by the preaching of the word every communion day his passion and death is and will be remembred to his comming againe The Eucharist saith Bellarmine est memoriale omnium miraculorum quasi compendium vitae passionis resurrectionis Domini In the written word sermons prayers creeds catechismes his nativitie passion ascension c. are remembred It followeth not they should bee remembred therefore their memorie should be celebrated severally with the solemnity of a festivall day For the Lord hath appointed an holy day which we call the Lords day and may call Christs day as I said before for publishing all Christs acts and benefites Pope Alexander the 3. gave this reason wherefore the Romane Church doth not observe an holy day to the Trinitie to wit because glorie to the Father and to the Sonne and to the holy Ghost and other like things belonging to the praise of the Trinitie are published daily Ecclesia Romana in usu non habet quòd in aliquo tempore hujusmodi celebrat specialiter festivitatem cum singulis diebus gloria patri filio spiritui sancto catera similia dicantur ad laudem pertinentia trinitatis The Popes ground must bee this Whatsoever is treated on or remembred in the ordinarie divine service needeth not a speciall holy day to celebrat the memorie of the same I assume The nativity passion resurrection ascension of Christ and sending downe the holy Ghost are not only remembred in privat but also in publike and in the ordinarie service specially on the Lords day If all be true that is affirmed by a councell holden at Constantinopl● that Christ was borne on this day the starre shined to the wisemen on it Christ fed 5000. persons with five loaves and two fishes on it that hee was baptized rose and sent downe the holy Ghost on it the light was treated on it and which Pope Le● affirmeth that the Lords day is consecrated with so many mysteries dispensed on it that whatsoever notable thing was done on earth was done to the honour of this day it appeareth that the Lord would have us to observe only this day as holy and sanctified by himself for the proclaiming of all his worthy acts and not to presume to institute holy festivities upon our owne heads There is no danger but the memorie of Christs nativitie c. will be preserved to the end of the world without observing such solemnities and making holy dayes which lyeth not in the power of man This pretext of remembring and putting in minde hath beene a cloak to bring in crosses images surplices and other popish garments with much other superstition and among the rest these memoriall dayes THE JVDGEMENT OF FORraine Divines I Passe by the Petrobrusians the Waldenses and Wicleffs followers and come to later times Luther in his booke de bonis operibus set forth anno 1520. wished that there were no festivall dayes among Christians but the Lords day only were observed And in his booke to the nobilitie of Germanie he saith Consul●● nesse ut o●nia festa aboleantur solo die dominico retent● That is It were expedient that all feasts were abolis●ed t●e Lords day onely being retained Farellus and Vi●et r●n●●ed all holy dayes out of the Church of Geneva as Calvine epist. 118. testifieth The same decree which banished Farellus and Calvine out of Geneva brought in other holy dayes In a nationall synod holden at Dort anno 1578. of the Belgick Almaine and French Churches we have these words Optandum for●t nostros sex diebus laborare diem solum Dominicum celebrare That is It were to be wished that our countrie people laboured six dayes and celebrated only the Lords day So yee may see festivall dayes are rather tolerated by them because of the wilfulnesse of the magistrates and people then commended or allowed Among the articles agreed upon and concluded concerning ecclesiasticall policie in the Palatina● anno 1602. we have this following Omnes Feri● per annum festi dies tollendi è medio All the festivall dayes through the yeare are to be abolished Yee see where they finde the opportunity they abolished them Bucer howbeit not
then to designe a place for the congregation to meet in but a matter belonging to order But there was more required to this day For it was not instituted only for order and policie that the people might know what dayes to conveene to publike exercises howbeit it was one respect Times may bee appointed for preaching and prayer on the weeke dayes by any particular Church But there is more required here a day to be obseved holy by the universall Church not only for publike worship but also for privat not onely for externall but also for internall which could not be done but by divine authoritie which is supreme and onely able to binde the conscience to internall as well as externall to privat as well as to publick worship as I have said before The last point which I am to touch is concerning the strictnesse of the observation Whither we be bound to as strict observation of the Lords day as the Jewes were of their sabbath The superstitious observation of the Iewes wee are not bound unto For they observed that day more precisely then God required They found fault with Christ healing of the sicke man upon the sabbath and the sicke mans carrying home of his bed They have had and have many foolish observations as not to pull to an herb on the sabbath nor to eat an aple which they pluck upon that day nor claw with their nailes in publike nor catch a flea unlesse it bite Let us then see what God hath forbidden them They were bidden ●ake that which they had to bake upon the sixt day and seeth that they had to seeth Exod. 16. 23. and forbidden to kindle a fire upon the seventh day But that which was baken and seethed upon the sixt day a part of it was not reserved to the seventh day but that which remained over unbaken and unsodden The text importeth no further for if it had beene baken or sodden they would perhaps have attributed the not putrifying upon the seventh day to the baking or seething It was food that might bee eaten without baking like comfites or fruit It seemeth then this injunction was given onely during the time the manna rained If this direction had beene to bee observed afterward they might not have eaten any thing which was baken two dayes before Is it likely that Christ and others bidden to the Pharisees house upon the sabbath-day had no meat dressed for them by baking of seething The kindling of fire was forbidden not simply but for baking or seething the manna as some thinke and therefore endured onely so long as the manna lasted howbeit the most superstitious sort of the Jewes in later times observed it It is noted of the Essens a strict sect of the Jewes as singular in them that they kindled no fire upon the sabbath-day They were commanded Exod. 16. 29. to abide every man in his place and not to goe out of their tents at lest out of the campe This was but temporarie Afterward they might take journey upon the sabbath to the Prophets or synagogues 2 King 4. 23. Levit 23. 3. Yea if they were not to journey for that the Scribes prescrived to them 2000 cubits that is a mile or thereabouts out of a towne or citie which was called the sabbath-dayes-journey But afterward they became more superstitious not taking up the Lords intent in that place of Exodus as the Jew that would not be drawne out of the jackes wherein he had fallen upon the sabbath-day So howbeit the Iewes should be superstitious now in not kindling fire that is no warrant that the direction was not ●●●oratie Some thinke this prohibition served onely during the workmanship of the tabernacle But let it bee granted that both the one direction and the other were to endure during the policie of the Iewes I denie that they were forbidden by vertue of the fourth precept of the decalogue They would and might have kindled fire notwithstanding of the fourth precept Their rest upon the sabbath was ceremoniall and figurative And because ceremoniall and figurative therefore saith Bellarmine and Dow after him with others it behoved to be more strict exact and rigid For the more exact the figure is the better it representeth and signifieth So granting that dressing and preparing of meat by fire were not a temporarie precept during the manna yet it depended upon the ceremoniall rest and typicall state of Gods people under the law They abstained from the buriall of the dead upon the sabbath-sabbath-day 2 Maccab. 12. 39. because if any touched the dead or entred into the house where the dead lay or touched a grave was uncleane seven dayes Numb 19. 14. 16. and consequently they might not enter into the tabernacle Here a duty forbidden for legall uncleannesse which bindeth not us The prophanation of the sabbath was a capitall crime Exod. 31. 14. but this law bindeth not us The workes depending upon the ceremoniall rest or any particular ceremonie bindeth not us but only the workes inhibited in the fourth precept wherein the ceremoniall and iudicall precepts are not included but onely annexed to them as peculiar unto that people which was under the tutorie and paedagogie of the law Aquinas saith that the ceremoniall and judiciall precepts are not contained in the decalogue Ad secundum dicendum quod judicialia praecepta sunt determinationes moralium praeceptorum prout ordinantur ad proximum sicut ceremonialia sunt quaedam determinationes praceptorum moralium prout ordinatur ad Deum unde neutra praecepta continentur in daecalogo If then these workes were not forbidden by vertue of the fourth precept we are not bound to for beare them If our observation of the Lords day praefigure that blessed and glorious life which we expect as some doe hold then our rest should be also as exact and rigid because figurative Dominicus dies qui Christi resurrectione s●●xat●●e ● ●e ernam requiem spiritus corporis praefigurat saith Augustine But wee will not build strictnesse of rest upon such a weake ground It may bee fill drawne to resemble heavenly and spirituall things but that is not any end of the institution It is not ●●pu●destinatu● instituted for any shadow or signification though ●t may befitly applied unto such an use saith Willet Our rest upon the Christian sabbath is only subservient to the sanctifying of the day The strictnesse required of old by the vertue of the fourth precept is required of us As Whit maketh sunday an holy day only by the ordinance of the Church pag. 109. 150. so the particular forme and circumstances of resting are prescribed unto us saith hee by the Church pag. 135. meaning the Church governours the prelates So doth Bellarmine allow such workes as shall be permitted by the prelats or have beene used by long custome Tertiopera concessa à pralatis Quartò opera quae ex consuetudine sunt licita Our holy fathers the prelats paternes
the Lords supper 2. part page 24. translateth Theodoret 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reverenced and disputeth against adored as not agreeable to his meaning And so Bilson expoundeth Theodoret and to this purpose alledgeth the glosse of the Canon law In hoc sensu possumus q●am libet rem sacr●m adorare id est reveren●iam exhibere Ana. stasius saith Dominica verba attentè audiant si leliter adorent 1. venerantur saith the glosse Adore plenitudinem scripturae I adore the fulnesse of the scripture saith Tertullian Doctour Burges is forced to constru● the word adored in this sense when he would give a right sense to some words of Iewell The sacraments in that sort in respect of that which they signifie and not in respect of that which they are of themselfes are the flesh of Christ and are so understood and beleeved and adored but the whole honour resteth not in them but is passed over from them to the things which be signified saith Iewel His meaning is saith the Doctour that no more is or may be done respectively to the sacrament then that which wee call veneration that which in strict sense we call adoration or divine worship is reserved to God Chrysostome meaneth spirituall reverence in 1 Corin. 11. and therefore he useth emphaticall speeches of ascending up to the gates of heaven even the heaven of heavens like eagles saith Doctour Fulk 〈◊〉 followeth not that they kneeled in Augustines time because the Ethnicks objected that Christians honoured Bacchus and Ceres The reverene carriage of Christians at the participation of the sacrament all bread and wine was sufficient to be an occasion of the mistaking Averroes the Arabian Spaniard about 400 yeares since objected That Christians adored that which they did eat It may be that in his time they kneeled and gave just occasion to Averroes reproach But his time is not within our date In a word looke how old they can prove kneeling we shall prove reall presence Doctour Purges hath found out a place which was never found out before wher●● hee confidently concludeth that the communicants k●eeled in Tertull●ans time for faith he the people shunned to take the sacrament when they might not kneel in the act of receaving or partaking of it and therefore forbore to come to the communion table on the station dayes because it behoved them the stand on these dayes Tertullian saith he inviteth them to come and take the bread standing at the table publikely and to reserve and carry it away with them and receave it at home as they desired kneeling and so both duties should be performed the receaving of the eucharist and the tradition of standing on these dayes observed Tertullians words are Similiter de stationum diebus non putant plerique sacrificiorum orationibus interveniendum qu●d statio solvenda sit accepto corpore Domini Which last words he translateth because station or standing is then to be performed in receaving the body of the Lord whereas he should ●ranst●te because the fast is then to be brocken after the receaving of the bodie of the Lord. For the word statio in Tertullians language is taken for fasting both in this place and in his booke De corona militis cap. 11. and in his booke De jejuniis cap. 2. 10. 14. as Pamelius hath well observed upon that place and after him Baronius in his annales In his booke De jejuniis he bringeth in for illustration Moses persevering in prayer till the going downe of the sunne when the people was fighting against the Amalekits Nonne statio fuit sera saith he Did Ioshua dyne that day saith he that he fought against the Ammorits that commanded the sunne to stand in Gibeon and the moone in Askalon That God gave such authority to Sauls commandement concerning fasting till even that I●nathan for tasting a little hony was scarce delivered at the instant request of the people Tantam authoritatem dedit edicto stationis Saulis ut Ionathan filius c. H. bringeth in such exemples for the custome their owne sect of the Mountanists had brought in which was to keep these fasts till evening whereas the custome of the Church was to keepe them only to the ninth that is our third houre afternoone In the 2. and 14. chapter he maketh mention of weddensday and f●yday appointed for these fasts Cur quartam sextam sabbathi st●tionibus dicamus speaking of the custome of the Church at that time The meaning of Tertullian in the place above cited is They were in an errour who thought that if they had receaved the sacrament their fast should be broken which should have continued to the set houre For saith he d●th the encharist lose that service which wee have devoted unto God or rather doth it binde us more to God Nonne solennior erit statio tua si ad aram Dei steteris Shall not thy fast bee the more solemne if thou stand also at the altar of God th●● is the communion table Accepto corpore Domini reservata as Iunius reade●● id est stationis officio not reservato that it may answer to the other member both are safe participatis sacrificti exc●utio off●cii both the participation of the sacrifice ●nd performance of thy service id est jejunii saith 〈◊〉 his answer to the theologues of Burde●ux 〈…〉 his answer to the bishop of Ever●ux he saith That Tertullian would remove that scruple that after they had communicated their fast was broken they thought a● si particip●tio euch aristiae jejunium abrumpere● 〈◊〉 if the participation of the eucharist had broken up their fast Ambrose giveth the reason wherfore these set fasts were called Stationes quod stantos commarantes in eis inimicos insidiantes repellimus because standing and sta●ing in them wee rep●ll our enemies lying in wait for us meaning spirituall enemies The metaphore is borrowed from souldiers who behoved to fast so long as they were in statio● Metaphora à militi●m sumpta quod quamdiu in statione erant jejunare 〈◊〉 oportebat See Pamelius upon both the places Doctour Burges finding that Tertullian lib. 2. ad uxorem maketh mention of jejunia fasts after hee had made mention of stationes concludeth in his owne fancie that stationes were not fasts whereas he might have seene stationes distinguished à jejuniis in the former place also but by the one he meaneth of such as fasted at any time of their owe free accord by the other the set dayes of fasting Iejunium est indifferenter cujuslibet Di●i abstinentia non perleg●m sed secundum propriam voluntatem statio statutorum dierum vel temporum And this difference Pamelius acknowledgeth he hath out of Rabanus Ma●rus The very phrase it selfe solvere stationem might have guided him aright For what more frequent a phrase for breaking of a fast then solvere jejuniums We denie not that they stood both these dayes and other
memoriam gratiarum actionem creationis 〈◊〉 sui quam totius mundi quam Deus complevit die septimo alioqui enim vim non haberet discursus argumentum Pauli ut patet exdictis Howbeit scripture bee sufficient for confirmation of this truth I will adde for superaboundance some footsteps of the first institution which were found among the Gentiles Whence came the name of Septimane weekes to be receaved among the Ethnicles of old Not from the Jewes for they abhorred their customes and derided their sabbaths Not from Astrologians for distinction of dayes by weekes was more ancient then the imposing of the names of the planets upon the dayes of the weeke Or Ptolem●● his time who wrote about the yeare of our Lord 140 as Rivetus proveth by the testimonie of Georgius Syncellus and Philoponus The ancient Greek Poets cited by them for the name of weeke I omit I onely adde the testimonie of Scalig●r 〈…〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ex diebus dicitur septiman● res omibus quidem orientis populis ab ultima usque antiquita●e us●ata nobis autem Enrop eis vix tandem post Christian●smum recepta Hee saith from the upmost antiquitie his systeme of dayes in a weeke was in use among all the orientall nations But that was the part of the world which was first planted and where the holy Patriarches lived Whereas he saith this colection or distinction of dayes in weekes was not receaved in Europe till Christiani 〈◊〉 entred testimonies of Ethnick Poets alledged by ●●vetus make good that the name of weekes was more ancient even among the Latines I adde also that place in Genes 29. 27. where Laban saith to Jacob Fulfill her weeke Whither he meant a weeke of dayes or as others interpret a weeke of yeares it is all one For seven yeares was never called a weeke of yeares but where seven dayes was called a weeke of day●s Whence then could this so ancient a circuit or circle of dayes come but from the Patriarches who observed that circle because of the seventh-dayes-sabbath or from the first weeke of the creation it selfe Wee have not onely the traces of weekes among the ancient Ethniks but also of the seventh day in speciall I pretermit the testimonies cited by Rivetus out of Homer Linus and Callimachus who make mention of the perfiting of the worke of creation the seventh day I content mee with the testimonies alledged for observation in some sort of the seventh day by Casaubon commencing upon that place of Suetoni●●● Diogenes grammaticus disputare sabbutis Rhodi solitus vententem ut se extra ordinem audiret non admiserat ac per servalu● suum in septim●● diem dis●ulerat Where he bringeth in Lucian making mention of resting dayes granted every seventh day to children who were at schoole Vul●atius Gallicanus that souldiers exercised themselves upon the seventh day in archerie and armes Dampridius that Alexander Severus went up to the Capitoll upon the seventh day when hee was in Rome and frequented the temples In this same place Suetonius reporteth of Diogenes the Grammarian that if any were desirous o●heare declamation or discourse he differred them to the seventh day Eusebius saith That alm●st all as well ph●losophers as Poets understood that the seventh day was more sacred then other dayes Phil● Jud●eus 〈…〉 cited saith It was an holy day not of one 〈◊〉 region only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but of all And in another place he s●ith Our law admonisheth all of duetie 〈◊〉 Grecians the inhabitants of the ●les and the continent 〈◊〉 the orientall people the Entrop●cans and the 〈…〉 even the whole habitable world to the uttermost coasts for who doth not honour that holy day returning every weeke Buxtorsius telleth us that the Jewes at this day thinke Christians and others shall bee phnished because they keepe not their sabbath And this I beleeve they thinke not of their other holy dayes I will close this point concerning the first institution of the sabbath with pointing at the testimonies both of ancients and neotericks Tertullian reporteth that the Jewes hold that the Lord sanctified the seventh day from the beginning and that thereupon when the law was given the Lord said Rem●mber Gen 〈◊〉 ardus in his chronologie affirmeth that the Hebrew Doctours taught so Peter Martyr citeth Rabbi Agn●● Broughtoun in his concent alledgeth Rambam and Aben-Ezra Philo Judaeus his consent ye had a little before Cyprian de Spiritu sancto Chrysostome hom 10. in Genes 2. Epiphanius contra heresin Anoet● haeres 51. The doretus 〈◊〉 est in Genesin Augustine epist. 86. ad Casulannm Waleus in his dissertatio de sabbatho citeth Luther Calvine Zwinglius Beza P. Martyr Bullinger Zanchius Vrsinus Gualtor Aretius Bertramus Mercerus Antoniu● Faius Juntus Paraeus Alstedius Rivetus in his dissertatio de origaine sabbathi addeth other Neoterikes Dan●ws Ho●pinian●s Chimnitius Gerardus Marloratus with some others and popish writers Eugubinus Gen●brardus Cornelius à Lapide and Emanuel Sa. A diligent reader may easily finde moe affirming that the sabbath was instituted at the beginning Seeing the sabbath was observed from the beginning it was not instituted in the wildernesse but only renewed to the people of God and enjoined to them with solemnitie both because of their owne neglect or forced prophanation in Egypt as also because it was neglected among other nations who observed it not or not in the right manner but rather prophaned then sanctified it The question ariseth whether it was then onely morall or partly morall partly ceremoniall But the question should bee stated other wayes For there is a difference betweene these two questions whether the sabbath of the Jewes was partly morall partly ceremoniall or whether the fourth precept as it standeth in the decalogue was partly morall partly ceremoniall That the Iewish sabbath was partly morall partly ceremoniall is the commun and receaved opinion which for mine owne part I would be loath to contradict even taking ceremoniall for typicall and profigurative of our 〈◊〉 purchased forus by Christ. But it followeth not that the fourth precept as it standeth in the decalogue is partly morall partly ceremoniall in that scene that is typicall and prefigurative There is nothing in the 〈◊〉 precept as it was promulgat upon mount Sinai ranked among the rest of the morall precepts placed in the midst and written with Gods owne finger in ●ibles of stone that soundeth any way to typicall ceremonie At other times when the ceremonies of the law were intimated then were typicall and ceremoniall precep●s delivered It is true when the fourth precept was promulgated it was accommodated to the state of man after his fall ●or strangers within our gates must cease that day from all manner of workes which might give offence to Gods people which needed not to be enjoyned in the state of innocencie or if mankinde had continued in the bosome of th● Church and had not made defection falling in a
the scripture the time of some heavie judgement is called the day of the Lord or because the Lord revealed to him upon a day these great mysteries for that day had beene uncertaine the sense ca●to logicall as if John should have said I was ravished in the spirit that day I was ravished in the spirit But John maketh mention of this day as a thing knowne before to the Churches to designe the time when he saw th●se visions And he calleth it not the day of the Lord but the Lords day or the dominicall day and so it hath ever beene called in the Christian Church since the dayes of the Apostles Justi●u● c●ll●th it Apoc. 2. Diem solis Sunday because the apologie was directed to an ethnick and in his dialogue with Trypho the first day of the weeke because Trypho was a Jew It were superfluous to cite testimonies to prove that in everie age this day hath beene called the Lord day and observed by Christians in every age Notwithstanding it bee cleare and evident that the Lords day was observed in the Apostles times it is questioned whither it was instituted by Christ or by the Apostles or if by the Apostles whither by them as ordinarie pastours or as extraordinarie office-bearers assisted with the infallible direction of the spirit Master Daw It concerneth us little to know whither it was delivered by the Apostles themselves or their next after commers Those who come after are equalled by him with the Apostles who were assisted extraordinarly in laying the foundation wherein the Church was builded and setting down the government and unchangeable policie of the Church Either every Church had power to hallow a day like the Lords day or else the Church universall If every nationall Church then they might have differed and hallowed sundrie dayes If the Church universall that could not be brought to passe but in the representative an oecumenicall councell None such could be had for 300 yeares after Christ. But so the hallowing of such a day had beene suspended for 300 yeares If the Church may institute such a day it may abrogate it also and change at pleasure If the Church or ordinarie pastours may institute such a day they may make lawes binding the conscience For wee are bound in conscience to observe the Lords day even out of the case of scandall and contempt in secret as well as in publike with internall worship as well as externall or els we sinne howbeit the Church cannot take notice of it or judge upon it If there be no such day for the Lord then wee deny to him that which the verie law of nature granteth to him for the law of nature requireth such a day Seeing no ordinarie pastours may doe it it followeth that if the Apostles did it they did it not by vertue of their pastorall power and office which was common to them with their successours as Master Dow speaketh but by that power which was properly apostolicall and that it cannot be called an ordinance of the Church as Master Dow alledgeth it may Even Bellarmine distinguisheth between traditions divine apostolicall and ecclesiasticall and confoundeth not apostolicall with ecclesiasticall The apostolicall constitutions may be also called divine saith he because they were not instituted without the assistance of the spirit and divine may be called apostolicall not that they were instituted by the Apostles sed quod ab eis primùm ecclesi● traditae sunt cum ipsi seorsim eas à Christo accepissont that is that by them they were first delivered to the Church after they had first receaved them apart from Christ himselfe The observation of the Lords day is not like the Papists unwritten verities for it is extant in the scripture but the question is about the precept We confesse practice say they but where is precept I answer their practice was a paterne to us and hath the force of a precept Rivetue himselfe in his exercitations upon Genesis answers In such things we need no expresse precept if wee have practice and example namely of such as we know to be the first institutours of good order by vertue of a speciall calling such as were the Apostles but chiefly where the practice is repeated for then it is inculcat if there be no necessarie reason craving a change Respondeo in talibus non opus esse praec●pto expresso si habeamus exemplum praesertim eorum quos scimus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in ecclesia fuisse ex speciali vocatione primos institutores quales fuerunt Apostoli In talibus enim exemplum praxis vim aliquam habet pracepti praesertim ubi praxis illa repetitur tum enim incul●atur si nulla ratio necessaria mutationem requirat Adde also that the observation was uniforme in all the Churches and constant which presupposeth a precept an ordinance or institution For what likelihood is there that one began and the rest every one after other followed the example of others that went before in practice and that this way the observation crept in by exemple and did grow to a custome The places above cited make mention of the first day of the weeke and the Lords day not as then begun but as knowne and observed before even at the Pentecost before the holy Ghost descended upon the Apostles And yet Rivetus inferreth a precept out of 1 Corin. 16. where the Corinthians are directed every first day of the weeke to lay aside some thing for the poore where howbeit the chiefe intention of the Apostle is to give direction for the helpe of the poore yet because hee will have it to be done the first day of the weeke it followeth that hee willeth also that they should dedicate the Lords day to the solemne assembling of the Church for hee that intendeth the end intendeth also the midst Vbi etsi prima intentio Tauli sit de collecta statuere tamen quia vult eam primo di● hebdomadis fieri inde sequitur voluisse etiam ut diem Dominicam solemni ecclesiae congregationl dedicarent Qui enim vu●t finem vult etiam media si nihil in eis sit illegitimum aut verbo Dei prohibitum Yet his words would bee somewhat corrected for the Apostle enjoyneth them not to observe that day as if they had never observed it before but maket● mention of it as a thing knowne and as Chrysostome observed would move them to bee the more free-hearted because of the benefites which they had receaved that day He enjoyneth them no new thing but concernidg the collection for the Saints as he had given order to the Churches of Galatia Yet this direction implieth a direction to continue in the observation of that day for in directing them to doe a little farre more would he have them to performe greater duties Bellarmine giveth some rul●s to trie genuine apostolicall traditions which if yee will admit howbeit they cannot be justly applied to their unwr●tten verities yet
and patrons of the prophanation of the Lords day usurpe dispensation with Gods morall precepts The very light of nature leadeth a man to acknowledge that what time is set apart as holy it should not bee prophaned with worldly businesse or exercises howbeit this light hath beene detained in unrighteousnesse among the Gentiles who would not spend the time as they ought to have done or were ignorant and thought their games and playes were a hononring of their gods I need not to reekon particular workes this generall ingraft in mans minde by nature that a holy day should be spent in holy exercises will direct every one in the particulars This or that will be an impediment to the spirituall exercises whereunto I am bound this day In hoc pracepto est aliquid quod est morale ut vacare id est intendere Deo orando colendo meditando quae sunt in dictamine legis natura Et ista hodie in lege Christiana magis manent in virtute quàm in lege veteri Ex statutis synodalibus dioecesis Lingonensis anno 1404. Here yee see in the statutes of that diocie it is acknowledged morall in the fourth precept to pray worship meditate that nature diteth this much and that these dueties remaine more in strength under the Gospell then under the old law This statute with the rest was approved by a Cardinall Ludovicus de Barro In a councell holden at Mascone 588 the people is exhorted to spend the Lords day in hymnes and praises prayers and teares Sunt oculi manusque vestrae toto illo die ad Deum expanse Let your eyes be bent and hands spread toward God all that day They require also spirituall exercises in the night it selfe In the synods holden in France by the Popes legates Galo and Simon it was ordained under the paine of excommunication that none grind at watermills or any other mills from saturday at evening till the Lords day at evening Cardinall Galo and Simon were sent legates to France about the yeare 1812. In a synod holden in Ange●●s 1282. the like ordinance was made against grinding at milles notwithstanding of the abuse for a long time before for that sins are the more hainous the longer miserable fouls are bound to them cumali qua praescriptio contra praecepta decalogi locum sibi vindieare non possit Seeing no prescription can take place against the precepts of the decalogue Yee see they ground their ordinance upon the fourth precept and conclude ex vi quart● praecepti that Christians may not grind at milles that day from evening to evening They inhibited also cutting or shaving of beards that day or any other exercise of barbar ●ra●t under the paine of excommunication but in case of imminent perill of death or grievous disease This strictnesse then required of us admitteth not lawfull and honest games shooting bowling wrastling c. farrelesse unhonest and unlawfull w●i●h ought at no time to bee suffered For honest games and passe-times howbeit honest may be impediment to spirituall exercises and distract the minde as much as the lawfull workes of our calling Refreshment by meat and thanke was allowed by God himselfe when hee provided for the seventh day and by Christ himselfe who being invited went to the pharisees house upon the sabbath to dinner Aman may recreate himselfe with the free aire of his garden or the fields if family dueties or the like hinder him not providing hee spend the time in holy exercises or holy conference with some other But games and passe 〈◊〉 cannot consist with such holy exercises Workes of pietie as to travell to the places of publike worship or charitie as to visit the sicke and of necessity as to preserve the life of man and beast in danger are lawfull The Jewes suffered themselves rather to be● killed then take armes upon the sabbath-day 〈◊〉 after better advice they resolved to fight if any invaded them 1 Maccab. 2. 41. The Hebrew Doctours have a saying Periculum animae impellit sabbatum the perill of the life driveth away the sabbath Yet we should pray to be free of those necessities Christ foretelling his disciples Matth. 24. 20. the destruction of Ierusalem biddeth them and in their name other disciples who were to follow after pray that their flight might not be in winter nor on the sabbath-day wherefore not on the sabbath-day but because it would be an hinderance of their holy and spirituall exercises upon that day Now the destruction of Jerusalem fell not forth till fourtie yeares after Christs ascension But so it is the Iewish sabbath was one of the dead ceremonies which obliged not to necessarie obedience after the passion of Christ. Christ meant then of the Christian sabbath I have exceeded farre the bounds I set to my selfe and therefore I am forced to end this discourse THE DEFINITION OF A FEstivall day IUdicious Piscator defineth thus a festivall day ●●stum propriè loquendo est publica folennis ceremonia mandata à Deo ut certo anni tempore cum singulari letitia obeatur ad gratias agendum Deo pro certo aliquo beneficio in populum suum collato that is A feast or festivall day is a publike or solemne ceremonie commanded by God to be executed at a certaine time of the yeare with singular gladnesse to give God thankes for some certaine benefite bestowed on his people Hooker the master of ceremonies maketh festivall solemnitie to be nothing els but the divine mixture as it were of these three elements praises set forth with cheerefull alacritie of minde delight expressed by charitable largenesse more then common bounty and sequestration from ordinarie workes The sabbath under the law was never called jom tob a good that is a merrie day as were the solemne anniversarie feasts Other dayes also which were not solemne feasts were so called as dayes of banketing and feasting Drusius in his annotations upon Ester 9. citeth Elias Thesbite to this purpose Master Aiusworth in his annotations upon Exodus 16. citeth the Chaldee paraphrase speaking of the sabbaths and good dayes that is the solemne feasts as distinct things Puxtorsius also in abbreviaturis So the Lords day succeeding to the old sabbath should not be ranked among the festivall dayes or feasts as the word is taken in our common language The definitions agree not to the Lords day It is not an anniversarie but a weekly day It is not instituted for the commemoration of a particular benefite but for the worship of God at large as the morall law requireth and as the old sabbath did For howbeit that day was made choise of which was the day of Christs resurrection yet it was not instituted onely for the commemoration of that particular benefit but for the worship of God in generall It hath no peculiar service of epistles gospels collects or sermons and homil●es for Christs resurrection The Church invented afterward a feast or festivall day to wit Easter for