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A14653 The doctrine of the Sabbath Wherein the first institution of the vveekly Sabbath, with the time thereof, the nature of the law binding man to keep it, the true ground, and necessity of the first institution, and of the observation of it, on the severall day in the Old Testament, and also of the moving of it to the first day under the Gospel, are laid open and proved out of the Holy Scriptures. Also besides the speciall dueties necessarily required for the due sanctification thereof, those two profitable points are proved by demonstrations out of Gods Word. First, that the Lord Christ God and man, is the Lord of the Sabbath, on whom the Sabbath was first founded...2. That the faithfull under the Gospell are as necessarily bound to keep the weekly Sabbath of the Lords day... Deliverd in divers sermons by George Walker B. of Divinity and pastor of St. Iohn Evangelists Church in London. Walker, George, 1581?-1651. 1638 (1638) STC 24957; ESTC S103296 151,861 168

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of the weeke which they are bound to keepe for their weekly Sabbath This is that which is most controverted called in question among the learned in this age therfore comes to be first proued and clearly demonstrated by testimonies and proofes out of the holy Scriptures which being performed I proceed in the next place to the dutie of rest will shew how far Christians are bound unto it on their weekly Sabbath the Lords day And in the last place I will come to the speciall duties of sanctification by which that day is to be kept holy to the Lord now under the Gospell First for the day it selfe Some are of opinion that it is the same which was from the begining that is the seventh last day of the week This opinion is grounded upon the bare letter of the law as it was giuen both in the institution and sanctifying of the seventh day renewed againe in the fourth Commandement and understood by the fathers in the old Testament J confesse that the words of the law if we take them as they were limited to the fathers not considering wi●hall how and upon what grounds and conditions God made the seventh day the weekly Sabbath they seeme to favour their opinion For if we conceiue no mo●e but a mere cessation and rest of God from his works on the six daies created to be the ground of the law then we may also conceiue that the law of the weekly Sabbath binds all mankind to that particular day in all ages because the ground is the same to all men equally belongs to all men in all times to the worlds end O●hers are of opinion that the law of the Sabbath being but a mere ceremoniall law is a bolished by the comming of Christ and bindes not us under the Gospell to any particular day And that it is free for the Church of God to appoint any day for their holy assemblies and that Christians haue no Sabbath neither are bound to keepe any such rest as the law required in the old Testament Others hold that the law of the Sabbath is naturally simply morall in the generall nature of it as it requires a weekly Sabbath to be sanctified and kept holy and that the particular determination of the daie is an honour and prerogatiue which belongs to Christ the Redemer who is the Lord of the Sabbath And that it was the purpose of God from all eternity and in the first giving of the law as to consecrate the seventh day in memory of God perfecting all the works of creation resting from them on that day so also to consecrate by the resurrection of Christ the first day of the weeke to be ever after the weekly Sabbath in honour and memory of the worke of redemption which on that day was fully perfected by Christs rising from the dead and entering into that state of glory in which he rests for ever hauing no more to do for the ransoming and redeming of mankinde Gods justice being full satisfied The first of these opinions being grounded vpon a carnall vndestanding and imperfect sence of the words of the law hath but a weake and sandy found●tion and because as the first authors of it were blasphemous hereticks which erred in diuers fundamental points of christian faith and Religion Soe also the reviuers of it are either cursed Anabaptists or men who doe not rightly vnderstand the law nor the groundes and conditions vpon which it requires an holy weekly Sabbath Therefore it is justly hated and rejected as a Jewish errour the maintainers thereof haue in all true Christian Churches of all ages beene branded with the name of hereticall and Iudaicall Sabbatarians And I need not spend any precious time in confuting it and the frivolous fallacies by which it is maintained The second opinion being too rashly conceived and vnadvisedlie professed and held by some godly Divines of the reformed Churches who in this point do much contradict themselves also being an unsound opinion and therefore well relished by Popish Schoole-men malicious Iesuites licentious Liber●ines and men of profane hearts hath no ground in the Scriptures nor any sound Orthodox writings of any auncient fathers Yea bringing great confusion into the Decalouge which is the summe of the morall law and laying a foule staine upon our Church which hath appointed the commandement of the Sabbath to be read among the tenne Commandements and enjoynes the people to pray that God would incline their hearts to keepe that law as well as all and everie one of the rest Therefore I shall not spend any time in the confutation of it The arguments which are brought for the confutation of the contrary truth will sufficiently raze and vtterly abolish it out of the hearts of all true Christians The third opinion is most agreeable to the holy Scripture and the common Doctrine of the Orthodox writers both of auncient and later times especially of the most godly and learned in the Church of England who haue heretofore writen learned treatises of the Sabbath and expositions of the ten Commandements of the Decalogue And therefore I wil bee bold here againe to commend it to you for an undoubted truth which I haue aboundantly proued confirmed by many demonstratiue convincing arguments already partly in that large search which J haue made before into the nature of the law of the sabbath and that description which I haue made of it but most fully in that passage where I proued the change of the day by the resurrection of Christ from the seventh to the first day of the weeke now vnder the Gospel and brought diuers argumen●s to shew that the law which God gaue for the keeping holy of a seventh day in every weeke at the first institution of the Sabbath here in my text and renewed againe on mount Sina and giue ●f●en in charge by Moses to Israell doth now as strictly binde us to keepe an holy Sabbath on the Lords day in everie weeke as it bound the auncient people of God in the old Testament to keepe the Sabbath of the seventh day But for the confirming of your hearts in the beleife of this truth and in the knowledge of this duty I will not multiply any new arguments onely that you may more firmely retaine it in your memories and still beare it in minde that you are in conscience bound to keepe only the Lords daie and none other for your weekly Sabbath in these times of the Gospell J will bri●fly touch and explaine some principall heades which haue beene before laid down at large and in ample manner The summe whereof is this Namely That although the law of the Sabbath is not a law of nature in ●hat rigid sence in which some do conceive it that is a law written in mans heart expresly and distinctly in the creation which by the mere instinct of nature and direction of naturall reason did lead man to keepe everie seventh day of the
the weeke And in honour of the resurrection of Christ on that day hath from the time of the Apostles agreed to keepe that day for the Lords day not out of any opinion that God hath blessed sanctified it aboue all other daies of the weeke but onely for good orders sake and that it is lawfull for Gods people after publick exercises of religion and some needfull rest and refreshing to use necessarie laboures and bodily recreations which in themselves are not sinfull and unlawfull neither do hinder publick duties of religion and of Gods worship But on the contrarie it is the common doctrine of the most godly and learned in the Church of England ever since the reform●●ion of religion held maintained taught that although Christians are by Christ freed from the observation of the seventh day which was the Sabbath of the old Testament and from that servile bondage and rigorous rest which the law litterally and carnally vnderstood did impose on them or rather they by their carnal exposition wresting of the law did impose on themselves as not kindling of a fire nor liberty to heal the sick nor to do any worke of charitie and necessity on the S●bbath day which could not without danger be deferred Yet they are bound by the law which was first giuen here in my text and after by Moses and the Prophets to keepe in everie weeke an holy rest and that on the first day which is the Lords day because God hath blessed it with a blessing aboue all other daies even by exhibiting Christ a perfect redeemer in his resurrection and hath thereby consecrated that day to be his holie sabbath And that all bodilie laboures sports and recreations and all worldly negociation are by Gods law strictly prohibited now under the Gospell as they were in the daies of the Patriarches and Prophets and under the law Because indeed and in truth they crosse the holie purpose of God which he hath manifested in his law and are impediments of those holy exercises which are required in the sanctification of his holie day This doctrine and practise I hold to be the best and this we are all bound to receiue and imbrace and to cleaue vnto it not onely because it is the Doctrine of our Mother Church commended to us in the book of homilies established by divets lawes statutes and constitutions still in force but also because it is most consonant to the sacred Scriptures the precepts and practise of the Apostles and to the common Doctrine of the purest and most holy Orthoxe of the auncient fathers in the Primitiue times and ages next succeeding after the Apostles as by Gods assistance as J shall make cleare and manifest In the justifying proving of this Doctrine and in laying open the speciall duties of Christians which concerne rest and cessation from all worldly negociation and bodilie laboures on the Lords daie which is the Christian Sabbath I will shew First of all That rest and c●ssation from all bodilie laboures about the worldlie businesse and from all servile and and earthlie workes which concerne this fraile life is a necessarie dutie which God requires by his law of all Christians on the Lords daie which is their Holie weeklie Sabbath vnder the Gospell 2. That Gods law rightlie understood doth in respect of rest from worldly cares and all bodily workes and pleasures as strictly binde us vnder the Gospell on the Lords day as it bound the fathers upon their seventh day in the old Testament 3. I will shew how far Gods word law doth allow of bodily exercises which concerne this life and how farre in such exercises we may goe with good warrant upon the Lords holy Sabbath and what exercises are condemned in the word of God CHAP. 19. FOR the full proofe of the first point there are many strong and invincible arguments grounded vpon the word and law of God upon the generall consent of Orthodox divines both auncient and moderne even upon the confession of them who in this point much differ and seeme to deny that the Lords day either is or ought to be called a Sab. The first Argument is drawn from the words of the law which forbids all workes to be done on the Sabbath day either by man himselfe or his children servants or cattell as Exod. 20 10. Deut. 5.14 where it is said In it thou sh●lt not do any worke thou nor thy son nor thy servant nor thy cattell Exod. 35.2 Leuit. 23.7 Yee shall do no servile work● therein whosoeve● doth any work therin shall be put to death The reasons why the Lord requires rest from all servile worke on the Sabbath day are two First because he who is the Lord our God and our Redeemer hath on that day rested from his worke and him we ought to imitate if we will enter into his rest Secondly because he hath blessed the day which is his Sabbath aboue all daies of the weeke and wheresoever the causes and reasons stand firme there the law is still in force Now this law of the Sabbath doth reach to the Lords day As J haue proved before the reasō vpon which it requirs rest frō se●vile works are much more to be found in the Lords day which is the Christian Sab then in the Old Sabbath of the seventh day For in it Christ who is God ouer all blessed for ever and who is our Redeemer from a greater then Egyptian bondage even the slauery of sinne death and hell and the Divell hath rested from the great worke of redemption as God the Creatour did one the seventh day from the worke of creation And this day is now by Christs resurrection in which Christ perfected mans redemption blessed with a blessing farre more excellent then any wherewith God blessed the seventh day Therfore this is the Sabbath now under the Gospell in it God requirs of us by his law a rest total cessatiō frō al servile works Secondly whatsoever day is the Lords holy day a day of holy convocations assemblies that is a Sab of rest frō al servile works worldly busines this is manifest Exod. 12.16 31.15 35.2 Leuit. 32.3 7 which places do plainly shew that every day which is holy to the Lord and a day of holy assemblies is a Sab of rest no worke may be done therin And so likewise in all the law the Prophets every day which is a day of holy convocation an holy day is called a Sab day of rest from our own works pleasures every Sab is called the Lords holy day for these two are termini convertibiles termes which may be naturally affi●med one of another as apeares Neh. 9 14 Isa 58 13 Now the Lords day in the time of the Gospell is the chiefe of all holy dayes among Christians It was sanctified observed by the Apostles for their day of holy assemblies from the first publishing
all our owne ordinarie and common workes and labours Fourthlie they who are more spirituall and haue haue liuely hope of Heaven and haue the spirit shed on them more abundantlie they are more bound by Gods law to sequester themselves and withdraw their mindes from worldlie cares and more to minde heavenlie things as at all other times so on the Lords holie daie which is consecrated to heavenly spirituall and religious worship and seruice of God is a pledg to them of eternall rest with Christ in heaven For to whome God hath given more of them shall more bee required Now it is most plainly testified in the Scriptures That Christians vnder the Gospell are more spirituall and haue the spirit more abundantly shed on them through Christ then the Fathers had Act. 2.17 Tit. 3.6 The Ministery of the new Testament is the ministery of the spirit not of the letter 2 Cor. 3.6 And we haue now more evidence more assurance of the blessed hope reserued in heaven for vs. Colos. 1.5 There is Christ our life and Treasure Colos. 3 1.2 And there our hearts ought to be and not on earthly things We must now be ready if Christ call vs to sell all and to giue to the poore that we may haue treasure in heaven Therefore we are bound by the law especially on the Lords day our weekly holy day to be more sequestered from the world and to rest wholy from all cares and labours about earthly things that we may be wholy deuoted to heavenly things and to divine meditations Lastly though Auncient Fathers and Doctours of the Church did much condemne in their writings the observation of the Sabbath after the manner of the later Iewes to weet in idlenesse and from resting from all worldly affaires that they might spend the day in vaine sports and delights and in wanton leaping and dauncing which in the graue judgment of these learned Fathers Was worse and more prophane then plowing and digging and working in woll Yet notwithstanding they doe generally commend the Lords day as a day of rest to all Gods people from all rurall workes and worldly affaires that they may be at leasure to exercise themselues in holy duties and be wholy devoted to the worshipp of God And hereupon it is that the learned of these later times especially the builders of Gods Church in this land do most frequently in respect of this rest and cessarion from al seculiar affaires call the Lords day the Sabbath of Christians as appeares in the first part of the Homily of the time and place of prayer and do affirme that as the Fathers in the old Testament were bound to rest one the seventh day from all manner of worke Soe also are Christians bound on the Lords day to rest and that by the law of God CHAP. 20 THE second position which I haue propounded before which now Comes to be proved is That Gods law rightly understood doth in respect of this duty of rest from all worldly affaires as strictly bind us under the Gospell on the Lords day as it bound the fathers on the Sabbath of the seventh day in the old Testament Here some will perhaps imagine that I goe about to laye an heavy yoke of Jewish legall bondage upon Christians contrary to Christian liberty by which Christ hath made us free But if they remember and beare in minde what I haue before proued to weet That the fathers from the beginning had no such burden imposed on them as is commonly conceived and that the Scrip●ures are alleaged to proue that they might not kindle a fire nor dresse meate nor goe out of their place on the Sabbath day and that it was death to gather sticks on that day in case of necessity are much mistaken They shall be forced to confesse that I take away the heavy yoke which many lay upon the Fathers in the old Testament ra●hen then lay any yoke upon Christians in the obseruation of the Sabbath Yea that I require and urge no more then that which all the learned of best note in all ages haue ever since the time of the Apostles and by tradition from them commended to the Churches of Christ which also the lawes Canons and Doctrine of the Church of England generally receiued and established doe impose on us the light burden and easie yoke of Christ. It is true that the Scribes and Pharises those great corrupters of the law and blinde Hypocrites as our Saviour cals them did lay an heavy yoke on the people of their time by their false glosses and corrupt traditions as in diuers other points so in the obseruation of the Sabbath They held it unlawfull in case of necessity to pull an eare of corne or any fruite from a tree on the Sabbath day and blamed Christs Disciples for doing so when they were hungry and had no other meanes to keepe themselues from fainting They accused our Saviour Christ for working a glorious miracle and doing a worke of great charity on the Sabbath when by his word he healed some that were sick of great infirmities and sent them away bearing their beds on their backes in open sight of all which tended much to the honour of God and made the people glorifie Christ and his Gospell But our Saviour reproues them for this strictnesse and convinceth them of errour by diuers argument● First by Scripture which saith that God will haue mercy rather then sacrifice that is God is serued more acceptably with workes of mercy which are morall duties then sacrifices which are but a seruice ceremonial he delights more in works of mercy charity then in them as at all times so when they are done to his glory on the Sab day So that if it was a breach and prophanation of the Sab to do any worke of mercie in it then it must needs be much more a prophanation to labour worke about sacrifices in killing beasts dressing washing their flesh making fires to burne them on the Altar which were not so pleasing to God as works of mercy But the Pharisees allowed approued such works of sacrificing durst not condemn thē And th●●for our Saviour concludes that they ought not to condemne his mercifull works of healing the sick on the Sab day shewes that by censuring his doings for prophanation they did much more censure the forenamed actions of their Priests even the dressing burning sacrifices mat 12.5.6.7 Secondly our Saviour proues that by Gods owne law they were allowed to circumcise children on the Sab day whensoever it happened to fall out on the eight daie after the birth of children and to the Child circumcised they applied healing medicin●s and therfore they groslie erred in accusing him for healing on the Sabbath which was a thing pleasing to God and was a lesse labour then Circumcision Iohn 7.22 Thirdlie he convinceth them of grosse hypocrisie and blindnesse in that they imposed heavie burdens upon
others which they themselves would not beare they did restraine men from pulling an eare of corne rubbing eating it on the Sabbath daie in the case of hunger great necessitie And yet they led their oxen to the water and did pull a sheepe or a asse out of a pitt on the Sabbath daie Mat. 12.11 Luk. 13.15 14.5 By these arguments which our Saviour vsed against the Scribes and Pharisees in the Gospell it is most cleare and manifest that it was not the law of God given from the beginning nor the will of God the lawgiuer but onely the Hipocriticall Scribes and Pharises who by their traditions devices of their owne brains imposed on the Iews that strict and rigorous rest and cessation from all works whatsoever on the Sabbath day which the learned fathers and Christian writers do cal an heauy burden hard to be borne Object But it may bee some will object that the fathers in the old Testament were bound to offer double sacrifices on Sabbath daie Num. 28.9 even two lambes of the first yeare without spott and two tenth deales of flower For a meate offering mingled with oyle the drink● offering thereof Which was more costly required more bodily labour and care then any which is imposed on us Chri●●ian● by Gods law upon our Christian Sabbat● and therefore their observation of the Sabbath was an heavie yoke burden harder to be borne then ●ny which is imposed on us Answ. I answer that this objection doth strongly proue the point in hand For if more bodilie labour and care was required of the Fathers in their worship which was more carnall bodilie then ours on their Sabbath and vve are therefore eased of that yoke haue a more spirituall vvorship taught us and imposed on us by Christ and his Apostles as the Prophets foretold Then vvere the Fathers lesse restrained from bodilie laboures then wee are neither was there soe strict and rigorous a Rest and Cessation imposed on them which serues much for the justifying of our position to weet That Gods law rightly understood and expounded according to the will and intent of God the lawgiuer doth as strictly bind us under the Gospell to Rest from all worldlie businesse on the Lords day as it bound the fathers one the seventh day in the old Testament But to proceed in the further manifestation of this truth Although I could bring many arguments and proofes both out of Scripture alsoe out of the writings of the learned and cleare testimonies which shew the consent of all Godlie Orthodox vvrititers of all ages Yet because I vvill leave no occasion or colour to such sonnes of Beliall as doe intrude into our assemblies to catch calumniate and report my vvords safely and to accuse my Doctrine except they vvill h●rden their despeand malicious hearts and put on brasen faces vvith vvhorish foreheads to accuse the holy Scriptures and the Doctrine published in the booke of Homilyes and by lavv established in this Church of England vvherof vve are members therefore I vvill onely commend to your consideration the publick Doctrine of our Church in the verie vvords of the Homilies vvhich both by statut● lavv and Royall perogatiue are established in this land and Kingdome and vvill shevv hovv parfectlie they agree vvith holie scripture in this point First in the first part of the Homilie Concerning the time and place of prayer We are taught that God in the f●urth Commandement hath appointed the time for his people to assemble themselves together solemnly when he said Remember that thou keepe holy the sabbath Secondly in the same place it is affirmed that the praecise keeping of the seventh day and the externall ceremoniall worshippe of the sabbath which the law required as it wa● given to the Jew●s being b●t C●remoniall are ceased to us and we are not bound by the law so strictly to forbeare worke and labour in the case of necessity after the manner of the Iewes That is as they were taught by the Scribes and Pharisees But we keepe now the first day of the weeke which is our sunday and make that our Sabbath that is our day of rest in the honour of our Lord Christ who as upon that day rose from death conquering the same most triumphantly These are the words of the Homily And that the keeping of a set time to weet one day in weeke wherein wee ought to rest from lawfull and needfull workes Js found in the fourth Command●ment among th● things which appertain to the law of nature is a thing most godly most just and needfull for the setting forth of Gods Glory and ough● to 〈◊〉 retained kept of all good Christian people So is it there expresly affirmed Thirdly we are there ●aught That as by the fourth commandement no man on the six dayes ought to be slothfull or idle but diligently to labour in their estate wherein God hath set him Even so God hath given expresse charge to all men that on the Sabbath day which is now our Sunday they sho●ld 〈◊〉 from all worldly and worke day labour and that Gods obedient people should use the Sabbath holily and so rest from their common dayly businesse that they may giue themselves wholy to Heavenly exercises of Gods true religion and service Fourthly in the same Homily all Gods people are urged and pressed to keepe the Sunday for their holy Sabath by three A●guments The first is the commandement of God in the law The second is Gods examample who rested on the Seventh day and did no worke of creation at all but blessed and sanctified it and consecrated it to quietnesse and rest from labour The third is an example of the Apostles who immediately after the ascention of our Lord Christ began to keepe this day of the week commended it the first Churches of the Gentiles 1 Cor. 16 and called it the Lords day Revel 1.10 Sithens which time Gods people hath alwaies with out any gainsaying obserued it Fifthly and lastly the Homilies shewes that the rest and cessation which God requires by his law one the Lords day at the hands of us Christians is the same which the law did bind the fathers unto from the beginning upon this Sabbath in the old testament First whereas the law commanded the Fathers to rest from all such workes as they are allowed to do on the other common dayes of the weeke that is wordly labours as the expresse words of the law shew In it thou sh●lt not do any worke thou nor thy sonne nor thy daugther nor thy servant c. Exod. 20.10 And again thou shalt do no servile work therin Levit. 23.7 thou shalt do no manner of servile worke Num. 28.18 So the Homily blames all those people for wicked boldnesse carelesse prophanation of the Lords day who make no conscience of doeing their worldly businesse one that day though there bee no extreame need and necessity Secondly as the law forbids journeying
from home about worldly affaires on the sabbath Exod. 16.29 bringing in and carrying out loads and burdens Ier. 17.27 exercising themeselves in the workes of their ordinary calling trade as buying selling keeping market and faires on that day So also the Homily condemnes them as transgressours profaners of the Lords sabbath who on the sunday which is the Lords day and Christian sabbath do not spare to ride and journey bring and carry row and ferry buy and sell keepe markets and faires and so use the Lords holy dayes and worke dayes both a like Thirdly as the law and the Prophets commanded Gods people in the old testament to rest in holynesse Exod. 31.14 35.2 and not pollute the sabbath by doing their owne pleasure but to honour the Lord not doing their own wayes nor finding their own pleasure nor speaking their owne words Isa. 58.13 So also the Homily requires of all Gods people the same Holy rest on the Lords day in that it condemnes them who follow vain and carnall sportes and fleshly pleasures and all such exercises as cause brawling and railing and tending to wantonnesse as a worse sort of people then they that breake the sabbath by working and doing all their businesse in it For these are the words of the Homily The other sort is yet worse for though they will not travell and labour on the sunday as on the weeke day Yet they will not rest in holinesse as God commandeth but they rest in vngodlinesse and filthynesse praunsing in their pride pranking and pricking pointing and painting themselues to be Gorgeous and Gay they rest in excesse and superfluity in Gluttony and drunkennesse like Rats and swine they rest in brawling and rayling in quarrelling and fighting They rest in wantonnesse ●oyish ●alking and filthy fleshlynesse So that it doth evidently appeare that God is more dishonoured and the Divell better served upon Sunday then all other dayes of the week besides And I assure you the beasts which are commanded to rest one the sunday honour God better then this kinde of people Now by these expresse words of the Homily we se most clearly that both this and the former position are not any new Doctrines or factious opinions of my owne devising as some malicious catchers false traducers haue slaunderously reported both of them mee But the true Orthodox Doctrine of the Scriptures in the law the Prophets new Testament the divine doctrin pubklickly receiued in the Church of England by law established For the further confirmation whereof J could say much besides the strong Arguments which I haue brought to proue the former position which doe ouer and aboue most strongly proue this also For 1. Jf the Lords day be a more blessed day then the seventh daie was in the old Testament 2. Jf it bee a more holie day a daie of more holy convocations assemblies 3. Jf we haue as much as manifold use of rest cessation as they had more 4. Jf we be bound by Gods law by the Gospel to be more spirituall more sequestred from the world because we haue more abundant gifts of the spirit more cleare sight knowledg of heavenly eternall rest more hope of eternall life glory Then it must needs follow that we by Gods law are as strictly bound to rest cease from all worldlie cares bodily workes sports and pleasures as the Fathers were in the old testament But because slaunderous traducers shal haue nothing here to object against me in this point except they can desperately harden their hear●s and faces to accuse blaspheme wound thr●ugh my sides the holie Scriptures and the publick doctrine of the Church of England by the law established and royall authoritie maintained I will content my selfe desire you my hearers to be satisfied with this which I haue said you haue heard alreadie And so I passe to the third point befor propounded concerning the dutie of rest even the manner measur● of it in what cases Gods law permits bodily exercises on the L day CHAP. 21. HOwsoeu●r all worldlie workes and labours are forbidden and rest From them all is commanded in the law yet the equitie of the law permits some labours and exercises and in some cases allowes such bodilie workes as are ordinarilie vnlawfull to be done on the Lordes holie Sabbath daie First of all it is lawfull for Ministers and preachers of Gods word to doe some painfull and laborious workes upon the Lords daie even all such as are necessarie for the better sanctification of the daie and for the edification of the people and flock in publick Though they are not allowed to neglect their studies on the six daies but are bound to read study meditate for help of their memories to write downe the heads points and proofes of their Doctrine before the day of assembly Yet because few or none are so perfect as to preach publick with good order Method and readinesse of speach and memorie that which they haue studied without searching and reading ouer the testimonies of Scripture which they haue collected and studied noting down writing some which come new fresh to their mind serious meditating upon that which they are to speak for better imprinting of it in their mem●ries Therefore their is a necessity laid on them to labour in this kinde on the Lords Sabbath A●d though it be a great labour of the body to stand up preach in the congregation with intention of the voyce earnestnes of affection doth more spend the spirits strength of the body makes drops of sweat run downe the face more abundantly then the tilling of the ground Yet the matter in which they deale is holy all their worke is religious their labour tends to an holy supernatural end is necessary for a ful sanctification of the day therf●re it is not only allowed but also required commandement by the law of God If any doth make a doubt or question of this truth we haue very strong proofe thereof in the holy Scriptures Th● first Argument is drawne from the hard bodily labours artificiall practises of the Preists which they vver● by the law bound to performe in their double sacrifices offerings on the Sab day in the old Testament they were bound to flealambs to dresse wash the flesh the intrals to offer them up in sacrifices on the Altar thy were bound to lay them upon wood on the Altar to kindle the fire burne the fat some part of the flesh also they were to take a tenth deale of flower to mingle it with oyle to make the drinke offering thereof also to offer all to God as we read Num. 28.9 Now if God by his law allowed commanded such bodily works on the Sab day because they were needfull for sacrifices Circumcision which were but a ceremoniall