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A53694 Exercitations concerning the name, original, nature, use, and continuance of a day of sacred rest wherein the original of the Sabbath from the foundation of the world, the morality of the Fourth commandment with the change of the Seventh day are enquired into : together with an assertion of the divine institution of the Lord's Day, and practical directions for its due observation / by John Owen. Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1671 (1671) Wing O751; ESTC R25514 205,191 378

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only so ordered all the works of it that they should be meet to instruct us or contain an Instructive Power towards Rational Creatures made in that state and condition wherein man was created which was before described which hath in it the first notion of a Law but it was the Will of God that we should learn our Duty thereby which gives it its complement as a Law obliging unto Obedience And it is not only thus in general with respect unto the whole work of Creation in it self but the ordering and disposal of the Parts of it is alike directive and Instructive to the Nature of man and hath the force of a Law Morally and everlastingly obligatory Thus the preeminence of the Man above the Woman which is Moral ensues upon the Order of the Creation in that the Man was first made and the Woman for the Man as the Apostle argues 1 Tim. 2. 12 13. And all Nations ought to be obliged hereby though many of them through their Apostasie from Natural Light knew not that either Man or Woman was created but it may be supposed them to have grown out of the Earth like Mushromes and yet an Effect of the secret Original impression hereof influenced their minds and practices So the Creation of one Man and one Woman gave the Natural Law of Marriage whence Polygamy and Fornication became transgressions of the Law of Nature It will be hard to prove that about these and the like things there is a clear and undoubted Principle of Directive Light in the mind of man separate from the consideration of the Order of Creation But therein a Law and that Moral is given unto us not to be referred unto any other Head of Laws but that of Nature And here as was before pleaded the Creation of the world in six dayes with the Rest of God on the seventh and that declared gives unto all men an everlasting Law of separating one day in seven unto a Sacred Rest. For he that was made in the Image of God was made to imitate him and conform himself unto him God in this Order of things saying as it were unto him what I have done in your station do ye likewise Especially was this made effectual by his innate Apprehension that his Happiness consisted in entring into the Rest of God the pledge whereof it was his unquestionable Duty to embrace § 31 4. In this state of things a Direction by a Revelation in the way of a Precept for the due and just exercise of the Principles Rules and Documents before mentioned is so far from impeaching the Morality of any Command or Duty as that it compleats the Law of it with the addition of a formal obligatory Power and Efficacy The Light and Law of Creation so far as it was innate or concreated with the faculties of our souls and compleating our state of Dependance on God hath only the general nature of a Principle inclineing unto actions suitable unto it and directing us therein The Documents also that were originally given unto that Light from without by the other Works and Order of the Creation had only in their own Nature the force of an Instruction The Will of God and an Act of Soveraignty therein formally constituted them a Law But now man being made to live unto God and under his Conduct and Guidance in all things that he might come to the Enjoyment of him no Prejudice ariseth unto nor Alteration is made in the Dictates of the Law of Creation by the superadding any Positive Commands for the Performance of the Duties that it doth require and regulating of them as to the especial Manner and Ends of their Performance And where such a Positive Law is interposed or superadded it is the highest folly to imagine that the whole Obligation unto the Duty depends on that Command as though the Authority of the Law of Nature were superseded thereby or that the whole Command about it were now grown Positive and Arbitrary For although the same Law cannot be Moral and Positive in the same respect yet the same Duty may be required by a Law Moral and a Law Positive It is thus with many Observances of the Gospel We may for Example instance in Excommunication according to the common received notion of it There is a Positive Command in the Gospel for the exercise of the sentence of it in the Churches of Christ. But this hinders not but that it is natural for all Societies of men to exclude from their Societies those that refractorily refuse to observe the Laws and Orders of the Society that it may be preserved unto its proper End And according to the Rule of this Natural Equity that it should be so have all Rational Societies amongst men that knew nothing of the Gospel proceeded for their own good and preservation Neither doth the superadded Institution in the Gospel derogate from the general Reason hereof or change the nature of the Duty but only direct its practice and make Application of it to the uses and ends of the Gospel itself § 32 I do not plead that every Law that God prescribes unto me is Moral because my Obedience unto it is a Moral Duty For the Morality of this Obedience doth not arise from nor depend upon the especial Command of it which it may be is Positive and Arbitrary but from the respect that it hath unto our Dependance in all things which we have to do absolutely and universally on God To obey God in all things is unquestionably our Moral Duty But when the substance of the Command it self that is the Duty required is Moral the addition of a Positive Command doth no way impeach its Morality nor suspend the Influence of that Law whereon its Morality doth depend It is therefore unduly pretended by some that because there is a Positive Command for the Observation of the Sabbath supposing there should be such a Command for the whole of it which is nothing else but an Explanation and Enforcement of the Original Moral Precept of it as in every State of the Church something relating unto it namely the precise Determination of the Day it self in the Hebdomadal Revolution depended on a Law Positive that therefore the Law of it is not Moral It is not so indeed so far and in that respect wherein it is Positive but it is so from it self for the substance of it and Antecedently unto that Positive Command The whole Law therefore of the Sabbath and its Observation may be said to be Moral Positive which Expression hath been used by some Learned Divines in this case and that not unduly For a Law may be said to be so on a double Account First When the Positive Part of the Law is Declarative and accumulative with respect unto a Precedent Law of Nature as when some Additions are made to the Duties therein required as to the manner of their Performance Secondly When the Foundation of a Duty only is laid
absolutely changed or abolished but a afresh represented unto the people only with a relief provided for the Covenanters against its Curse and Severity with a direction how to use it to another End than was first given unto it it follows that the Day of the Sabbatical Rest could not be changed And therefore was the Observation of the seventh Day precisely continued because it was a Moral Pledge of the Rest of God in the first Covenant For this the instructive part of the Law of our Creation from Gods making the world in six dayes and resting on the seventh did require The Observation of this day therefore was still continued among the Israelites because the first Covenant was again represented unto them But when that Covenant was absolutely and in all Respects as a Covenant taken away and disannulled and that not only as to its formal Efficacy but also as to the manner of the Administration of Gods Covenant with men as it is under the Gospel there was a necessity that the Day of Rest should also be changed as I have more fully shewed elsewhere I say then that the precise Observation of the seventh Day enjoyned unto the Israelites had respect unto the Covenant of Works wherein the foundation of it was laid as hath been demonstrated And the whole Controversie about what day is to be observed now as a Day of holy Rest unto the Lord is resolved fully into this enquiry namely what Covenant we do walk before God in § 6 And that we may understand the whole Nature of the Judaical Sabbath it must moreover be considered that the Law in general and all the Precepts of it was the Instrument of the Politie of the people under the Government of God as we before observed For all the Judgements relating unto Civil things were but an Application of the Moral Law to their State and Condition Hence was the sanction of the transgressions of it to be punished with Death So was it in particular with respect unto the Sabbath Numb 15. 35 partly that it might represent unto them the Original Sanction of the whole Law as a Covenant of Works and partly to keep that stubborn people by this severity within due bounds of Government Nor was any thing punished by Death Judicially in the Law but the transgression of some Moral Command 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Hand of Heaven is threatned against their Presumptuous Transgressions of the Ceremonial Law where no Sacrifice was allowed I the Lord will set my Face against that man and cut him off This also made the Sabbath a yoke and a burden that wherein their Consciences could never find perfect Rest. And in this sense also it is abolished and taken away Again it was made a part of their Law for Religious Worship in their Typical Church State in which and whereby the whole Dispensation of the Covenant which they were under was directed unto other Ends. And so it had the Nature of a shadow representing the good things to come whereby the people were to be relieved from the Rigor and Curse of the whole Law as a Covenant And on these Reasons new Commands were given for the Observation of the Sabbath new Motives Ends and Uses were added thereunto every way to accommodate it to the Dispensation of the Covenant then in force which was afterwards to be removed and taken away and therewithall the Sabbath it self so far as it had Relation thereunto For the continuation of the seventh Day precisely belonged unto the new Representation that was made of the Covenant of Works The Representation of that Covenant with the sanction given unto it amongst the Judgements of Righteousness in the Government of the people in the Land of Canaan which was the Lords and not theirs made it a yoke and burden and the use it was put unto amongst Ceremonial Observances made it a shadow in all which respects it is abolished by Christ. To say that the Sabbath as given unto the Jews is not abolished is to introduce the whole Systeme of Mosaical Ordinances which stand on the same bottom with it And particularly the Observation of the seventh Day precisely lyeth as it were in the Heart of that Oeconomy And these things will the more clearly appear if we consider the dealing of God with that people about the Sabbath from first to last § 7 The Jews some of them at least as was before discoursed would have not only the first Revelation of the Sabbath unto them or the Renovation of its Command but its first Institution absolutely to have been in their station at Mara Exod. 15. The vanity of this pretence we have before sufficiently discovered And whereas this was the Opinion of the Talmudical Masters of the Middle Ages since Christ they seem to have embraced it on the same Account whereon they have invented many other Fancies For observing that a Sabbath was in esteem amongst the Christians in Opposition unto them they began to contend that the Sabbath was as they called it the Bride of the Synagogue and belonged to themselves alone being given secretly to them only The vanity of this pretence we have before laid open and so shall not again insist upon it § 8 The first peculiar dealing of God with them about the Sabbath was evidently in their first Station at Alush Exod. 16. The occasion of the whole is laid down v. 4 5. Then said the Lord unto Moses Behold I will rain Bread from Heaven for you and the people shall go out and gather a certain rate every day that I may prove them whether they will walk in my Laws or no And it shall come to pass that in the sixth day they shall prepare that which they bring in and it shall be twice as much as they gather dayly Here is no mention of the Sabbath nor any Reason given why they should gather a double portion on the sixth Day This Command therefore must needs have seemed somewhat strange unto them if they had before no notion at all of a seventh Dayes Sacred Rest. They must else otherwise have been at a great loss in themselves why they must double their measure on the sixth Day However it is apparent that either they had lost the true Day they were to observe through that long Bondage in Aegypt or knew not what belonged to the due Observation and Sanctification of it For when the people had observed this Command and gathered a double portion of Manna to keep one part of it for the next day although they had Experience that if at another season it were kept above one Day it would putrifie and stink v. 20. The Rulers of the Congregation fearing some mistake in the matter go and acquaint Moses with what was done amongst them v. 22. Hereon Moses replyeth unto them v. 23. This is that which the Lord hath said to morrow is the Rest of the holy Sabbath unto the Lord bake that which you will bake This
23 Another Ground of their Hatred was that the Jews whilst the Temple stood gathered great summs of money out of all their Provinces which they sent unto the Sacred Treasury So the same Person informs us in the same place Cum Aurum Judaeorum nomine quotannis ex Italia ex omnibus vestris Provinciis Hierosolymam exportari soleret Out of Italy and all other Provinces of the Empire there was Gold wont to be sent by the Jews to Jerusalem as now the Europaean Jews do contribute to the maintenance of their Synagogues in the same place and this is acknowledged by Philo Legat. ad Caium and Josephus Antiqui lib. 14. cap. 11. to have been yearly a very great summ But by his Judaeorum nomine he seems not only to express that the Returns of the Gold mentioned were made in the name of the Jews but also to intimate that it might be raised by others also who had taken on them the profession of their Religion For this was the third and principal cause of their Hatred and Animosity namely that they drew over multitudes of all sorts of persons to the profession of the Law of Moses And a good work this was though vitiated by the wickedness and corrupt Ends of them who employed themselves therein as our Saviour declares Matth. 23. 15. This greatly provoked the Romans in those dayes and on every occasion they severely complain of it So Dio Cassius speaking of them adds 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And this kind of men that is men of this Profession not natural Jews is found also among the Romans which though they have been frequently punished yet have for the most part encreased so as to take the liberty of making Laws to themselves For their punishments an Account is given us in Suetonius in Domit. and others of the Inquisition and Search made after such as were circumcised And as to their makeing of Laws unto themselves he respects their Feasts Sabbaths Abstinencies and such like Observances as the Jews obliged their Proselytes unto In like manner complaineth Juvenal Romanas autem soliti contemnere Leges Judaicum ediscunt servant ac metuunt jus Tradidit arcano quodcunque volumine Moses Contemning the Roman Laws they learn the Rites and Customs of the Jews observing and learning the whole Right or Law delivered in the secret Writing of Moses Seneca is yet more severe Cum interim usque eo sceleratissima gentis consuetudo convaluit ut per omnes jam terras recepta sit Victi victoribus leges dederunt The custom of this wicked Nation hath so far prevailed that it is now received among all Nations The conquered have given Laws to the Conquerors And Tacitus Pessimus quisque spretis religionibus patriis tributa stipes illuc that is to Jerusalem congerebat The like revengeful Spirit appears in those Verses of Rutilius lib. 1. Itinerar though he lived afterwards under the Christian Emperors O utinam nunquam Judaea victa fuisset Pompeii Bellis imperioque Titi Laetius excisae pestis contagia serpunt Victoresque suos natio victa premit But it is not unlikely that he reflects on Christians also § 24 We may add hereunto that for the most part the conversation of the Jews amongst them was wicked and provoking They were a people that had for many Generations been harrased and oppressed by all the principal Empires in the world this caused them to hate them and to have their minds alwayes possessed with revengeful thoughts When our Apostle affirmed of them that they pleased not God and were contrary to all men 1 Thess. 2. 15. he intends not their opposition to the Gospel and the Preachers of it which he had before expressed but that envious contrariety unto mankind in general which they were possessed with And this evil frame the Nations ascribed to their Law it self Moses novos ritus contrariosque caeteris mortalibus gentibus indidit saith Tacitus But this most falsly no Law of man ever taught that benignity kindness and general usefulness in the world as theirs did The people themselves being grown wicked and corrupt pleased not God and were contrary to all men Hence they were looked on as such who observed not so much as the Law of Nature towards any but themselves as resolving Quaesitum ad fontem solos diducere verpos Not to direct a thirsty person to a common Spring if uncircumcised Whence was that Censure of Tacitus Apud ipsos fides obstinata misericordia in Promptu adversus omnes alios hostile odium Faithful and merciful among themselves towards all others they were acted with irreconcilable hatred which well expresseth what our Saviour charged them with as a corrupt principle among them Matth. 5. 43. Thou shalt love thy neighbour and hate thine enemy Into which two sorts they distributed all mankind that is in their sense their own Countrey-men and Strangers Their corrupt and wicked conversation also made them a reproach and their Religion contemned So was it with them from their first Dispersion as God declares Ezek. 36. 20. When they entred unto the Heathen whither they went they profaned my holy name when they said to them these are the people of the Lord. And their wickedness increased with their time for they still learned the corrupt and evil Arts with all wayes of deceit used in the Nations where they lived until for the crimes of many the whole Nation became the common hatred of mankind And that we may return from this Digression this being the state of things then in the world we may not wonder if the Writers of those dayes were very supinely negligent or maliciously envious in reporting their Wayes Customs and Religious Observances And it is acknowledged that before those Times the long course of Idolatry and Impiety wherein the whole world had been ingaged had utterly corrupted and lost the Tradition of a Sabbatical Rest. What Notices of it continued in former Ages hath been before declared § 25 But it is further pleaded p. 54. that indeed the Gentiles could be no way obliged to the Observation of the fourth Commandment seeing they had no Indication of it nor any means to free them from their Ignorance of the Being of any such Law That they had and had lost the knowledge of it in and by their Progenitors is rejected as a vain pretence And so much weight is laid on this consideration that a demand is made of somewhat to be returned in answer that may give any satisfaction unto conscience But I understand not the force of this pretended Argument Those who had absolutely lost the knowledge of the true God in and by their Progenitors as the Gentiles had done might well also lose the knowledge of all the concernments of his Worship And so they had done excepting only that they had traduced some of his Institutions as Sacrifices into their own Superstition and so had they corrupted the use of his Sabbaths into that of
meer cessation from working It is not absolutely so for God worketh hitherto And the Expression of Gods Rest is of a Moral and not a Natural signification For it consists in the Satisfaction and Complacency that he took in his Works as effects of his Goodness Power and Wisdom disposed in the Order and unto the Ends mentioned Hence as it is said that upon the finishing of them he looked on every thing that he had made and behold it was very good Gen. 1. 31. that is he was satisfied in his works and their disposal and pronounced concerning them that they became his infinite Wisdom and Power so it is added that he not only rested on the seventh Day but also that he was refreshed Exod. 31. 17. that is he took great complacency in what he had done as that which was suited unto the End aimed at namely the expression of his Greatness Goodness and Wisdom unto his Rational Creatures and his Glory through their Obedience thereon as on the like Occasion he is said to rest in his Love and to rejoyce with singing Zeph. 3. 17. Now in the Work and Rest of God thus stated did the whole Rule of the Obedience of man originally consist and therein was he to seek also his own Rest as his Happiness and Blessedness For God had not declared any other way for his Instruction in the End of his Creation that is his Obedience unto him and Blessedness in him but in and by his own Works and Rest. This then is the first End of this Holy Rest. And it must alwayes be born in mind as that without which we can give no glory to God as rational creatures made under a Moral Law in a dependance on Him For this he indispensibly requireth of us and this is the summ of what he requireth of us namely that we glorifie him according to the Revelation that he makes of himself unto us whether by his Works of Nature or of Grace To the solemnity hereof the Day enquired after is necessary To express these things is the General End of the Sabbatical Rest prescribed unto us and our observation For so it is said God wrought and rested and then requires us so to do And it hath sundry particular Ends or Reasons First That we might learn the satisfaction and complacency that God hath in his own works Gen. 2. 2 3. That is to consider the impressions of his Excellencies upon them and to glorifie him as God on that Account Rom. 1. 19 20 21. For hence was man originally taught to Fear Love Trust Obey and Honour him absolutely even from the manifestation that he had made of himself in his works wherein he rested And had not God thus rested in them and been refreshed upon their compleating and finishing they would not have been a sufficient means to instruct man in those Duties And our Observation of the Evangelical Sabbath hath the same respect unto the works of Christ and his Rest thereon when he saw of the Travel of his soul and was satisfied as shall afterwards be declared Secondly Another End of the Original Sabbatical Rest was that it might be a pledge unto man of his Rest in and with God For in and by the Law of his Creation man had an End of Rest proposed unto him and that in God This he was to be directed unto and incouraged to look after Herein God by his Works and Rest had instructed him And by giving him the Sabbath as he gave him a Pledge thereof so he required of him his Approbation of the Covenant Way of attaining it whereof afterwards Hence Psal. 92. whose Title is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A Psalm a Song for the Sabbath Day which some of the Jews ascribe unto Adam as it principally consists in contemplations of the Works of God with holy Admirations of his Greatness and Power manifested in them with praises unto him on their Account so it expresseth the Destruction of ungodly sinners and the salvation of the Righteous whereof in that dayes Rest they had a pledge And this belonged unto that state of man wherein he was created namely that he should have a pledge of Eternal Rest. Neither could his Duty and capacity be otherwise answered or esteemed reasonable His Duty which was working in Moral Obedience had a natural Relation unto a Reward And his Capacity was such as could not be satisfied nor himself attain absolute Rest but in the Enjoyment of God A pledge hereof therefore belonged unto his condition Thirdly Consideration was had of the Way and Means whereby man might enter into the Rest of God proposed unto him And this was by that Obedience and Worship of God which the Covenant wherein he was created required of him The solemn Expression of this Obedience and Exercise of this Worship was indispensibly required of him and his posterity in all their Societies and Communion with one another This cannot be denyed unless we shall say that God making man to be a sociable creature and capable of sundry Relations did not require of him to honour him in the Societies and Relations whereof he was capable which would certainly overthrow the whole Law of his Creation with respect unto the End for which he was made and render all societies sinful and rebellious against God Hereunto the Sabbatical Rest was absolutely necessary For without some such Rest fixed or variable those things could not be This is a Time or season for man to express and solemnly pay that homage which he owes to his Creator And this is by the most esteemed the great if not the only End of the Sabbath But it is evident that it falls under sundry precedent Considerations § 10 These being the proper Ends and Reasons of the Original Sabbatical Rest which contain the true Notion of it we may nextly enquire after the Law whereby it was prescribed and commanded To this purpose we must first consider the state wherein man was created and then the Law of his Creation And for the state and condition wherein man was created it falls under a threefold consideration For man may be considered either 1. Absolutely as a Rational Creature or 2. As made under a Covenant of Rewards and Punishments or 3. With respect unto the especial nature of that Covenant First He was made a Rational Creature and thereby necessarily in a Moral Dependance on God For being endowed with Intellectual Faculties in an immortal soul capable of eternal Blessedness or Misery able to know God and to regard him as the first Cause and last End of all as the Author of his Being and Object of his Blessedness it was naturally and necessarily incumbent on him without any farther considerations to Love Fear and Obey him to trust in him as a Preserver and Rewarder and this the order of his nature called the Image of God enclined and inabled him unto For it was not possible that such a creature should be produced and not lye
place in the Promise of the Covenant that they should be written in our Hearts for if it should be so especial Grace would be yet administred for the Observation of those Laws now they are abolished which would not only be vain and useless but contradictory to the whole Design of the Grace bestowed upon us which is to be improved in a due and genuine Exercise of it Neither doth God bestow any Grace upon men but withal he requires the Exercise of it at their hands If then this Law was written in Tables of Stone together with the other Nine that we might pray and endeavour to have it written in our Hearts according to the Promise of the Covenant it is and must be of the nature of the rest that is Moral and everlastingly obligatory 3. As all the rest of the Moral Precepts it was reserved in the Ark whereas the Law of Ceremonial Ordinances was placed in a Book written by Moses on the side of the Ark separable from it or whence it might be removed The Ark on many accounts was called the Ark of the Covenant whereof God assisting I shall treat elsewhere One of them was that it contained in it nothing but that Moral Law which was the Rule of the Covenant And this was placed therein to manifest that it was to have its accomplishment in him who was the End of the Law Rom. 10. 3 4. For the Ark with the Propitiatory was a Type of Jesus Christ Rom. 3. 25. And the Reason of the different disposal of the Moral Law in the Ark and of the Ceremonial in a Book on the side of it was to manifest as the inseparableness of the Law from the Covenant so the establishing accomplishment and answering of the one Law in Christ with the Removal and abolishing of the other by him For the Law kept in the Ark the Type of him he was to fulfil it in Obedidience to answer its Curse and to restore it unto its proper use in the New Covenant not that which it had originally when it was it self the whole of the Covenant but that which the nature of it requires in the Moral Obedience of Rational Creatures whereof it is a compleat and adequate Rule when the other Law was utterly removed and taken away And if that had been the End whereunto the Law of the Sabbath had been designed had it been absolutely capable of Abolition in this world it had not been safeguarded in the Ark with the other Nine which are inseparable from mans Covenant Obedience unto God but had been left with other Ceremonial Ordinances at the side of the Ark in a Readiness to be removed when the appointed time should come 4. God himself separates this Command from them which were Ceremonial in their Principal Intention and whole subject matter when he calls the whole Systeme of Precepts in the Two Tables by the name of the Ten Words or Commandments Deut. 10. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Those ten Words which the Lord spake unto you in the Mount out of the midst of the fire in the Day of the Assembly No considering Person can read these words but he will find a most signal Emphasis in the several parts of them The Day of the Assembly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is that which the Jews so celebrate under the Name of the Station in Sinai the Day that was the foundation of their Church State when they solemnly covenanted with God about the Observation of the Law Deut. 5. 24 25 26 27. And the Lord himself spake these words that is in an immediate and especial manner which is still observed where any mention is made of them as Exod. 20. Deut. 5. 10. and saith Moses he spake them unto you that is immediately unto all the Assembly Deut. 5. 22. where it is added that he spake them out of the midst of the Fire of the Cloud and of the thick Darkness with a great Voice that every individual Person might hear it and he added no more He spake not one Word more gave not one Precept more immediately unto the whole people but the whole solemnity of Fire Thunder Lightning Earthquake and sound of Trumpet immediately ceased and disappeared whereon God entred his Treaty with Moses wherein he revealed unto him and instructed him in the Ceremonial and Judicial Law for the use of the people who had now taken upon themselves the Religious Observance of what he should so reveal and appoint Now as the whole Decalogue was hereby signalized and sufficiently distinguished from the other Laws and Institutions which were of another Nature so in particular this Precept concerning the Sabbath is distinguished from all those which were of the Mosaical Paedagogie in whose Declaration Moses was the Mediator between God and the people And this was only upon the Account of its Participation in the same Nature with the rest of the Commands however it may and do contain something in it that was peculiar to that people as shall be shewed afterwards 5. Whereas there is a frequent Opposition made in the Old Testament between Moral Obedience and the outward observance of Ordinances of a meer arbitrary Institution there is no mention made of the Weekly Sabbath in that case though all Ceremonial Institutions are in one place or other enumerated It is true Isa. 1. 13. the Sabbath is joyned with the New Moons and its Observation rejected in comparison of Holiness and Righteousness But as this is expounded in the next Verse to be intended principally of the appointed annual Feasts or Sabbaths so we do grant that the Sabbath as relating unto Temple Worship there intended and described had that accompanying it which was peculiar to the Jews and Ceremonial as we shall shew hereafter But absolutely the Observation of the Sabbath is not opposed unto nor rejected in comparison of other or any Moral Duties 6. The Observation of the Sabbath is pressed on the Church on the same Grounds and with the same Promises as the greatest and most indispensible Moral Duties and together with them opposed unto those Fasts which belonged unto Ceremonial Institutions To this purpose is the Nature and Use of it at large discoursed Isa. 58. v. 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14. § 46 Now it is assuredly worth our Enquiry what are the just Reasons of the Preference of the Sabbath above all Positive Institutions both by the place given unto it in the Decalogue as also on the account of the other especial Instances insisted on Suppose the Command of it to be Ceremonial and one of these two Reasons or both of them must be alledged as the cause hereof For this Exaltation of it must arise either from the Excelency of it in it self and service or the Excellency of its signification or from both of them jointly But these things cannot be pleaded or made use of unto the purpose intended For the service of it as it was observed among the Jews it
for the Relief and Salvation of the Elect and being solemnly renewed unto Abraham and his seed four hundred and thirty years before the giving of the Law unto his Posterity there was a blessed Relief provided therein against the Curse and Threatnings annexed to the first Covenant for all them that betook themselves unto it and made use of it Notwithstanding I say this Renovation of the first Covenant materially unto them they were so far freed from its Covenant Terms as that they had a Relief provided against what they could not answer in it with the consequences thereof 2. From the Nature and Tenor of the Covenant of Works so renewed amongst that people there was begotten in their minds such a Respect unto the Rigor of its Commands the manner of their Observance or of Obedience unto them with the dread of its Curse awfully denounced amongst them as brought a servile and bondage frame of Spirit upon them in all wherein they had to do with God by vertue of the Law and Rule of that Covenant This frame of Spirit as that which stands in direct Opposition unto the freedom and liberty purchased for us by Jesus Christ to serve God in Righteousness and Holiness without fear all our Dayes is much insisted on by the Apostle Paul especially in his Epistles to the Romans and Galatians And in their Observation of the Sabbath in particular they were under this bondage filling them with many scrupulous Anxieties which arose not from the Law of the Sabbath it self as originally given unto man in the state of Innocency but from the Accommodation of the Law thereof unto them after the Entrance of sin And hereby their Sabbath Rest became unto them a great part of their wearying burthensome yoke which is taken off in Christ. 3. This Law was yet proposed to that Church and People in the Manner and Form of a Covenant and not only materially as a Law or Rule This it had from the Promises and Threatnings which it was attended withall There was adjoyned unto it Do this and live and the man that doth these things shall live in them as also Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things written in the Law to do them Not that it was hereby absolutely constituted a Covenant which eventually and finally they were to live or dye by for as we shewed before there was a Relief provided against that condition in the Promise but God gave the Old Covenant an especial Revival though with respect unto other Ends than were originally intended in it Hence this Covenant Form given unto it rendred the Obedience of that people in a great measure servile for it gendred unto bondage 4. The Law being attended with various Explanations and many Ordinances of Judgement deduced from the Principles of Moral Right and Equity contained in it was made the Rule of the Polity and Government of that people as an Holy Nation under the Rule of God himself who was their King For their Polity for the kind of it was a Theocracy over which God in an especial manner presided as their Governour and King And hence he affirms that when they would choose another King over them after the manner of the Nations that they rejected him from reigning over them though they resolved to adhere to his Laws and the manner of Government prescribed to them And this was peculiar to that people Hence the Sabbath amongst them came to have an absolute necessity accompanying it of an outward carnal Observance the neglect whereof or acting any thing against the Law of it was to be punished with Death 5. Unto this Renovation of the Covenant in the manner and for the ends expressed there was added a Typical Church State with a great number of Religious Laws and Ordinances in themselves carnal and weak but mystically significant of spiritual and heavenly things and instructive how to use the Promise that was before given for their relief from the Rigor and Curse of the Law or Covenant now proposed unto them And in all these things did the Covenant of God made with that people in the Wilderness consist The Foundation Matter Manner of Administration Promises and Threatnings of it were the same with the Covenant of Works but they were all accommodated to their Ecclesiastical and Political Estate with especial Respect unto their approaching condition in the Land of Canaan only there was in the Promise new Ends and a new Use given unto it with a Relief against its Rigor and Curse § 4 On the Account of the Accessions that were thus made to the Law and especially unto the Observation of the Sabbath is it often mentioned in the Scripture as that which God had in a peculiar manner given unto the Israelites in whose especial Worship it had so great a place many of their Principal Ordinances haveing a great Respect unto it it being also the only means of keeping up the solemnity of Natural Worship in their Synagogues among the people Acts 15. 21. Thus God sayes concerning them that he gave them his Sabbaths in the Wilderness to be a sign between him and them Ezek. 20. 10 11 12. And it is said of the same time Nehem. 9. 14. That he made known unto them his holy Sabbath that is in the manner and for the Ends expressed Nor is there any need why we should say that he gave them intends no more but that he restored the knowledge of the Sabbath amongst them the memory whereof they had almost lost although that Interpretation of the Expression might be justified For he sayes no where that he then gave his Sabbaths but that he then peculiarly gave them unto that people and that for the Ends mentioned For the Sabbath was originally a Moral Pledge and Expression of Gods Covenant Rest and our Rest in God And now was it appointed of God to be a sign of the especial Administration of the Covenant which was then enacted Hence it is said that he gave it them as a perpetual Covenant Exod. 31. 16. that they might know him to be the Lord that sanctified them v. 13. that is their God according to the Tenor of that Covenant which was to continue throughout their Generations that is until the New Covenant should be brought in and established by Christ. Thus was it peculiarly given unto them and so far as it was so as it was a sign of their Covenant as it was then first given so it is now abolished For § 5 The Renovation and change of the Covenant must and did introduce a change in the Rest annexed unto it For a Sabbath or an holy Rest belongs unto every Covenant between God and man But as for the kind and nature of it as to its Ends Use and Manner of Observation it follows the especial kind or nature of that Covenant wherein we at any season walk before God Now the Original Covenant of Works being in this Representation of it on Sinai not
this fully answers the first Law as it was a Principle of Light and Power unto Obedience And in a great measure it supplys the loss of it as it was a Rule also For there is a great Renovation thereof in God's writing his Law in our hearts not here to be insisted on But in this new Creation God designed to gather up all that was past in the Old and in the Law thereof and in the continuation of it by writing under the Old Testament unto one head in Christ. Wherefore he brings over in this state the use of the first Law as renewed and represented in Tables of Stone for a directive Rule of Obedience unto the new Creature whereby the first original Law is wholly supplyed Hereunto he makes an Addition of what positive Laws he thinks meet as he did also under the Old Law of Creation for the tryal of our Obedience and our furtherance in it So the Moral Law of our Obedience is in each condition the old and the new materially the same nor is it possible that it should be otherwise But yet this old Law as brought over into this new estate is new also For all things are become new And it is now the Rule of our Obedience not meerly and absolutely unto God as the Creator the first cause and last end of all but as unto God in Christ bringing of us into a new Relation unto himself In the Renovation then of the Image of God in our souls and the transferring our of the Moral Law as a Rule accompanied with new distinct Principles Motives and Ends doth the Law of the new Creation consist and fully answer the Law of the first as it was a Principle and a Rule each of them having their peculiar positive Laws annexed unto them § 4 Secondly The Law of Creation had a Covenant included in it or inseparably annexed unto it This also we have before declared and what belonged thereunto or ensued necessarily thereon Thus therefore must it be also in the new Creation and the Law thereof Yea because the Covenant is that which as it were gathereth all things together both in the Works and Law of God and our Obedience disposing them into that order which tendeth to the Glory of God and the Blessedness of the Creatures in him this is that which in both Creations is principally to be considered For without this no End of God in his Works or Law could be attained nor man be made Blessed in a way of Righteousness and Goodness unto his Glory And the Law of Creation no otherwise failed nor became useless as to its first End by sin but that the Covenant of it was thereby broken and rendred useless as to the bringing of man unto the enjoyment of God This therefore was principally regarded in the new Creation namely the making confirming and ratifying of a new Covenant And the doing hereof was the great promise under the Old Testament Jerem. 31. 32. whereby the Believers who then lived were made partakers of the benefits of it And the confirming of this Covenant in and by Christ is expressed as a part of the new Creation Heb. 8. 9. and it is indeed comprehensive of the whole Work of it § 5 Thirdly The immediate End of the old Covenant was to bring man by due Obedience unto the Rest of God This God declared in and unto his inbred native light by his Works and his Rest that ensued thereon and the Day of Rest which he instituted as a pledge thereof and as a means of attaining it by that Obedience which was required in the Covenant This we have before declared and this was the true original and End of the first Sabbatical Rest. All these things therefore must have place also in the new Covenant belonging unto the new Creation The immediate End of it is our entring into the Rest of God as the Apostle proves at large Heb. 4. But herein we are not absolutely to enter into Gods Rest as a Creator and Rewarder but into the Rest of God in Christ the Nature whereof will be fully explained in our Exposition of that Chapter For Obedience is now to be yielded unto God not absolutely but to God in Christ and with that respect therefore are we to enter into Rest. The foundation hereof must lye in the Works of God in the new Creation and the complacency with Rest which he took therein For all our Rest in God is founded in his own Rest in his Works For a pledge hereof a Day of Rest must be given and observed the reasons and necessity whereof we have explained and confirmed in our preceding Discourses This as hath been shewed originally was the Seventh day of the week But as the Apostle tells us in another case the Priesthood being changed there must also of necessity a change of the Law ensue so the Covenant being changed and the Rest which was the End of it being changed and the way of entring into the Rest of God being changed a change of the Day of Rest must of necessity thereon ensue And no Man can assert the same Day of Rest precisely to abide as of old but he must likewise assert the same Law the same Covenant the same Rest of God the same way of entring into it which yet as all acknowledge are changed The Day first annexed unto the Covenant of works that is the seventh Day was continued under the Old Testament because the outward administration of that Covenant was continued A relief indeed was provided against the curse and penalty of it but in the administration of it the nature promises and threatnings of that Covenant though with other ends and purposes were represented unto the people But now that Covenant being absolutely abolished both as to its nature use efficacy and power no more to be represented nor proposed unto Believers the whole of it and its renewed administration under the Old Testament being removed taken away and disappearing Heb. 8 13. the precise Day of Rest belonging unto it was to be changed also and so it is come to pass § 6 We must here suppose what hath been before proved and confirmed There was a Day of holy Rest unto God necessary to be observed by the Law and Covenant of Nature or Works neither was or could either of them be compleat without it looking on them as the rule and means of mans living unto God and of his coming to the enjoyment of him That this Day was in the innate right of Nature as directed by the Works of God designed and proposed unto it for that purpose to be one Day in seven This was it to learn and this it did learn from Gods creating the World in six dayes and resting on the seventh for God affirms every where that because he did so therefore it was the duty of man to labour on six dayes as his occasions do require and to rest on the seventh This therefore they were taught by
those Works and Rest of God or it could not be proposed as the reason of their suitable practice and for this end did God so Work and Rest. The Law therefore of this holy Rest he reneweth in the Decalogue amongst those other Laws which being of the same nature and original namely branches of the Law of our Creation were to be unto us moral and eternal For God would no longer entrust his mind and will in that Law unto the depraved nature of man wherein if he had not in the best often guided and directed it by fresh extraordinary revelations it would have been of little use to his glory but committed it by vocal revelation to the minds of the people as the doctrinal object of their consideration and recorded it in tables of stone Moreover the nature of the first Covenant and the way of Gods instructing man in the condition of it by his Works and Rest had limited this holy Day unto the seventh Day the observation whereof was to be commensurate unto that Covenant and its administration however the outward forms thereof might be varied § 7 On these suppositions we lay and ought to lay the observation of the Lords Day under the New Testament according to the institution of it or declaration of the mind of Christ who is our Lord and Law-giver concerning it 1. A new work of Creation or a work of a new Creation is undertaken and compleated Isa. 65. 17. Chap. 66. 22 23. 2 Pet. 3. 13. Rev. 21. 1. Rom. 8. 19 20. 2 Cor. 5. 17. Gal. 6. 15. 2. This new Creation is accompanied with a new Law and a new Covenant or the Law of faith and the Covenant of Grace Rom. 3. 27. Chap. 8. 2 3 4. Jer. 31. 32 33 34. Heb. 8. 8 9 10 11 12 13. 3. Unto this Law and Covenant a Day of holy Rest unto the Lord doth belong which cannot be the same Day with the former no more than it is the same Law or the same Covenant which were originally given unto us Heb. 4. 9. Rev. 1. 10. 4. That this Day was limited and determined to the first Day of the Week by our Lord Jesus Christ is that which shall now further be confirmed only I must desire the Reader to consider that whereas the Topical Arguments whereby this Truth is confirmed have been pleaded improved and vindicated by many of late I shall but briefly mention them and insist principally on the declaration of the proper grounds and foundations of it § 8 As our Lord Jesus Christ as the eternal Son and Wisdom of the Father was the immediate cause and Author of the old Creation Joh. 1. 3. Col. 1. 16. Heb. 1. 2 10. so as Mediatour he was the Author of this new Creation Heb. 3. 3 4. He built the House of God he built all these things and is God Herein he wrought and in the accomplishment of it saw of the travail of his soul and was satisfied Isa. 53. 11. that is he rested and was refreshed Herein he gave a new Law of life faith and obedience unto God Isa. 42. 4. not by an addition of new Preceps to the moral Law of God not virtually comprized therein and distinct from his own positive institutions of worship but in his revelation of that new way of obedience unto God in and by himself with the especial causes means and ends of it which supplyes the use and end whereunto the Moral Law was at first designed Rom. 8. 2 3. Chap 10. 3 4. whereby he becomes the Author of eternal salvation unto all that do obey him Heb. 5. 9. This Law of life and obedience he writes by his Spirit in the hearts of his people that they may be willing in the day of his power Psal. 110. 3. 1 Cor. 3. 3 6. Heb. 8 10. not at once and in the foundation of his work actually but only in the causes of it For as the Law of nature should have been implanted in the hearts of men in their conception and natural nativity had that dispensation of righteousness continued so in the new birth of them that believe in him is this Law written in their hearts in all generations Joh. 3. 6. Hereon was the Covenant established and all the promises thereof of which he was the Mediatour Heb. 8. 6. And for an holy Day of Rest for the ends before declared and on the suppositions before laid down evincing the necessity of such a Day he determined the observation of the first Day of the Week For § 9 First On this Day he rested from his works in and by his Resurrection for then had he laid the foundation of the new Heavens and new Earth and finished the works of the new Creation when all the Stars sang together and all the Sons of God shouted for joy On this Day he rested from his works and was refreshed as God did and was from his For although he worketh hitherto in the communication of his Spirit and Graces as the Father continued to do in his works of providence after the finishing of the works of the old Creation though these works belonged thereunto yet he ceaseth absolutely from that kind of work whereby he laid the foundation of the new Creation henceforth he dieth no more And on this Day was he refreshed in the view of his works for he saw that it was exceeding good Now as Gods Rest and his being refreshed in his work on the seventh Day of old was a sufficient indication of the precise Day of Rest which he would have observed under the administration of that original Law and Covenant so the Rest of our Lord Jesus Christ and his being refreshed in and from his works on the first Day is a sufficient indication of the precise Day of Rest to be observed under the dispensation of the new Covenant now confirmed and established And the Church of Christ could not pass one Week under the New Testament or in a Gospel-state of worship without this indication For the Judaical Sabbath as sure as it was so and as sure as it was annexed unto the Mosaical administration of the Covenant was so far abolished as not to oblige really the Disciples of Christ in conscience unto the observation of it whatever any of them might for a season apprehend And if a new Day was not now determined there was no Day or season appointed for an observance of an holy Rest unto the Lord nor any pledge given us of our entring into the Rest of Christ. And those who say that it is required that some time be set apart unto the ends of a Sabbatical Rest but that there is no divine indication of that time when not what it is or shall be if we consider what are the ends of such a Rest as before declared must allow us to expect firmer proofs of their uncouth Assertion than any as yet we have met withall § 10 Accordingly this Indication of the Gospel Day of Rest
various states 37 Command for the Sabbath before the Fall 38 Before and at the giving of the Law and under the Gospel 39 Whether appointed by the Church 40 Of the fourth Commandment in the Decalogue 41 The proper subject of it 42 The seventh Day precisely not primarily required therein 43 Somewhat moral in it granted by all 44 The matter of this Command a Moral Duty by the Law of Creation 45 The Morality of the Precept it self proved from its interest in the Decalogue by various Instances 46 The Law of the Sabbath only preferred above all Ceremonial and Judicial Laws 47 The Words of our Saviour Matth. 24. 20. considered 48 The whole Law of the Decalogue established by Christ. 49 Objections proposed 50 The first answered 51 The second answered 52 The third answered 53 One Day in seven not the seventh Day precisely required in the Decalogue 54 An Objection from the sense of the Law 55 Answered 56 57 Other Objections answered 58 Col. 2. 16 17. considered The Third Exercitation Causes of the Sabbath § 1 WE have fixed the Original of the Sabbatical Rest according to the best light we have received into these things and confirmed the Reasons of it with the consent of mankind The next step in our progress must be an Enquiry into its Causes And here also we fall immediately into those Difficulties and Entanglements which the various Apprehensions of Learned Men promoted and defended with much Diligence have occasioned I have no Design to oppose or contend with any although a modest Examination of the Reasons of some will be indispensibly necessary unto me All that I crave is the liberty of proposing my own Thoughts and Judgement in this matter with the Reasons and Grounds of them When that is done I shall humbly submit the whole to the Examination and Judgement of all that call upon the Name of our Lord Jesus Christ their Lord and ours § 2 First It is agreed by all that God alone is the Supream Original and Absolute Cause of the Sabbath When ever it began when ever it ends be it expired or still in force of what kind soever were its Institution the Law of it was from God It was from Heaven and not of men and the Will of God is the sole Rule and measure of our Observation of it and Obedience to him therein What may or may not be done in reference unto the Observation of a Day of holy Rest by any inferior Authority comes not here under consideration But whereas there are two sorts of Laws whereby God requires the Obedience of his Rational Creatures which are commonly called Moral and Positive it is greatly questioned and disputed to whether of these sorts doth belong the Command of a Sabbatical Rest. Positive Laws are taken to be such as have no Reason for them in themselves nothing of the matter of them is taken from the things themselves commanded but do depend meerly and solely on the Soveraign Will and Pleasure of God Such were the Laws and Institutions of the Sacrifices of old and such are those which concern the Sacraments and other things of the like nature under the New Testament Moral Laws are such as have the Reasons of them taken from the Nature of the things themselves required in them For they are Good from their respect to the nature of God himself and from that nature and order of all things which he hath placed in the creation So that this sort of Laws is but Declarative of the absolute goodness of what they do require the other is Constitutive of it as unto some certain Ends. Laws Positive as they are occasionally given so they are esteemed alterable at pleasure Being fixed by meer Will and Prerogative without respect to any thing that should make them necessary antecedent to their giving they may by the same Authority at any time be taken away and abolished Such I say are they in their own nature and as to any firmitude that they have from their own subject matter But with respect unto Gods Determination Positive Divine Laws may become eventually unalterable And this Difference is there between Legal and Evangelical Institutions The Laws of both are Positive only equally proceeding from Soveraign Will and Pleasure and in their own Natures equally alterable But to the former God had in his purpose fixed a determinate time and season wherein they should expire or be altered by his Authority the latter he hath fixed a perpetuity and unchangeableness unto during the state and condition of his Church in this world The other sort of Laws are perpetual and unalterable in themselves so far as they are of that sort that is Moral For although a Law of that kind may have an especial Injunction with such circumstances as may be changed and varied as had the whole Decalogue in the Common-wealth of Israel yet so far as it is Moral that is that its Commands or Prohibitions are necessary emergencies or expressions of the Good or Evil of the things it commands or forbids it is invariable And in these things there is an Agreement unless sometimes through mutual Oppositions men are chased into some Exceptions or Distinctions § 3 Unto these two sorts do all Divine Laws belong and unto these Heads they may be all reduced And it is pleaded by some that these kinds of Laws are contradistinct so that a Law of one kind can in no sense be a Law in the other And this doubtless is true reduplicatively because they have especial formal Reasons As far and wherein any Laws are Positive they are not Moral and as far as they are purely Moral they are not formally Positive though given after the manner of positive Commands Howbeit this hinders not but that some do judge that there may be and are Divine Laws of a mixt nature For there may be in a Divine Law a foundation in and respect unto somewhat that is Moral which yet may stand in need of the superaddition of a Positive Command for its due Observation unto its proper End Yea the Moral Reason of things commanded which ariseth out of a due natural Respect unto God and the order of the Universe may be so deep and hidden as that God who would make the Way of his Creatures plain and easie gives out express positive Commands for the Observance of what is antecedently necessary by the Law of our Creation Hence a Law may partake of both these Considerations and both of them have an equal influence into its Obligatory Power And by this means sundry Duties some Moral some Positive are as it were compounded in one Observance as may be instanced in the great Duty of Prayer Hence the whole Law of that Observance becomes of a mixt nature which yet God can separate at his pleasure and taking away that which is Positive leave only that which is absolutely Moral in force And this kind of Laws which have their Foundation in the nature of things
is ours and with the first fruits of our substance in every kind Somewhat of whatever God hath given unto us is to be set apart from our own use and given up absolutely to him as an Homage due unto him and a necessary acknowledgement of him To deny this is to contradict one of the principal Dictates of the Law of Nature For God hath given us nothing ultimately for our selves seeing we and all that we have are wholly his And to have any thing whereof no part as such is to be spent in his service is to have it with his displeasure Let any one endeavour to assert and prove this Position No part of our Time is to be set apart to the Worship of God and his Service in an holy and peculiar manner and he will quickly find himself setting up in a full contradiction to the Law of Nature and the whole Light of the knowledge of God in his mind and conscience Those who have attempted any such thing have done it under this deceitful pretence that all our Time is to be spent unto God and every day is to be a Sabbath For whereas notwithstanding this pretence they spend most of their time directly and immediately to themselves and their own Occasions it is evident that they do but make use of it to rob God of that which is his due directly and immediately For unto the holy separation of any thing unto God it is required as well that it be taken from our selves as that it be given unto him This therefore the Law of our Creation requires as unto the separation of some part of our Time unto God And if this doth not at first consideration discover it self in its Directive Power it will quickly do so in its condemning Power upon a contradiction of it Thus far then we have attained § 25 Moreover men are to worship God in Assemblies and Societies such as he appoints or such as by his Providence they are cast into This will not be denyed seeing it stands upon as good yea better Evidence than the Associations of mankind for Ends Political unto their own Good by Government and Order which all men confess to be a Direction of the Law of Nature For what concerns our living to God naturally is as clear in that Light and Conduct as what concerns our living among our selves Now a part of this Worship it is that we honour him with what by his Gift is made ours Such is our Time in this world Nor can the Worship it self be performed and celebrated in a due manner without the Designation and Separation of some Time unto that purpose and thereby secondly this Separation of Time becomes a branch of the Law of Nature by an immediate natural and unavoidable consequence And what is so is no less to be reckoned among the Rules of it than the very first notions or impressions that it gives us concerning the nature of any thing Good or Evil. For whatever Reason can educe from the Principles of Reason is no less Reason than those Principles themselves from whence it is educed And we aim no more from this discourse but that the separation of some Time to the Worship of God according to the Ends before insisted on is Reasonable so that the contrary in its first conception is unreasonable and foolish And this I suppose is evident to all I am sure by most it is granted Could men hereupon acquiesce in the Authority and Wisdom of God indigitating and measuring out that Portion of Time in all seasons and Ages of the Church there might be a Natural Rest from these contentions about a Rest Sacred and Holy However I cannot but admire at the Liberty which some men take positively to affirm and contend that the Command for the Observation of the Sabbath when or however it were given was wholly umbratile and Ceremonial For there is that in it confessedly as its Foundation and that which all its concernments are educed from which is as direct an Impression on the mind of man from the Law of Creation as any other Instance that can be given thereof § 26 Upon this Foundation therefore we may proceed And I say in the next place that the stated Time directed unto for the Ends of a Sacred Rest unto God by the Light and Law of Nature that is Gods Command impressed on the mind of man in and by his own Creation and that of the rest of the Works of God intended for his Direction in Obedience is that it be one day in seven For the confirmation hereof what we have discoursed concerning the Law of Creation and the Covenant ratified with man therein is to be remembred On the supposition thereof the Advancement or Constitution of any other Portion of Time in the stead and to the Exclusion thereof as a Determination and Limitation of the Time required in general in the first Instance of that Law is and would appear a contradiction unto it God haveing finished his Works in six Dayes and rested on the seventh giving man thereby and therein the Rule and Law of his Obedience and Rewards for him to assign any other measure or portion of Time for his Rest unto God in his Solemn Worship is to decline the Authority of God for the sake of his own inventions and to assign no portion at all unto that End is openly to transgress a principal Dictate of the Law of Nature as hath been proved Neither this Direction nor Transgression I confess will evidently manifest themselves in the meer Light of Nature as now depraved and corrupted No more will sundry Instances of its Authority unless its voice be diligently attended unto and its Light cultivated and improved in the minds of men by the Advantage of Consequential Revelations given unto us for that purpose For that by the Assistance of Scripture Light and Rational Considerations thence arising we may discover many things to be dictates of and to be directed unto by the Law of Nature which those who are left unto the meer Guidance and Conduct of it could not discover so to be may be easily proved from the open Transgression of it in sundry Instances which they lived and approved themselves in who seemed most to have lived according unto it and professed themselves to be wise in following the Light and Conduct of Reason in all things as was before at large discoursed The Polutheisme that prevailed amongst the best of the Heathens their open profession of living unto themselves and seeking after their Happiness in themselves with many other Instances make this evident And if Revelation or Scripture Light contributed no more to the Discovery of the Postulata of the Law of Nature but by a removal of those Prejudices which the manner and fashion of the world amongst men and a corrupt conversation received by Tradition from one Generation to another had fixed on and possessed their minds withal yet were the Advantages we have
The Church under the Gospel and its Rest. 19 The foundation of it 20 Christ his Works and his Rest intended Heb. 4. 10 21 This farther proved by sundry Arguments 22 What were his Works whereby the Church was founded 23 His entrance into his Rest not in his Death but in his Resurrection 24 The Day of Rest limited and determined hereby 25 The Sabbatism that remains for the people of God 26 The sending of the Holy Ghost 27 Church Assemblies on the first day of the Week 28 The Lords-day Rev. 1. 10. 29 The sum of the preceding Discourse 30 Necessity of the Religious Observation of one day in seven 31 Blessing of God on the Church-worship on the first day 32 Of the seventh day Sabbath Judaism restored in it Of the Ebionites 33 Schisms perpetuated by the opinion of the seventh day Sabbath 34 Penalty of the Law reinforced with it 35 The Whole legal § 1 HOw the Creation of all things was finished and the Rest of God and Man that ensued thereon hath been declared It hath also in part and sufficiently as unto our present purpose been evidenced how the great Ends of the Creation of All in the Glory of God and the Blessedness of Man in him with the pledge thereof in a Sabbatical Rest were for a season as it were defeated and disappointed by the entrance of Sin which brake the Covenant that was founded in the Law of Creation and rendred it useless unto those ends For the Law became Weak through sin and the flesh or the corruption of our Nature that ensued thereon Rom. 8. 5. Hence it could no more bring Man to Rest in God But yet a continuation of the Obligatory force of that Law and Covenant with the direction of it unto other ends and purposes than at first given unto them was under the Old Testament designed of God and hath been declared also Hence was the continuation of the original Sabbatical Rest in the Church of Israel with the especial application of its command unto that people insisted on in the preceding Discourse In this state of things God had of old determined the Renovation of All by a new Creation a new Law of that Creation a new Covenant and a new Sabbatical Rest unto his own Glory by Jesus Christ and these things are now to be discussed § 2 The Renovation of all things by Jesus Christ is prophesied of end foretold as a new Creation of All even of the Heavens and the Earth and all things contained in them Psal. 65. 17 18. chap. 66. 22. 2 Pet. 3 13 Hence the state of things to be introduced thereby was under the Old Testament called the World to come Heb. 2. 5. So it is still called by the Jewish Masters 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So Kimchi amongst other Expositions of the Title of Psal. 92. a Psalm or Song for the Sabbath day addes this as that which the most antient Rabbins fixed on 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They interpreted it of the World to come which shall be wholly Sabbath and Rest and these are the dayes of the Messiah A spiritual Rest it is they intend and not a cessation of a Sabbath-day in particular seeing in the prophesie of the new Temple or Church-state in those dayes there is especial direction given for the service of the Sabbath-day Ezek. 46. 4. And this Renovation of all things is said accordingly to be accomplished in Christ 2 Cor. 5. 17 18. Old things are past away behold all things are become New the Old Law Old Covenant Old Worship Old Sabbath all that was peculiar unto the Covenant of Works as such in the first Institution of it and its renewed declaration on Mount Sinai all are gone and antiquated What now remains of them as to any usesulness in our living to God doth not abide on the Old foundation but on a New disposition of them by the Renovation of all things in Christ. For in the dispensation of the fulness of times God gathered unto an Head all things in Christ both which are in Heaven and which are on Earth even in him Ephes. 1. 10. The whole old Creation as far as it had any thing in its self or its order that belonged unto or communicated any thing towards our living unto God and his Glory is disposed anew in Christ Jesus unto that End But this Renovation of all which is the foundation of all our acceptable Obedience unto God and of his present Worship consists principally in the Regeneration of the Elect making them new Creatures and the erection of a new Church-state thereby to the Glory of God Now this new Creation of all must answer unto all the Ends of the Old in reference unto the Glory of God and the Good of them who are partakers of it otherwise it would not be so rightly called nor answer the declared Ends of it which was to gather all things to an Head in Christ Jesus For what was lost by sin as to the Glory of God in the old Creation in this was to be repaired and recovered § 3 We may then as the foundation of our present Discourse consider how these things answer unto one another First the old Creation comprized in it the Law of the Obedience of all Creatures unto God This was therein and thereby implanted on their Natures with inclinations Natural or Moral unto the Observation of it And thus must it be also in the new Creation as unto the subject of it which is the Church This Law of the old Creation unto Man consisted principally in the Image of God in him and con-created with him For hereby did he both know his duty and was enabled to perform it and was acquainted with his Relation unto God and dependance upon him which rendred it necessary and indispensible But this Law in the state of Creation fell under a double consideration or had a double use first of Rule and then as a Principle As a Rule the light that was in the mind of man which was a principal part of the Image of God in him acquainted him with his whole duty and directed him in the right performance of it As a Principle it respected the Ability that the whole man was endowed withall to live to God according to his duty This Law as to its first use being much impaired weakned and in a great measure made useless by sin God was pleased to restore it in the vocal Revelation of his Will especially in the Decalogue which with his own finger he wrote in Tables of Stone In answer hereunto a new Law of Obedience is introduced by the new Creation in Christ Jesus And this principally consisted in the Renovation of the Image of God in the new Creatures which was lost by sin For they are renewed in the spirit of their minds and do put on that new man which after God is created in Righteousness and true Holiness Ephes. 4. 23 24. And
yet surely there is nothing for it In the things that are so we have ground to expect the Assistance of the Spirit of Christ to enable us for their right observation to the Glory of God and our own edification or increase in Grace But it is a meer Precept of the Old Law as such And what the Law speaks it speaks unto them that are under the Law In all its Precepts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it exerciseth a severe Dominion over the souls and consciences of them that are under it And we have no way to extricate our selves from under that Dominion but by our being dead unto its power and Authority as such through the Death of Christ or an interest by Faith in the Benefits that through his fulfilling and satisfying the Law do redound to the Church But what is required of any one under the notion of the formal and absolute power of the Law is to be performed in and by that spirit which is administred by the Law and the strength which the Law affords and this indeed is great as to conviction of Sin nothing at all as unto Obedience and Righteousness Do men in these things appeal unto the Law unto the Law they must go For I know not any thing that we can expect Assistance of Gospel-Grace in or about but only those things which are originally moral or superadded unto them in the Gospel it self to neither of which Heads this observation of the seventh Day as such can be referred It is therefore a meer legal Duty properly so called and in a bondage frame of Spirit without any especial assistance of Grace it must be performed And how little we are beholding unto those who would in any one instance reduce us from the liberty of the Gospel unto bondage under the Law our Apostle hath so fully declared that it is altogether needless farther to attempt the manifestation of it Of the Lords-Day The Sixth Exercitation 1 Practice the end of Instruction and Learning 2 Practical observation of the Sabbath handled by many 3 Pleas concerning too much rigour and strictness in directions for the observation of the Sabbath 4 Extreams to be avoided in directions of sacred duties Extream of the Pharisees 5 The worse extream of others in giving liberty to sin 6 Mistakes in directions about the observation of the Lords Day 7 General directions unto that purpose proposed 8 Of the beginning and ending of the Sabbath The first Rule about Time 9 The frame of spirit required under the Gospel in the observation of the Lords Day 10 Rules and Principles for its due observation 11 Duties required thereunto of two sorts 12 Preparatory duties their necessity and nature 13 14 Particular account of them Meditation 15 Supplication 16 Instruction 17 18 Publick duties of the Day it self 19 What refreshments and labour consistent with them 20 Of private duties § 1 IT remains that something be briefly offered which may direct a practice suitable unto the principles laid down and pleaded For this is the End of all sacred Truth and all instruction therein This that great Rule of our blessed Saviour both teacheth us and obligeth us to an answerable duty If you know these things happy are ye if you do them Joh. 13. 17. words so filled with his wisdome that happy are they in whose hearts they are alwayes abiding The End then of our learning Scripture-Truths is to obtain such an Idea of them in our minds as may direct us unto a suitable practice Without this they are to us of no use or of none that is good 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Knowledge without practice puffeth not buildeth up For as Austin speaks with reference unto those words Con. Faust. Man lib. 15. cap. 8. Multa quibusdam sunt noxia quamvis non sint mala Things not evil yea good in themselves may be hurtfull unto others And nothing is usefull but as it is directed to its proper End This practice is unto sacred Truth § 2 I confess our endeavours herein may seem less necessary than in the foregoing Discourses For there are many Treatises on this part of our present Subject extant in our own language and in the hands of those who esteem themselves concerned in these things With some they meet indeed with no other entertainment than the Posts did that were sent by Hezekiah through Ephraim Manasseh and Zebulun to invite them unto the Passeover they are laughed to scorn and mocked at 2 Chron. 30. 10. But wisdome is justified of her children Unto some they are of great use and in great esteem And for the most part in the main of their design they do agree So that the Truth in them is established in the mouthes of many witnesses without danger of dividing the minds of men about it But yet I cannot take my self to be discharged hereby from the consideration of this concern also of a sacred Rest under the Gospel the nature of our design requiring it And there are yet important Directions for the right sanctifying of the Name of God in and by the due observance of a Day of sacred Rest which I have not taken notice to have been insisted on by others and whereas a due improvement may be expected of the peculiar principles before discussed I shall go through this part of the Work also § 3 Besides there are not a few complaints and those managed at least some of them by Persons of sobriety and learning pretending also a real care for the preservation and due observance of all duties of Piety and Religion that there hath been some excess in the Directions of many given about the due sanctification of the Lords Day And there is no small danger of mistakes on this hand whilest therein is a pretence of zeal and devotion to give them countenance Of this nature some men do judge some rigorous prescriptions to be which have been given in this matter And they say that a great disadvantage unto Religion hath ensued hereon For it is pretended that they are such as are beyond the constitution of humane nature to comply withall of which kind God certainly requires nothing at our hands Hence it is pleaded that men finding themselves no way able to come unto a satisfaction in answer unto the severe Directions for duties and the manner of their performance which by some are rigorously prescribed have taken occasion to seek for relief by rejecting the whole command which is duely interpreted in such a condescension as they were capable of a compliance withall they would have adhered unto On this account men have found out various inventions to colour their weariness of that strict course of duty which they were bound unto Hence have some taken up a plea that every Day is to them a Sabbath that so they might not keep any Some that there is no such thing as a sacred Rest on any Day required of us by the Authority of Christ and therefore that all