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

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likewise of this day is of no less excellency then the Fathers blessing of the seventh day Nay how many wayes did Jesus Christ bless his own day By his Glorious Resurrecti●n when the Sun of Righteousness di● ri●e wi●h healing in his wings to visit and make Mal. 4. 2. Rom. 13. 12. happy the world and to make it day among the Sons of Men. By his several apparitions on this day when Christ did exhilarate and revive his sadned and disconsolat● Disciples St. Aug. de C●vit dei lib. 22. cap. 30. with the bright intervals of his pellucid and salvifical presence But of this more hereafter By his heavenly instructions on this day Luke 24. 25. when as Elijah now he was going to heaven he dropt his Mantle and shewed his Disciples his mind by revelation 2 Kings 2. 13. before he shewed them his face in glory By illuminating the minds and opening the understandings ings of his Disciples more eminently on this day Luke 24. John 20. 22. John 20. 28. Rev. 22. 16. 45. On this day not only the morning star arose in the World of inhabitants but in the hearts of the Disciples and he opened not only the curtains of the grave but of the minds of his Apostles by his redoubted and omnipotent operation By breathing the Holy Ghost upon his Disciples John 20. 22. as on this day When Christ did that by his breath which the Minister cannot do by his Zeal the Scholar by his Art the Friend by his love nay Nature it self by its force Aug. Serm. 15. de verb. Apost viz. inspire the heart with holy principles and the head with holy knowledge and spiritual understanding By the installation of his Apostles into their supream jurisdiction giving them power to bind and to loose in heaven and in earth John 20. 21 22 23. On this day the Apostles received not their Miter but their Mission and the emblem of their dignity was no ceremonial vesture but a supereminent power All which blessings Christ scattered on this solemne day our Christian Sabbath and on this day as an essay of converting power Christ by the Ministry of Peter turned three thousand to his own Divine self Now all these blessings which Christ heaped on this day Acts. 2. 41. what are they but so many acts of consecration They are only the pouring out of the oyl to anoint it to be far above its fellows and to be the Christians solemn and weekly festival And thus Ignatius calls our Sabbath the Highest and Psal 45. 7. Queen of dayes The argument then is very forcible à pari if the Fathers blessing a day made it a Sabbath to the world before and in the times of the Law then the Sons blessing a day must needs make it a Sabbath to the world in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Ignat. John 5. 23. times of the Gospel And this is the more to be taken notice of because Christ saith expresly John 5. 23. That all men shall honour the Son even as they honour the Father Reas 3 Christs Faithfulness in his Church proclaims him the institutor of his own day God the Father when he had ordained Expendendum est quod non solùm ritus et ceremonias populo suo dedit deus quibus ad fidem charitatem gratiarum actionem observantiam dei imbuerentur sed et certa tempora praescripsit in quibus vigore legis praescriptas Ceremonias exercerent Haud permisit illis libertatem ut ferias quas et quando vellent pro suo libero arbitrio figerent out refigerent mutarent tollerent multiplicarent minuorent sed ferias servandas tradid it ex quibus est Sabbati sanctificatio Muscul his worship leaves it not to Moses nor to the people of Israel to appoint a set and solemn day for it but he himself first ordains it in paradise Gen. 2. 3. and then revives and renews it on Mount Sinai Exod. 20. 8. Nay when the Idolaters among the people of Israel did invent a worship they who invented it instituted a day for it Exod. 32. 5. Jeroboam when he devised a worship he likewise ordained a day for it 1 Kings 12. 32 33. So Nebuchadnezzar when he set up an Idol and appointed a worship for it he set apart a day for the performance of this worship Dan. 3. 2. The miscreant Prophet Mahomet as he gave laws to his Proselytes and prescribed a form of worship so he himself instituted his solemn day viz. Every Fryday And he did not leave it to the arbitrary will and pleasure of his worshippers to ordain or solemnize what day they pleased Therefore from all this we may conclude unless Christ should fall short of the example of his Father Nay of the very Idolaters he must be the institutor of his own day for it cannot be proved that at any time or in any age that any publick worship was ever invented to be observed but the Author and institutor of it was also the institutor of the day for that worship not leaving it to others will to appoint the same for him Now Christ is the great Law-giver of his Church the glorious founder of Gospel-worship the Sacraments were ordained by him Prayers must be made in his name Discipline is of his institution the Ministry of his calling and sending and shall our blessed Mediator be only excluded from the appointment of a day for weekly Mark 16. 16. Luke 22. 19 20. John 20. 22. Mat. 21. 22. James 4. 12. Mat. 28. 19. Mat. 26. 26. John 14. 15. Mat. 18. 18. Rom. 1. 1. Cant. 2. 16. H●g 2. 7. Rev. 15. 3. Eph. 1. 22. Mat. 18. 20. Psal 89. 7. Heb. 12. 2. and solemn worship Shall that cursed caitiff Mahomet as was hinted constitute and appoint a weekly day for his worshippers to observe to himself and read that system of Vanities that miscellany of lying inventions the Alchoran and shall not our beloved the desire of Nations the King and Soveraign of his people the Head of his Church not only influential but authoritative shall not he be invested with a power to set apart a weekly Sabbath for his people wherein they may meet in his name and assemble in his fear and congregate to hear his glorious Gospel and to participate of those blessings which attend his salvifical presence Or did Christ forget his main import when he ascended to his Father his approaching joy swallowing up his thoughts of and care for his poor Church which he left behind Surely we must make Christ the institutor of his own blessed day or inveniencies too many will arise which no salves will be able to smoother or suppress Should Christ have left it to his Church to appoint a day what end would be of the discord and disagreements which unavoidably follow When should the whole Church meet to enact such a constitution Or shall one part of the Church being as is
foundations of the world were laid He is from everlasting to everlasting His Name is everlasting God Gen. 21. 33. His Armes are everlasting arms His Mercy is everlasting mercy He is the everlasting Father Isa 9. 6. His Strength is everlasting strength Isa 26. 4. His Kindness Rex seculorum est proprium dei attributum significans quod deus est primum et aeternumens Alap Respondisse fertur Thales Milesius interrogantibus quid sit divinitas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is everlasting kindness Isa 54. 8. His heart was full of love before man was created to be the object of it nay he had his delights in himself before he had his darling Man to let out his love upon The Prophet calls God an everlasting light Isa 60. 19 20. which shews there was no twilight before this illustrious and bright Sun His years fail not there is no faintness can seize upon his Nature nay his years cannot be numbred Isa 36. 26. There can be no termination of his being He inhabits Eternity Isa 57. 15. there he alwayes dwelt The World is but a latter production to which he was pleased to give a being according to his good pleasure Let us meditate on the Independency of his being He subsists of himself and all things leane on the arm of his power and hang upon the good hand of his providence He sustains Acts 17. 28. the Angels He supplies man not onely with bread but Psal 147. 9. with breath He feeds the young Ravens they seek their meat at his hand God is the universal purveyor of the World and He supports this beautiful fabrick which else Psal 104 29. would soon sink into its primitive nothing and he doth it by his own manutenency Should God withdraw his fustentation the whole Creation would faint and dye away He is the great King which maintains the Universe He preserves Psal ●●6 9. the stranger He relieves the fatherless and the widdow as the Psalmist speaks nay all things here below are constant stipendaries to this infinite God Let us meditate on the variety of his Excellencies He is excellent in Greatness He can wound the hairy scalp of the sinner and break him in pieces as a potters vessel His Exod. 15. 7 Psal 63. 21. Sword is called the sword of his Excellency Deut. 33. 29. as that weapon which can pierce the heart of his Enemies His loving kindness is radiant with Glory and Excellency How glorious and excellent is his mercy to draw sinners out of the dust and seat them with Angels in eternal glory And God is not onely excellent in loving but he is so in Exod. 14. 22. working He can bring mighty things to pass keep the water D●n 3. 25. from drowning the fire from burning the Lions from D●n 6. 22. devouring the Sun from posting His works are glorious in Jo●h 10. 13. excellency In a word whatsoever is excellent is originally Isa 28. 29. seated in God and the creatures excellency is but a drop from this Ocean a ray from this glorious Sun If God put on Psal 93. 1. his Attire he cloaths himself with Majesty his inward Psal 104. 1. garment is Strength his outward wear is Honour the Sun beams are shades compared to the glittering of his apparel Let us meditate on the luster of his appearances When God discovers himself Angels cannot look upon him they are dazled with that overcoming sight and poor Man is frighted Isa 6. 5. into despair Isa 6. 5. And so Manoah said to his Wife Psal 68. 9. We shall surely dye because we have seen God If God appears Judg. 13. 22. in his Glory Mount Sinai smoaks and flames as if it was turned into an Aetna or Vesuvius those Mountains of Sicily Heu mihi perii occidi defeci ex consterra tione tantae visionis Alap and Campania which continually disgorge themselves in smoak and fire If God cast an eye upon the Earth it trembles if he but touch the mountains they smoak Psal 144. 32. Nay if God wrap himself up in a Cloud that dark appearance Exod. 19. 18. pearance is so full of Glory that the people keep at a distance Terra dicitur siluisse conspectu Alexandri pavore concussa nec resistere ausa est and the Priests dare not make any near approach 2 Chron. 5. 13 14. The most refracted manifestation of God astonisheth and strikes man into a consternation When God appears he must put on the mask of a cloud or else poor dust would unsoder and fall before him His appearance Exod. 3. 5. Exod. 19. 18. Isa 2. 10 19. Exod. 40. 34 35. Exod. 16. 10. Isa 2. 10. in the bush sanctified the ground His appearance on the Mount multiplyed the flame His appearance to sinfull Israel drives them into holes and places of retirement Isa 2. 10. How was Moses raised with the dazling appearance of Gods back parts on Mount Sinai Exod. 34. 6. And the Apostles ravished with Christs splendid and seraphick Exod. 34 6 35. Mat. 17. 2 3 4 5. appearance in the transfiguration His glorious appearance in Heaven feeds the songs of Angels His gracious appearance on earth to his poor wasting people fills their hearts with joy and they are refreshed and refined by it And his powerful appearance in Hell fills the damn'd with horrour and despair Job 37. 2. When God appears in Ordinances Job 37. 22. Mat. 18. 20 Acts 2. 37. Psal 63. 5. those very Ordinances become the Cordials of Grace the Instruments of conversion the Paradise of the soul the fulfilling of a promise the chariots of Christ to convey him to the believer and the banes of the most head-strong corruptions Let us meditate on the tender goodness of his mercies His mercy is great in point of quantity His mercy is numerous Gen. 19 19. Num. 14 19. Psal 5. 7. in point of multitude God hath a large off-spring of love His mercy is sweet and soft in point of quality Psal 103. 4. Sure mercy in point of perpetuity Acts 13. 34. Sheltring mercy where the believer may retire himself in point of security Vnus est dei filius u●um verb●m ●ed miseria nostra est multiplex non tantùm magnam misericordiam sed et miserationum quaerit multitudinem Psal 13. 5. His mercy fills earth Psal 119. 64. reacheth to the heavens Psal 57. 10. Nay it presseth into the Heavens Psal 36. 5. Nay it is so great it gets above the Heavens Psal 108. 4. And Mercy is not onely an outward dispensation from God but a sweet disposition in God Nehem. 9. 17. It is a pearl in his Crown it is a letter in his Name Exod. 34. 6. and a great letter too Nay it is a beam of his glory He delights to shew mercy His mercy is not above all his attributes that is impossible for what is in God is God but it is
memoranda primum et praeci●●●um est benefi●ium creationis quod commemoratur in sanctificatione Sabbati Aquin. Prima Secundae Quest 100. Artic. 5. transcendent Majesty in that magnificent Pallace of the Heavens which he hath prepared and furnished for himself where he sends forth his light and makes it his covering and the clouds are his triumphal Chariots Psal 104. 2 3. Sixthly In this great work is manifest Gods absolute perfection in imparting to the creatures all their several perfections which must needs be in a far more eminent degree in him who gave them And indeed this illustrious work is the strong motive to all Gods Creatures to Adore Worship Love Fear Serve Reverence and Obey this great Jehovah and to Depend Rest Trust and submit themselves to him alone But the glory of this work of Creation will yield a more amazing splendor if we look on it In its Antiquity It is the most ancient of all Gods visible works Deut. 4. 32. Mat. 13. 19. Rev. 3. 14. and that In principio de●●●reavit c. In hac voce non Authorem tantùm sed exordinum mundi judicat Moses Par. Gen. 1. 1. which is most ancient is most honourable Jer. 18. 15. Dan. 7. 9. This great and stupendous work is now some six thousand years standing it is the primitive essay of his power who is the ancient of days Time seems to shed a Veneration upon it The first Creation was the Cradle of the world its infancy which nothing did precede but the Being of a God who is from all eternity In its universality The work of Creation is the most general and extensive of all Gods works extending to Angels Men Sun Moon Stars nay to the Sparrow on the 1 Kings 4. 33. house top to the fly in the air and to the hysop on the Wall it transcends the bounds of Solomon's Philosophy to give us a Tract of all the Vegetables the Bruits and Rationals Bonum eò melius quò communius which God created when he set upon this glorious work And here that politick axiom is most true That which is good the more general the more grateful And therefore Philo the Jew in his Tract of the Workmanship of the World stiles the Sabbath which is the Festival in Memory Phil. suo de Opisicio Mundi of the Creation a Feast not of one people or of one Region but the universal festivity of all Nations which Festival alone deserves the name of popular In its goodness and untainted purity God at the first created all things very good perfect pure and excellent Gen. 1. 31. Nay man himself after his own image in holiness true righteousness Gen. 1 25 26. integrity and perfection without sin corruption Eccl. 7. 27. or obliquity The work of Creation at first was wholly unblemished Eph. 4. 24. there was no wrinckle upon the face of the Universe every creature was fair in its kind Mans sin put poyson into the Toad put rage into the Wolf put Briers and Gen. 3. 17. Thorns into the Earth put spots into the Moon nay withering into the flowers of the field and decays into the Omnes creaturae vehementem aversionem habent it● ut si haberent sensum gemerent ut parturientes i●lque ab exordio mundi lapsus hominis usque nunc trees of the forrest and veiled the face of nature with the black veil of uncomeliness And that the whole Creation groans as the Apostle affirms Rom. 8. 22. it is from those sick fits and distempers which mans sin hath cast it into When the air infects us the heat and the cold doth annoy us the earth disappoints us and yields no increase from whence is this vanity Even from our selves from ours and our first parents sin Man in sinning commits two evils as the Prophet speaks in another case he presses God Amos 2. 13. Jer 2 13. And he burdens the creature nay alters the world from its primitive loveliness when beauty was the taking blush of every Being In the rarity and eminency of some creatures more especially How glorious are the Angels those Courtiers of Heaven 1 Kings 13. 18. 1 Kings 19. 5. Dan. 6. 22. 2 Chr. 32. 21. those friends of the Bridegoom mans elder Brethren Psal 5. 8. Those Chariots of God Psal 68. 17. Those Guardians of believers Psal 91. 11. who are decked and adorned Quid murmuras caro misera quid recalcitras quid omninò invides si fueris corpus humilitatis reformabit idem Artif●x qui formavit Bern. with excellency who excell in strength Psal 103. 20. who excel in holiness Mark 8. 38. who excel in all the fruitions of joy and happiness Mat. 18. 10. Rev. 5. 11. Rev. 7. 12. who excel in splendor and glory Luke 24. 23. And how glorious was the humane nature of Christ how spotless precious pure chrystaline yet a creature His soul how undefiled Heb. 4. 15. His body how glorious Phil. 3. 21. How did the divine Nature glorifie the humane in its stupendious and grateful acceptation of it I might adde how glorious is the glistering Sun the amiable Moon the twinkling Stars which put the night out of its blackest melancholy Let onely this be subjoyned that without the work of Creation there could be no work of Redempti●n● the chief end of which is to restore us to that felicity happiness and enjoyment which man in his first Creation both did and had he persevered in that estate should have enjoyed and possessed Now one principal end of the Sabbath Gen. 2 ● is to commemorate this glorious work that as God when he had finished it took up his rest Gen. 2. 3. So man when he beholds it should take up his rest and keep a weekly Sabbath to the Lord. There is a political end of the Sabbath viz. The refreshment and recreative breathing of the outward man a relaxation ●ùm deus sex d●●r●m spacio 〈…〉 absoluisset septi●um diem quiete suâ sanctum reddere voluit Riv. of the body from the pains and toil of the week and therefore the Sabbath is called a rest It is said of God himself that on the seventh day he rested and was refreshed Exod. 31. 17. And how much more doth poor man stand in need of rest and refreshment Death indeed fairly unpins our tabernacle of clay folds it up and lays it in the grave but too much labour tears it down mans body is taken down Psal 116. 7. by death is thrown down by too much toil therefore the Deus non tantum Creator sed conservator est Creaturarum Leid Prof. wearisom labours of the week must be allayed by the rest of the Sabbath The very name of a Sabbath signifies nothing but rest strongly to argue that that holy day was appointed for mans relaxation from the hurries of the world and the sweats of the week The Sabbath is a rest to the
a two-edged sword to divide between sin and Heb. 4. 12. the soul Ordinances are kindly Physick and work the cure sweetly and effectually if this Physick be given by the hand of the Spirit if the third Person in the Trinity be our Physician how then should the necessity of the spirits assistance inflame our importunity to sue out that precious John 15. 5. Promise for the attainment of it recorded in Luke 11. 13. In Ordinances without the Spirit we can do noth●ng Christ 1 Cor. 9. 26. must work by his Spirit or else in all our holy duties we onely beat the ayr to use the Apostles phrase Let us study to be under the impressions of the Spirit on Gods holy day The earth stands not in so much need of the beams of the Sun as the soul doth of the influences of the Spirit The Spirit is a Spirit of Truth to guide the Understanding John 15. 26. It is a Spirit of Counsel to enrich the mind Isa 11. 2. and fill it with knowledge How naked Eph. 5. 18. is mans understanding if it be not covered with the covering John 14. 17. of Gods Spirit Isa 30. 1. 1 Cor. 12. 8. The Spirit is a good Spirit Neh. 9. 10. to sanctifie the will It is a holy Spirit Ephes 1. 13. in relation to its effects and productions it cures the will of its pertinacy and Rom. 1. 4. stubbornness and melts mans will into Gods We may take 1 Cor. 12. 9. an instance in Paul Acts 9. 6. The Spirit is a Spirit of Grace Zach. 12. 10. to beautifie the heart and fructifie it with all the sweet fruits of Righteousness It is more then the Sun to the Garden It not 2 Thes 2. 13. Phil. 1. 11. onely blows the flower but it plants The graces of the Spirit are those stars which shine in the firmament of the heart 2 Thes 2. 17. those vigorous principles which carry out the soul to every good word and work It is the spirit of Glory 1 Pet. 4. 14. to sublimate the affections and raise them as high as heaven Col. 3. 2. The spirit discovers glorious things to us shews the soul its treasury 1 Cor. 2. 12. Eph 3. 8. 2 Cor. 5 21. Rev. 1. 6. Cant. 7. 8. 13. Col. 3. 11. 1 Pet. 2. 7. where its riches lie It opens Christ to a believer who is the Wardrob of our Robes the Exchequor of our wealth the fountain of our honour the paradise of our delight or to speak in the Apostles language who is all and in all to the believing soul It is a spirit of life to quicken the whole man Rom. 8. 2. God breaths into man and so he becomes a living soul the Spirit breaths into man and so he becomes a living Saint Gen. 2. 7. Nay God works all his works upon us and in us in Christ by the spirit it is the spirit makes us upright and sincere 1 Cor. 6. 11. and so rectifies our obliquities Psal 51. 10. It is the spirit snuffs the understanding which is the candle of the Lord Eph. 1. 17. Prov. 20. 27. and so enlightens our darknesses It is the spirit 2 Thes 2. 1● fixes and establisheth us and so settles our inconstancies Psal 78. 8. It is the spirit softens and suples us Isa 32. Sapientia hominis est quâ res difficillimas scrutatur et pervestigare conatur Cartwr 15. and turns our barren hearts into a fruitfull field and so fills our vacuities It is the spirit conducts us in our straights John 16. 13. and so prevents our miscarriages It is the spirit takes us up Ezek. 3. 12. nay lifts us up Ezek. 3. 14. and so cures us of our pedantick and dreggish succumbencies for Man is the worm Jacob Isa 41. 14. and will naturally grovel on and immure himself in the Earth The spirit of God is an excellent spirit Dan. 5. 12. and will create in the 1. Cor. 12. 11. believer those excellencies which will make him more excellent then his neighbour Prov. 12. 26. The irrigations and pouring forth of the spirit Isa 44. 3. will make the soul fresh 1 Cor. 12. 13. Corroborari in interiore homine est intellectu voluntate caeterisque animae partibus suffulciri and green and be in a spring of grace which is most pleasant to the eye of God and Man This holy spirit upon us Isa 59. 21. is not so much our covering as our Crown our strength to encounter every temptation Eph. 3. 16. Let us then not as Sadduces mis-believe the spirit Acts 23. 8. But cry out Lord evermore give us of this spirit And to set our selves under these various and rare impressions We must purifie our selves The spirit is a holy spirit which will dwell onely in a clean heart flesh and spirit are combatants and not cohabitants they oppose one another Gal. 5. 17. then grace triumphs when flesh is subdued and chased out of the field We must supplicate our God The spirit is given to the Petitioner and not to the professor How much more shall your heavenly father give the holy spirit to them that ask him Isa 63. 11. Eph. 4. 30. 1 Thes 4 8. 1 Cor. 6. 19. saith our Saviour Luke 11. 13. Earnest prayer is the means to obtain the good spirit whose works are so many and so marvellous and whose operations are so secret and so soveraign But secondly as this duty must look upwards for the assistances and the impressions of the spirit So this duty must look inwards we have not onely to do with heaven on the Lords day and to look up to Gods spirit but we have to do with our own hearts too and seek the spirit to proportionate Prov. 4. 23. them to the holy services of the Sabbath and here our duty is two-fold 1. We must be in the graces of the spirit and that too in a double sense We must be in grace habitual We must come as Saints to the duties of a Sabbath That of the Apostle is highly observable Our communion is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ 1 Joh. 1. 3. Observe the terms of Relation Sancti est in spiritu vivere i. e. internam habere vitam et animum gratiâ spiritu etjustitiâ imbutum sancti est in spiritu ambulare i. e. secundum spiritus et gratiae dictamen ductumque incedere conversari agere operari et Graecum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 significat certo ordine serie et normâ incedere Alap the term Father speaks us to be Children It is not our communion is with God but with the Father and his Son Saints properly are the guests of the Sanctuary Christ in us is not onely the hope of our glory hereafter Col. 1. 27. but our hope of acceptance here We must bring Benjamin we must bring Christ if we will ever see the face of God in Ordinances wicked
triumphant Resurrection Then was Christ proclaimed Lord of quick and dead Rom. 14. 9. then Death gave its last groan and then Satan fell like lightning the forces of 1 Cor. 15. 55. Hell were scattered and discomfited when Christ appeared Luke 10. 18. in the Field after his detention in the Grave Christ by rising brake both the Chains of death and darkness together Resurrectione Christi et vita initium et mors recepit interitum and so far put the Law out of date that it super-annuated its threats that they are insignificant to the Believer Christ now had suffered whatever the Law could demand upon the Sinner And as his sufferings answered all the clamours of the Law so his Resurrection brake all the Chains of his Resurrectio Christi plena fuit mortis abolitio et vitae reductio Alap sufferings Indeed through the Grace of God we may read inflamed love Rom. 5. 8. and eternal life John 3. 15. in the death of Christ but the hope and assurance of both is built upon his Resurrection and therefore when the Apostle would set the door of hope wide open to us 1 Pet. 1. Col. 2. 14. 3 4. he shews us an empty Sepulchre and tells us with the Angel He is risen 1 Cor. 15. 17 18 19. The Promise is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Just Mart. Apol. 2. 1 Cor. 9. 27. Col. 3. 5. 2 Cor. 10. 4 5. the ground and Anchor-hold of our hope and that is performed by our Lords Resurrection by which he brake the Serpents head and scattered his power Acts 26. 6 7 8 9. This day then is Christs triumphal day when all his enemies were drawn at his Chariot-wheel And is not Christ in this our Ensample Shall not we on this day trample Satan under our feet conquer lust and get above the snares nay thoughts of the World and in holy and divine Ordinances pursue triumphant grace Conquest is our great work on the Sabbath-day then are we to subjugate our passions to subdue our corruptions to keep under the flesh to fetter the Old man and to bring into obedience our whole man to Jesus Christ The Sabbath properly is a day of Victories then light is to overcome our darkness the word to overcome our hearts Christ to over-rule and Conquer our affections and then is the season for the spirit to subdue and to bring into Captivity every high thought to the obedience of the Gospel And shall we then on Christs conquering-day be slaves to our fancy to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ignat. spend our time in vanity and recreations be Vassals to our lusts to spend our Sabbaths in riots and prophaneness be subjugated by the flesh to spend this golden season in sloth or formality Is not this to pour contempt on Christs triumphal-day and to cover the glory of it with thick darkness As if one should draw a Canvas Curtain before a curious Picture It may truly be said of those who prophane the Lords day they are the ecclipses of Christs Resurrection-day spots in that Feast and the foul blemishes of that lovely season Ignatius will tell us It is but a Jewish trick and a falling back and recidivation to their sin and folly The Resurrection of Christ was the loosing of his fetters then and not before did our dear Jesus rest from the temptations of Satan from the persecutions of the Jewish and the Gentile World from the flashes and scorching of his Fathers wrath and from the bonds of his own transient death His rising-day was his resting-day and all his disturbance and discomposures were scattered as the Clouds Vos in die quem dicunt solis solem colitis sicut autem nos eundem diem dominicum vocamus In eo non solem sed resurrectionem domini laetè veneramur which have nestled together are put to flight at the rise of the Sun And therefore it was the will of God that the day of Christs Resurrection should be honoured as holy rather then any other day of his Incarnation Birth Passion Ascension because his rising-day was his resting or Sabbath-day and whereon his rest began So the day of Gods rest from the work of Creation and the day of Christs rest from the work of Redemption are only fit the one to be the Churches Sabbath in the time of the Law the other to be the Churches Sabbath in the time of the Gospel The Lord Aug. contr Faust Manich. lib. 18. cap. 5. Christ in the day of his Birth did not enter into his rest but rather made an entrance into labour and sorrow and then began his work of Humiliation And so likewise in the day of his Passion he was then under the sorest part of his labour in the bitter Agonies in the Garden and on the Cross and therefore none of these could be consecrated to be our Sabbath Nor could the day of his Ascension be fit Gal. 4. 4 5. to be made our Sabbath because although Christ then and thereby entred into the third Heavens his place of Rest yet he did not then make his first entrance into his estate of Rest which was in the day of his Resurrection This day then was the first step of Christs exaltation the dawning of his glory Dies dominicus Christi resurrectione est sacratus Aug. when as Elijah he dropped the Mantle of all natural imperfections Now Christ was to bear no more bruises to give his Cheek to no more Smiters to tread the Winepress of his Fathers wrath no more This bright Sun was no more to be masked with Clouds this Morning Star was no more Isa 53. 10. to be veiled with shade or darkness Christs rising left his Isa 50. 6. Grave-cloaths behind him to shew us that now no more Revel 22. 16. he was to tast any thing which savoured of sorrow or mortality John 20. 5 6. And now how incongruous is it that the day of Christs freedom should be the day of our fetters That when he threw off his bonds we should bind them on us the faster That we should be fetter'd to any way of sin or chained to our sensual appetite or wanton fancy on the Lords day the weekly commemoration of Christs Resurrection On Di●s dominicus die● est quam nobis salvatoris no●tri resurrectio consecravit this day Christ threw off his Grave-cloaths and so should we cast off whatever savours of dust and earth In a word to be captivated to any way of offence on this holy day no way comports with the nature and freedom of Christs resurrection then all his bonds were loosed and then should we Le● Epist 93. cap. 4. cast from us whatsoever may hinder us from running the ways of Gods Commandements all our sloth frothiness of Spirit carnal delights cold formality and whatever may slacken our pace in our duties and spiritual services The Resurrection of Christ is the very life of the