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A33970 A modest plea for the Lords Day or rather the summe of the plea made by divines for the Lords Day as the Christian Sabbath, against those who contend for the old Sabbath of the seventh day, in order from the creation / by J.C., D.D. Collinges, John, 1623-1690. 1669 (1669) Wing C5327; ESTC R43109 56,915 142

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the Earth and deprive their souls of the great advantage which they might have by it and certainly this is no light thing to those who know their Saviours walks in the midest of the golden candlesticks and surely they should be near him where he is To evidence this I perceive many of them wholy absenting themselves from all religious meetings on the Lords day the only solemn time observed by all Christians near them it may be in prudence and to avoid scandal they do not openly labour but neither are they will that day worshiping God If any of them will that day go hear a Sermon I appeal to them whether they go as to a Sabbath duty with that preparation with that faith in the promises to them who keep the Lords Sabbath as they should go who expect a blessing from the Lord of the Sabbath Ah! my brethren is it nothing to you Is it nothing to you to have your places empty at the Lords solemn assemblies to be out when the joint-fighs prayers and tears of Gods people are poured out before the Lord if indeed you could judge none fearing God but your selves it were some plea but I know you have more charity why are you then divided from them why will you then lose the advantage of their prayers and deny them the advantage of your prayers I must profess were there nothing else to keep me off this very one thing would keep me off from that opinion Eccl. 3.10 Woe to him that is alone when he falleth for he hath not another to help him up Of the gifts and graces of how many precious ministers and the advantage you might have from them do you deprive your selves Have your souls no need of their interpretations of Scriptures their opening Gospel mysteries their powerful exhortations and arguments for holiness their directions for your Christian conversation I beseech you reflect upon your own souls since the time that in zeal to this opinion you divided your selves from the generality of Christians Have your souls prospered as formerly Have you so increased in the knowledge of God Have you had such love and zeal for God have you so grown in any exercise of grace Indeed it is not reasonable for any to think that you should you have not had the means This is not an age in which the Lord worketh in a way of miracles but produceth his great works by means fitted to them Our brethren must be very partiall to themselves and their present teachers if they think them for gifts and graces comparable to those godly and able ministers under who● ministry they formerly sate The Historian sayes of Mr. Thrask that besides a voice he had nothing we know how little judgement Brabourn had in any thing but this one point And how little Mr. Tilham had there needs no further witness then his own book where is vanity and wickedness enough Souls cannot feed upon a meer aiery empty roaring voice it is the word of God they live upon the word of God truly judiciously and faithfully opened and powerfully applied I appeal to our brethrens consciences whether they judge their present teachers so able and fit for this work as the Godly able ministe● of Christ who have wholly given up themselves to the study of the Scriptures and to the search of the mind of God in them I do not speak for every one that hath the confidence to wear a gown But I am sure our brethren know and will acknowledg● that all parts of England are filled with some number or others of able faithful preachers Now certainly it is no small disadvantage to our brethren to deprive themselves of all the gifts and labours of these servants of God while they walk alone erecting teachers to themselves CHAP. VIII That for any to deprive themselves of the liberty God hath indulged us to labour six dayes in each week is not without guilt IT is the Apostles Precept that we should stand fast in the liberty with which Christ hath made us free and doubtless we are no more to deprive our selves of that liberty which our great Creator hath indulged us than to throw away the life health or estate with which he hath blessed us It is one thing for us as our free-will offering to set apart one of the dayes which God hath given us for our own occasions for the service of God another thing for us to think our selves obliged to do this and to do it in a pretended Conscience to a command when we have no such command Since it hath pleased God to cast my lot in the Countrey I must profess I have most heartily pitied some of my Brethren baptized into this perswasion to see them in the time of Harvest by their perswasion hindred of a third part of their time from making use of those seasons which the gracious God hath indulged them for gathering in the fruits of the Earth The seventh day of the week they rest being perswaded it is the Lords Sabbath and the next day again either out of conscience to a command or to avoid scandall and danger of the Laws and I have sometimes thus said with my self Alas for my Brethren they are zealously affected they would not else for a private opinion indanger the loss of their Crops which God hath given them how good were this zeal if it were in a good cause but hath God required such things at their hands hath not the Lord said Six dayes thou shalt labour and do all thou hast to do Suppose these men by this devotion to lose their crop or a great part of it or at least to lose much in it c. what satisfaction could they have other than from their own fancy will it in the great day of account appear any ot●er than a self-robbery for a Will-worship either it will prove so or the whole Christian World is mistaken and hath been so from the very time Christ ascended up into Heaven Can my Brethren think That the Spirit that dwells in all Believers and leadeth them into all truth should leave all the Churches of the Lord Jesus Christ and come and reveal himself in this singular notion unto them Can our brethren think it is not possible that in this thing they should be mistaken Surely they cannot think but if whole Churches may err and if they can think that all the Churches of God in this thing have for 1600 years been mistaken they may be mistaken Further yet is it not ●robable that our Brethren should be mistaken Our Brethren must confess that the far greater number of Christians are of another mind yea and not only of those who are Christians at large baptized and owning Christ as the Saviour of the World but ●f those who are Christians indeed I mean who have not only imbraced the Doctrine ●f Faith but in whom is the work of Faith ●ith power purifying their hearts and who 〈◊〉 all their conversations
the more we have of Religious Duties and Ordinances the more advantage ariseth to our immortal Souls if we be not wanting to our selves But now what reall advantage any soul can have from the sanctification of the last more than of the first day of the week will pose the most serious Christian to determine Is his Soul to be advantaged by Praying Hearing Singing breaking Bread All these certainly are done on the Lords day and with this advantage in a far fuller communion of Christians than those have who keep the sixth day as to which the far larger part of Christians and Protestants yea and the severest livers of them are not satisfied The only thing which I can think of as seeming in the least to abate the edge of this consideration is That God is more glorified because a stricter Obedience is given to his revealed Will. And indeed Samuel hath taught us That the Lord hath not so great delight in Burnt-Offerings and Sacrifices as he hath in our obeying his voyce that to Obey is better than Sacrifice and to hearken than the fat of Rams Now our Brethren pretend a more strict obedience to the will of God in the sanctification of the seventh than in the sanctification of the first day I shall therefore in the next Chapter argu● that case with them In the mean time i● is worthy of our Brethrens second thought● whether under the Gospel it be usual with God to enjoyn his People Precepts of mea● Obedience I mean such from whence their Souls shall reap no advantage nor he any glory only in this as we shew our submission to the will of God Our gracious God hath made his yoke easie by commanding us nothing but such by performing of which we further glorifie him than by a meer Obedience and from which also we reap some reall advantage to our Bodies or Souls Such I am sure are all the other moral Precepts by a performance of them we really besides obedience to the will of God do our selves or others some good and bring God some reall glory further than by the acknowledging of him our Soveraign and yielding him a suitable homage But as to this there can be no such pretence neither Souls nor Bodies of our selves or others are more advantaged nor God more honoured by our observation of the seventh than of the first day nor is God more honoured if it doth not appear he is more obeyed It is agreed on both hands that one intire day ought to be sanctified by the solemn performance of all duties of instituted Worship both publickly and privately Reading the Word praying preaching hearing administring and receiving the holy Sacraments singing of Psalms visiting and administring to the necessities of the sick and of the poor Now I say it cannot be imagined what good our selves or others shall reap more by the performance of these duties on the seventh than on the first day Nor what honour God shall have if it doth not appear that a stricter obedience is yielded to the command of God by the sanctification of the seventh than by the sanctification of the first CHAP. III. That God hath no where required of Christians the observation of the Seventh day The fourth Commandment though it requires a Seventh day and such seventh day as is of Gods appointment yet it doth no more require the Seventh than the first day of the Week THere can be no pretence for a further Obedience to the command of God in the observation of the seventh day in orde● from the Creation than in the observatio● of the first but from the letter of the fourth Commandment as to which it is thus far agreed betwixt us and our Brethren 1. That it is in the power of God only to make a day holy No man can lay mens Consciences under an obligation that it shall be sin for them not to labour on this or that day or not to spend such a day in publick and private dutyes of Divine Worship but by Authority from God 2. That the fourth Commandment is morall and perpetuall not ceremonial and temporary either in whole or in part 3. That the sence of it is plain and literal not mystical only 4. That as it requireth some solemn time to be set apart for the Worship of God so expressely 1. A whole Day 2. One whole Day of Seven 3. Such a Day as God hath instituted So that we are far nearer agreement with our Brethren of this perswasion than with Heylin Primrose c. and the rest of that party who will have the Commandment ceremonial either in whole or in part and so lose us one of the ten Commandments or ●hose who overstraining two or three Allegorical expressions in Origen and Epiphanius would make the sense mysticall Christ to be the Sabbath and the Precept only to require the Sanctification of the Name of Christ a modern dream justifiable by no Reason Scripture nor Authority We are agreed with our Brethren That the fourth commandment is a Precept requiring the sanctification of a seventh part of our time unto the Lord for ever and such a seventh part as we shall find his direction for But that the fourth commandement doth primarily require the sanctification of the seventh day in order from the Creation is that in which alone we differ from our Brethren Let us therefore without passion candidly consult the Precept and see what there is in it which can justifie our Brethrens zeal in this case The Precept runs thus Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy six dayes thou shalt labour and do all thy work but the Seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God in it thou shalt not do any work thou nor thy son nor thy daughter nor thy man-servant nor thy maid-servant nor thy Cattel nor thy stranger that is within thy gate● For in six dayes the Lord made Heaven 〈◊〉 Earth the Sea and all that in them is a●rested the seventh day Wherefore the Lord bl●sed the Sabbath day and hallowed it It possibly is some disadvantage in th● controversie that most of our Brethren a● not skilled in the Hebrew language in whi● this Precept was Originally wrote The● lay much stress upon the word Sabbat● and the particle the beyond what indee● the letter of the Precept will bear It ma● not therefore be amiss to let our Brethre● know these two things by way of promise 1. That the term Sabbath in the Hebre● signifieth no more than Rest and a day o● sabbath is no more than a day of rest Tha● the term Sabbath signifies no more than rest is evident to him that either attends the derivation of the word or the usage of the same word in many Scriptures Lev. 25.6 where it is applyed to the years of Jubilee Lev. 26.43 2 Chron. 36.21 Isa 30.7 It is used to signifie a rest from strife Prov. 20.3 and that rest from labour which a wounded man hath Exod. 21.19 it is
so Suppose that any one of us should se● to our neighbour our crop of Corn with a reservation to our selves of a seventh part according to the proportion of our Acres and we should say to them Remember I have reserved the seventh part to my self six parts I have sold you but a seventh is mine you shall not meddle with it Must this seventh upon such a demise needs be this or that Close surely no but such a seventh as either according to our bargain we shall choose or our Farmer shall set out This is the case all our time was Gods he hath freely given us six parts and reserved a seventh such a seventh as he shall appoint to himself Hath not God a liberty at his pleasure to set out a seventh to us 3. But say our Brethren it must needs be the seventh in order from the Creation for that was the day which God rested which is brought in the Commandement as an argument to urge upon us the sanctification of the Sabbath Ans 1. That our great Creators resting from his work of creation is brought as an argument to induce us to the observation of the Sabbath we freely grant but we say not as an argument for the particular day but for the same proportion of time God rested one day in seven therefore you must also so rest It is impossible we should rest that day in which God rested that day vanished and returned no more Our Brethren therefore can plead only for the seventh in the weekly Revolution and why not fo● a seventh in Number only not in Order 2. But we may freely grant our Brethren that that argument held for the seventh i● order so far as it could be without any damage to our cause The Precept is on● thing the argument is another It doth not at all follow that because th● force of the Precept is perpetual therefor● the force of every argument should be s● also One argument brought hath a perpetual force Gods allowing us six dayes s● our own imployment what if the other ha● a temporary force a force only for tha● time during which the Sabbath then instituted was to continue There is nothing more ordinary in Holy Writ than to annex arguments of an universal eternal force to Precepts that were to expire and arguments of a temporary particular vertue to Precepts that obliged for ever How often do we find this as an Argument affixed t● the Ceremonial and Judicial Laws confessed by all to oblige only the Jewes For 〈◊〉 am the Lord thy God To give but one instance Lev. 22 29 30. The Precept relates ●o a sacrifice of Thanksgiving it injoyned them to eat it all the same day to leave none of ●t till the morning for saith God I am the Lord God is all our Lord yet we are not ●ll bound to that Sacrifice or the rites rela●ting to it On the other side The Argument affixed to the first Commandement is I am the Lord thy God which brought thee out of the Land of Egypt out of the house of bondage The command in the next words Thou shalt have no other Gods but me concerns us as well as the Jews but the argument from the deliverance from Egypt and the house of bondage literally only concern'd them So here The Precept Remember to keep holy the Sabbath Day with the direction and first argument in those words Six dayes shalt thou ●abo●● and do all that thou hast to doe but ●he seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God c. concerns all But the other Argument in those words For in six dayes the Lord made Heaven and Earth the Sea and all that in them is and ●ested the seventh day wherefore the Lord blessed the seventh day and hallowed it We say only concerned the proportion of time not inforcing the same day in order or if it did had but a temporary force that day being then under divine institution and there being a need of that argument to quicken the Jews to observe it for those many years it was confessedly to continue after the giving of the Law in Sinai Nor indeed was it possible for all the World or for the Jews in successive times to keep the just seventh part of time from the Creation in a strict computation those who know any thing know how this computation was interrupted in Joshuah and Hezekiahs time and what a difference there is betwixt dayes in several climates and quarters of the World making it a thing impossible either for all people and the Precept concerns all or for the Jewish people afterwards dispersed over all the world to keep the punctual seventh day in order from the Creation according to a weekly revolution I conclude therefore that there is no pretence from the fourth Commandment for any to urge that we more glorifie God by obeying his will in the observation of the last than of the first day of the week yea it will anon appear we less obey God The fourth Commandement only requiring one intire day of seven and such a one as God had or should appoint If we prove God hath appointed another the fourth Commandment stands good and we are rebellious against God if we insist on the old Sabbath and neglect what God hath more lately appointed CHAP. IV. That the Lord Jesus Christ was Lord of the Sabbath and had a power as to alter all Laws relating to the acts of Worship so this Law relating to the solemn time of Worship I Cannot but be so far charitable to our Brethren ingaged against us in this controversie as to believe they will yield us what we have hitherto contended for so far as it extends only to a liberty for the Lord of Heaven and Earth after his giving the fourth Commandement to alter it for though we cannot assert such a liberty no not to the Eternal God as to such things in the ten Commandments which contain in them a morall goodness antecedaneous to the Precept being made so by the Eternall will of God and the things being of that nature that the contrary to them must necessarily impeach the glory of God which he cannot with consistency to his holy nature recede from yet for such things whose goodness meerly depends upon the Precept certainly without derogation to the Soveraign authority of God we must acknowledge a power reserved unto God to make an alteration of them So that though we cannot suppose that God should by any Precept successive to the morall Law give his creatures liberty not to glorifie him or to blaspheme him or to have any other gods besides him yet we must acknowledge a liberty to God if he pleased to alter the law for the time of his Worship that being a thing from which no glory further ariseth to God than as his will is obeyed Now I presume it a principle agreed betwixt us and our Brethren That Jesus Christ is God over all blessed for ever the
first day of the week more than any other Whereas both he and Mr. T. urge that the text only commands that every one should lay by himself not that he should give it to the Deacons Whence Mr. Tilham cavils that if this day had been their sabbath the Apostle would not have directed a survey of their estates how God had prospered them I have shewed before the Apostle commands this survey and a laying by themselves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 against the first day of the week We ask why against that day more than another but that it was a day when the Church used to meet and they might have an excellent opportunity to bring it in and have their hearts warmed by the duties of that day into a due chearfulness becoming them who give unto the Lord. But M. T. will not acknowledge a collection a Lords day or a sabbath duty For then he thinks the Apostle would not have added that there be no gatherings when I come Verily the mans ignorance is to be pitied Works of piety mercy and necessity are doubtless sabbath duties or our Saviour would never have healed lame persons on that day The Apostles meaning therefore doubtless is That there be no gatherings for these Brethren-strangers when I come But suppose it be yet Mr. T. tells us that a survey of their estates which the Apostle doth implicitly command that they may see how God had prospered them was no sabbath work But there is no need as I have said we should so translate it nor do I think it the sense that the laying aside should be on the first day of the week but against the first day of the week Here 's no survey of estates directed on that day In short say what we will our brethren so fond of this notion will make us believe that the strength of our argument from this text lies that we think that the Apostle here directed a collection on the first day of the week whereas we tell them that if it were so plain as if written with a Sun beam we do not think that would prove it a collection for the saints was a pious and charitable work but might be done or directed on any day But this is that we urge from the text It is plain from holy writ that the Apostles gave a peculiar honour to this day more than to any other day of the week Though on the seventh day the Apostles so long as the Jewish rites were indulged or so long as they had any hopes to convince the Jews when they came where the Jews had Synagogues went in and heard with them yea and preached to them Yet 1. They never met in a perfect Congregation of Christians on that day that we read of but on the Lords day they did Act. 20.7 2. The Apostle ordains their gospel sacrifice their collection for the poor Saints at Hierusalem rather against this day than any other But possibly we may find that as the Apostles unquestionably by direction from their Lord gave more honour to this day than to any other So our Lord himself also did so 1. This was the day on which he rose again from the dead This I am sure they will not deny and verily this is not inconsiderable Let us but here weigh two or three things 1. The Resurrection of Christ was the Lord Christs great work by which he shewed himself to be Lord and Christ and so confirmed the whole gospel and whatsoever he instituted in his worship It was that work of his which gave evidence to the vertue both of his life and death To this end saith the Apostle Christ both died and ROSE again that he might be Lord both of the dead and of the living By this he was declared to be the Son of God with power Rom. 1.4 Hence is our justification Rom. 4.25 Hence our peace of conscience Rom. 8.34 Hence our lively hope and the answer of a good conscience 1 Pet. 1.3 It was our great Lords first holy-day as I may say Of the day of Christs suffering he saith THIS IS YOUR DAY and the power of darkness a day in which God hath given leave to the Devil and his instruments to play their pranks But this was His day This was the Lord Christs rest The day in which he rested from the work of Redemption As his Father had done on the seventh day from the work of Creation 2. May we not soberly think that our great Lord should and did choose to lie in his grave on the sabbath day on purpose to let us know that that sabbath died with him and to rise the next day that he might point out unto us the new sabbath which he had made for the new heaven and new earth which he had now created on purpose to rise upon the first day that his Father by the change of the day might have no loss as to the time consecrated by the fourth commandment Our Lord could have ordered his death so as he might have died and risen again on the 2 3 4 or 5 days he chooseth so to dye that he shall be buried during the whole Jewish sabbath and early in the next morning he ariseth Le● us in the next place consider what he did when he was risen The Evangelists record not so full a communion of our Lord with the world nor with his disciples after the resurrection for forty day● he was seen of them In that time counting the day on which he rose were seve● Christian sabbaths or first days of the week We read only of our Saviours appearing the two first of them 1. On the day of his resurrection he appeareth to Mary Magdalene looking in the grave for him and to some disciples goi●● to Emaus Luk. 24.13 and to the Eleve● met at Hierusalem Luk. 24.36 Joh. 20 1● and again 2. After eight days saith St. Joh. 20.26 We read but of two apparitions more th● one at the Sea of Tiberias Joh. 21. Th● other in Galilee which St. Matthew litt● more than barely mentions Mat. 28.16 17 We do not think Christs appearing made sabbath but Christs owning his disciple meetings on these dayes by appearing the● to them speaks not a little in the case especially if it be observed that nothing of any worldly discourse is mentioned as passing at these times but our saviour at the Sea of Tiberias talks with them in their art freely But say our brethren zealous for the old sabbath 1. If the disciples of our Saviour had kept that day as a sabbath he or they would not have gone such a journey as 60 furlongs almost eight miles 1. Beza saith either Josephus is mistaken or some error is crept into the copy for he it is but 30 furlongs 2. The length of their furlongs we know not For our Saviour it was now no la●our to him to move Certain it is the way was so short as Luk. 24.33 in that 〈◊〉 hour they could return
And it shall come to pass if you diligently hearken unto me saith the Lord to bring in no burthen through the gates of the City on the Sabbath day but hallow the Sabbath to do no work therein Then shall enter into the gates of this City Kings and Princes sitting on the Throne of David riding on Chariots and Horses they and their Princes the men of Judah and inhabitants of Hierusalem and that City shall remain for ever Here 's a Promise of outward prosperity and a stability in it And they shall come from the Cities of Judah and from the places about Hierusalem and from the land of Benjamin and from the Plain and from the Mountains and from the South bringing burnt-offerings and Sacrifices and Meat-offerings and Incense and bringing Sacrifices of praise unto the Lord our God I will continue my Worship amongst you in your own land in its former purity and glory But what if this people will not sanctifie the Lords Sabbaths it follows v. 27. But if you will not hearken unto me to hallow the Sabbath day and not to bear a burden even entring in at the gates of Hierusalem on the Sabbath day then will I kindle a fire in the gates thereof and it shall devour the Palaces of Hierusalem and it shall not be quenched I will without remedy destroy your City and deprive you of all the prosperity wherewith I have blessed you Isa 58.13 If thou turn away thy foot from the Sabbath from doing thy pleasure on my holy day and call the Sabbath a delight the holy of the Lord honourable and shalt honour him not doing thine own wayes nor finding thine own pleasure nor speaking thy own words then shalt thou delight thy self in the Lord and I will cause thee to ride upon the high places of the Earth and feed thee with the heritage of Jacob thy father Here is not only a promise of temporall good riding upon the high places of the Earth inheriting the heritage of Jacob which in generall you know was the blessing but also of a spiritual mercy Thou shalt delight thy self in the Lord Now lest any one should think these Promises are debts paid fulfilled to the Jews and concern not us let us consider yet another Text Isa 56.2 3 4 5 ● Blessed is the man that doth this and the Son of man that layeth hold on it that keepeth the Sabbath from polluting it and keepeth his hand from doing evil Neither let the Son of the stranger that hath joyned himself to the Lord speak saying The Lord hath utterly separated me from his people Neither let the Eunuch say Behold I am a dry tree For thus saith the Lord unto the Eunuchs that keep my Sabbaths and choose the things that please me and take hold of my Covenant even unto them will I give in my house and within my walls a place and a name better than that of Sons and Daughters I will give them an everlasting name that shall not be cut off v. 5. Also the sons of the stranger that joyn themselves to the Lord to serve him and to love the name of the Lord to be his servants every one that keepeth the Sabbath from polluting it and taketh hold on my Covenant v. 6. Even them will I bring to my holy mountain and make them joyfull in my House of Prayer their burnt-offerings and their sacrifices shall be accepted upon mine Altar for my House shall be called an House of Prayer for all people v. 7. That this is a promise respecting the Gospel-times is plain enough from divers things 1. It is made as a relief for Eunuchs and strangers who in regard of the partition-wall set up by the Ceremonial Law lay under many discouragements from joyning themselves to the Lord. 2. It speaks of a time to come when this Wall should be pulled down I will bring them c. 3. It speaks of a time when Gods House was to be called an House of Prayer for all People which was not till Gospel-times The things promised are great and excellent God promiseth 1. A place in his House 2. A Name better than that of Sons and Daughters even an everlasting Name that shall never be cut off 3. To bring them to his holy mountain 4. To accept their Sacrifices 5. To make them joyfull in the house of Prayer Promises then which God could not promise more Now who shall be made partakers of them Lord who shall dwell in thy Tabernacle who shall abide in thy holy Hill These things are promised To the Eunuchs that keep the Lords Sabbaths To the strangers that keep the Sabbath from polluting it All but those of the Jewish Nation come under the notion of Strangers all we that are Gentile Churches are but Churches made up of Strangers who have joyned our selves to the Lord and taken hold of his Covenant If we would be blessed with these things if we will have a place in Gods house an everlasting name that shall never be cut off if we would be brought to Gods holy Mountain if we would have God accept our services if we would be made joyfull in the house of Prayer we must keep the Sabbath from polluting it 7. Will example move us to say nothing of the example of the servants of God in the Old Testament The example of Nehemiah as a Magistrate is there a famous instance recorded Nehem. 20.32 ch 13 15 16 17 19. but let us look into the New Testament and there first take our Lords example who was a zealous observer of the Sabbath the seventh day Sabbath for the other did not begin till his resurrection Mar. 1.21 He on the Sabbath day went into the Synagogue and taught Mar. 6.2 When the Sabbath day was come be began to teach in the Synagogues Once for all Luk. 4.16 As his custom was he went into the Synagogue on the Sabbath day and stood up for to read It remains that we should be satisfied how he spent that time of the Sabbath which he did not spend in acts of more solemn publick Worship Something we find as to what he did he healed the sick Joh. 5.10 11 12 13 14 c. Joh. 9.14 Luk. 6.7 13. 12 13 14. Mar. 3.2 3 c. we find him also on the Sabbath day at a feast Luk. 14.1 2 3 c. and passing through the corn-fields Matth. 12.1 Mar. 2.23 observe but his discourses upon his healing the sick when he was at the Feast Luk. 14.1 2 3. when he passed through the Corn-fields Matth. 12.1 Mar. 2.23 you will find them constantly spiritual and heavenly and suited to the Law of the Sabbath not speaking our own words Concerning others we have no such particular account but in the general Luk. 23.56 The women rested on the Sabbath day according to the commandment they prepared spices and oyntments the night before but they rested the Sabbath day according to Gods command Through the whole history of the Acts
used to express the resting place of Thorns laid up to be burned 2 Sam. 23.7 Now because those dayes which it pleased God to set apart for himself were dayes in which he did require a cessation from labour to that end that they might better attend Religious dutyes these dayes were called Sabbaths and that as well before the giving of the Law upon Sinai Exod. 16.25 26 29. as after in innumerable Texts So as the word is indifferently used to signifie the weekly Sabbath as those other holy dayes which God appointed the Jews twice in Holy Writt we find the word with a little alteration doubled Exod. 16.23.35.2 we translate it a Sabbath of Rest In the Hebrew it is but the doubling of the same word or words or of a word from the same root and of the same significancy A rest of rest signifying it was not to be a bare cessation from labour but an holy religious rest So as the fourth Commandement is no more than Keep holy a day of Rest And because God had instituted but one such day in the revolution of a Week therefore by an usual figure the word doth sometimes signifie a week as Lev. 23.15.25.8 and so in the New Testament But that usage of the word in this case w● have nothing as yet to do with 2. A second thing which our Brethre● should know and observe is That thos● little particles a and the are English particles not found in the Hebrew but put 〈◊〉 by translation to make up the sense according to our way of speaking the Hebre● hath no more than Remember to keep holy d● of Rest or day of Sabbath and it is indifferent whether according to our Englis● way of speaking we put in a or the no● can any argument on either side be fetche● from those supplyes to the Text. These things being premised we say That there are three things or four whic● the Fourth Commandement requireth o● us 1. That we should keep some solemn time 〈◊〉 a time of holy Rest unto the Lord. 2. That it should be one day of seven a seventh part of our time 3. That it should be an intire day 4. That it should be such an intire day of seven as God hath appointed But that this day should be the sevent● day in order from the Creation we say falleth not at least primarily under the Fourth Commandment I say primarily not secondarily it doth as that was the day which God had appointed to the Jews Now we say 1. That this is not a singularity but divers divine Precepts both of those which were temporary to the Jews and of those which are of perpetual concernment have just such an interpretation allowed even by our Brethren and by all judicious Christians God commanded Deut. 12.5.11 You shall offer all your sacrifices only in the place which the Lord your God shall choose I would ask our brethren whether this Precept did not oblige them to offer their Sacrifices in the Tabernacle while that lasted and in the Temple afterwards when God had chosen that and in Ezra's Temple when that was builded You shall remember saith God to keep holy a Sabbath day one day in seven for an holy rest such a one as God shall choose for a Sabbath why must this be the seventh from the Creation only and not that only till God should choose another which done the Commandment as much obligeth to that We say in the second Commandment God requires of us observance of the Acts of Instituted Worship which with the Jews quite differed from ours Yet the command obliged both them to sacrifice an● us to preach hear receive the Lords Supper● How so The Commandment only require● of us in the generall to worship God according to his will The fifth Commandment requires us to Honour the King whe● it was given the Jews were bound to honour Moses their chief Magistrate at tha● time and many years after they were bound to honour Ahaz Hezekiah and all in force● of the same Precept God requires by th● Fourth Commandment that his People in all Ages should keep holy to him a Sabbath day He expounds himself thus One day in seven in which we shall not labour h● any bodily labour and such a day as 〈◊〉 should appoint You will say then how did the Jews know or how shall we know what to keep We answer the Jew● knew by a Law given them of the same Age with that for Sacrifices many hundreds of years before the Law given at Sinai and by a temporary Law often repeated and quite of another kind from the Fourth Commandment which day must hold still if we can neither find it expired nor repealed nor another substituted in the room of it bu● if we can find any such sacred Record The Fourth Commandment is not destroyed but established That required a Sabbath a day one of seven such day as God had or should appoint We plead only for a new appointment of the particular day to the New Earth the New World which God made by the sending of his Son into the world in the mean while the Fourth Commandement doth neither require this nor that day otherwise than as that day was at that time by another Law by God set apart Let us hear what our Brethren object 1. Some of them have observed an emphatical note in the Hebrew as much as that Sabbath Remember to keep holy the day of that Sabbath Answ We yield it that the affix Π is indeed sometimes emphatical but hundreds of places are to be shewed where it is not so as no argument of force can be drawn from it 2. But we may grant it so it is not that day but the day of that Sabbath if the note of Emphasis had been to the word signifying day it had been far more to our Brethrens purpose But what is it to our Brethrens purpose that it is the day of that rest or that Sabbath We will grant them that it is no ordinary rest but a special emphatical rest a spiritual holy religious rest which God requireth not a meer cessation from labour but a rest of rests as God sometimes calls it an holy rest in which we mus● not think our own thoughts 2. But say our Brethren you grant th● God requires by the Fourth Commandement 〈◊〉 seventh day how can it be a seventh if it 〈◊〉 a first day can the first be the seventh Answ All this runs upon the forme● mistake that the fourth Commandeme●● requireth the seventh in order from the Creation which we have denyed it require no more than such seventh Day as God ha● or should appoint Suppose seven pieces o● Silver on a Table before us either the one or other of the outermost pieces may be the seventh accordingly as we begin to count We must suppose the seven dayes of the Week so to lye before the great Lord o● our time surely that is the seventh whic● God will appoint and make
to Hierusalem and find the eleven and others gathered together We in a time of persecution oft go as far to hear a sermon and yet do not break the sabbath 2. But they say the text saith Christs second appearing was after eight dayes Joh. 20.26 But so it is said that after three dayes the Son of Man must rise again Mar. 8.31 Yet we know he rose on the third day The Grecians had that liberty in their la●guage of expressing themselves as to expres● a thing as done when once began Afte● eight dayes is no more than after the eight day was begun as after three dayes was n● more than after the third day was began Our Saviour being now ascended int● Heaven we find the disciples returnin● from mount Olivet to Hierusalem Act. 1 ●● and read little of them but of their continuing in prayers and supplication and choosing an Apostle till the day of Pentecost What was done in the day of Pentecost we find Act. 2. Then the Holy Ghost descended and before that we read of tha● descending of the Holy Ghost the Evangelists observed They were all with one 〈◊〉 in one place A phrase fully expressing 〈◊〉 Christian Church-meeting I am not Ignorant what a stir Mr. Tilham keeps 〈◊〉 prove this was upon the Jewish sabbath We say with I think better evidence it was upon the Lords day 1. It was Gods express law that the Jews should rest on the seventh day both 〈◊〉 earing and in harvest Exod. 34.21 22. 2. The law for the feast of Pentecost yo● shall find Levit. 23.10 11 12 15 16. ●hen you be come into the land which I shall ●●e you and shall reap the harvest thereof then 〈◊〉 shall bring a sheaf of the first fruits of ●●r harvest unto the Priest and he shall wave 〈◊〉 together with the offering of a lamb with●● blemish on the morrow after the sabbath 〈◊〉 shall wave it And you shall count unto 〈◊〉 from the morrow after the sabbath from 〈◊〉 day you brought the sheafe seven sabbaths ●ill be compleat even until the morrow after ●he seventh sabbath you shall number 50 dayes Deut. 16.9 Seven weeks shalt thou number ●nto thee begin to number the seven weeks him such time as thou beginnest to put sickle ●●to thy corn I must first take notice of a base cheat Mr. Tilham puts upon his reader Tilham 7 day sabbath p. 82. ●●lling them that Moses from God appointed Israel to bring on the ●●orrow after their passover sabbath ●sheaf of their first fruits c. Good reader look into all the texts that mention it and see if God sayes a word of their Passover Sabbath but v. 11. The morrow after the sabbath Which was undoubtedly the weekly sabbath Besides their passover sabbath was tied to a day It is not to be imagined their corn should alwayes be ri● just that day to wit the 14 day of ● first moneth Now they were not to cou● till they had put their sickle into their cor● Deut. 16.9 1. I observe first it was impossible th● Pentecost should ever fall upon the Jewish sabath for on the sabbath day they were ● God 's law to rest Exod. 34.21 22. even earing and harvest So the soonest they cou● begin to put their sickle into their co● must be the first day of the week 2. They were then to expect till th● next sabbath and from the morrow afte● to count which makes it necessary th●● the feast of Pentecost should alwayes fall 〈◊〉 the first day of the week 3. Here was a Church-meeting of Christians met in one place on the first day of the wee● 4. Christ who when on the Earth 〈◊〉 we heard did honour those meetings wi●● his own company here he sends the comforter gives them on this day the promise of th● Father It is true Mr. Ainsworth and some other think the passover sabbath was meant b● let any one consider with reason how it w●● possible unless the corn in Palestina was alwayes ripe before the fifteenth day of the month Abib so as they had reaped some of it for till that there was no beginning to count for Pentecost but Mr. Ainsworth is far from fathering this as Mr. Tilham doth on Moses it was only a notion taken up by that holy man from some Rabbins But enough of this whoso will read this argument from our Saviours Apparitions and the descending of the Holy Ghost improved to the height may have it admirably done by Mr. Warren late Minister of the Gospel in Colchester in his excellent Book called The Jewish Sabbath antiquated and the Lords day instituted from p. 169 to 187. where so much is indeed said upon this whole Subject as I think very little is to be added to it But there is yet behind one Text more insisted on almost by all Divines in this case it is that Rev. 1.10 I was in the Spirit on the Lords day and heard behind me a great voice as of a Trumpet saying c. V. 11. and I turned to see the voice that spake with me and being turned I saw seven golden Candlesticks and in the midst of the seven Candlesticks one like unto the Son of man c. who is described further v. 13 14 15 16. where he is said to have the Stars in hi● right hand and out of his mouth went for● a two-edged sword Christ himself opens the Vision v. 20. The seven starrs are the Angels of the seven Churches and the seven Candlesticks which thou sawest are the seven Churches St. John at this time was by the Roman Emperour banished into the Isle of Pathmos for the Gospel sake Here he seeth a Vision Two things as to the present Controversie are considerable in it 1. What he saw 2. When he saw it 1. What he saw He saw the Lord Jesus Christ in the middest of his Gospel Churches walking before him in the purity of Gospel Administrations and reaching forth godly Ministers to them and furnishing them with his Word which is as a sharp two-edged sword This plainly was the Vision interpreted by the Lord himself Revel 1.20 2. When saw he this On the Lords day he was in the Spirit on the Lords day then he heard this voice then he saw this Vision 3. I am aware that this Text hath so disturbed the leaders in this Controversie opposite to us that they have exercised their wits to find out a Lords day not the first day of the week Mr. Brabourn Mr. Tilham and one of more learning and worth than both of them think it might be the day of Judgement which indeed is called the day of the Lord Phil. 1.16 but never the Lords day Again the Apostle speaks of a known day and of a day in being then but neither of these is true of the day of Judgement not yet come nor to be known when it shall come Matth. 24.36 Of that day and hour knoweth no man Others think it might be the day of