Selected quad for the lemma: ground_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
ground_n day_n lord_n sabbath_n 2,255 5 9.8890 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A94296 Of religious assemblies, and the publick service of God a discourse according to apostolicall rule and practice. / By Herbert Thorndike. Thorndike, Herbert, 1598-1672. 1642 (1642) Wing T1054; Thomason E1098_1; ESTC R22419 207,469 444

There are 3 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

doubt that the proper day of it was solemnized from the beginning acknowledging as we do that it was the ground of determining the day which we celebrate through the yeare in stead of the Jews Sabbaths and seeing the Apostles assembled the next Pentecost after it Acts ii 1. we know there was from the beginning a great deal of difference and debate about the time those ancient Christians of Asia solemnizing it according to the Moon by a custome pretended to come from S. John whereof we reade in Policrates his Epistle related in Eusebius Eccl. Hist v. 22. the rest upon the first day of the week upon which our Lord rose again These that differed so much about the time agreed alwayes in observing the Festivall So they did in observing the Fast before it that were at much difference as well about the number of dayes as the measure of abstinence Ireneus in his Epistle to Victor of Rome in Eusebius Eccles Hist v. 23. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For the difference is not about the day alone but about the very kind of fasting for some think they are to fast one day some two some more some measure their day fourty houres of the day and night The Passion-day was commonly kept of all with Publick Fasting as Tertullian acknowledgeth De orat c. 14. that is the one day whereof Ireneus speaketh But besides De Jejun c. 2. relating the opinion and practice of the Church against which he writeth there for the discipline of Montanus Certè in Evangelio illos dies jejunio determinatos putant quibus ablatus est sponsus For certain they think saith he those dayes to be appointed for Fasting in the Gospel on which the Bridegroom was taken away That is the Passion-day and the Saturday after it according to Tertullian De Jejun c. 14. where the Sabbath or Saturday is qualified Nunquam nisi in Pascha jejunandum Never but at Easter to be fasted And the appointment of the Gospel whereof he speaketh is that Mark ii 20. The dayes shall come in which the Bridegroom shall be taken from you and then shall ye fast in those dayes or on those dayes as then it seemeth they understood it But in that which remaineth of I. reneus his words there is and seemeth to have been for divers hundred years a slight difference of reading in the copies of Eusebius which inferreth a main difference in the sense That reading which Christoferson translated in Latine acknowledged of late by Petitus Var. Lect. iii. 4. though it is unknown to me from what copies hath them thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is For some think they are to fast one day some two some more some fourty and they measure their day by the houres of the day and night Meaning that when they fast they fast from evening to evening Which is more Ruffinus read it no otherwise for thus he translateth those last words Nonnulli etiam quadraginta Ità ut horas diurnas nocturnásque computantes diem statuant Meaning that some fasted fourty dayes but that those which fasted fourty dayes computed every day foure and twenty houres of the day and night By this reading those some of whom Ireneus speaketh kept Lent fourty dayes even afore his time though as Petitus fairly conjectureth not upon all but upon some dayes of each week as it hath been shewed that the Jews kept their long Fasts but on Mundayes and Thursdayes and as he duly proveth that in S. Augustines and Leo the Greats time they fasted the Lent at Rome but three dayes in a week The other reading related afore is from Robert Stevens Greek which Nicephorus followeth for so he is translated in Latine Nonnulli autem quadraginta horis diurnis noctur-nisque diem metiuntur to say That some measured that one day which they fasted by fourty houres of the day and night To make good which reading B. Rhenanus in his Preface to Ruffinus complaining of the want which he found of the Greek of Eusebius out of which much might have been mended in that Latine instanceth in this passage thus Incidi nuperrimè in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quandam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gracam quam cùm evolverem occurrerunt forte fortuna Irenaei verba quae Eusebius C. xxiii L. v. citat de jejuniorum diversitate sic Graecè habentia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Very lately saith he I lighted upon a certain abbridgement of Evangelicall History in Greek which turning over I met by mere chance with the words of Ireneus which Eusebius citeth xxiii 5. concerning difference in fasting which in Greek runne thus For some fasted one day some two some more some fourty houres of the day and night fasting an houre for a day that is fourty houres for the fourty dayes of Lent afterwards This reading maketh the conjecture probable that it was first called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or quadragesima for the number of fourty houres which they fasted at the beginning for the time of our Lords being under the power of death from twelve on Friday till the Sunday morning For in the Constitutions of the Apostles v. 14. the Fast is not to be ended till then at Cocks crowing which afterwards was inlarged to fourty dayes as the Authour alledged by Rhenanus saith That it was at the first of fourty houres an houre for a day to wit of those dayes that were observed afterwards The issue of this dispute Whether fourty dayes were observed in the Church before Ireneus his time or not must rest upon the true reading of his words in Eusebius For though there is mention of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Quadragesima in Ignatius and perhaps elsewhere yet it is not said to be called so from fourty dayes in the writings of those times to my knowledge In the mean time it is manifest that there is no time of the Church to be assigned when the Festivall of the Resurrection and the Fast afore it was not solemnized The Fast upon Wednesdayes and Fridayes is referred to the like reason in the Constitutions of the Apostles v. 14. vii The Wednesday is to be fasted saith he because on it our Lord was betrayed and the bargain made between Judas and the Priests The Friday because he suffered upon it Epiphanius alledging the like reason referreth the order to the Apostles Expos Fidei Cathol 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But the Assemblies we hold are appointed by the Apostles upon the Wednesday and Friday and upon the Lords day upon those in Fasting untill the ninth houre I marvell not to heare him referre those Customes whereof they knew no beginning to the Order of the Apostles But the terms on which the Catholick Christians stand against Montanus and his sect in Tertullian de Jejun c. ii may help to lead us to the true ground of it Itaque de caetero indifferenter jejunandum ex arbitrio non ex imperio novae disciplinae pro
men and women vailing or uncovering their heads in those Assemblies and concerning celebrating the Eucharist with the Feasts of Love used then at common meetings with the grounds whereupon they proceed adding to both such passages of Scripture as fall in with the meaning of these speaking home to what was done or prescribed to be done at their religious Assemblies perhaps by this means we shall be furnished of such principles and such rules derived thence as the Scriptures afford the Church to proceed upon as well in the substance of that which is to be done in the Publick Service of God as in the form and course and circumstances of it And this upon the by will minister just occasion to inquire further into the condition of those Graces and Ministeries by which the severall parts of this work were exercised at that time according to the Apostle or intended to be exercised in after ages To which point having said something of late in a little tract of the Primitive government of Churches and finding it too much slighted there because the particular discourse of it suted not with the modell of that Treatise my desire is to take it in hand upon this occasion once more and inquire what further satisfaction the consideration of Publick Service at their religious Assemblies will yield them that desire the truth as concerning the nature and condition of ministeries first instituted for that purpose CHAP. II. Dayes of Assemblies appointed by the Law The Morall Service of God not specified in it but collected from it How the Jews are taxed for spending the Sabbath in pastime Places of such Assemblies not provided in it The Priests charged to teach the Law by deciding controversies of it The Chair of Moses the Chair of Prophets High places to what purpose Beginning of Synagogues Disciples of Prophets studied to be Prophets They ministred the Morall Service of God in High places and Synagogues OF the Figurative Service proper to the Law of Moses and that people which received it of the kinds and times and place for offering sacrifices there is particular appointment in it but of serving God by Prayer or hearing his Word you have there so much the lesse remembrance In Leviticus xxiii we find the particular of all their Solemnities that are called holy Assemblies For thus the generall is propounded vers 2. The Assemblies of the Lord which ye shall proclaim for holy Convocations these are my Assemblies The first of these is the Sabbath then the Passeover Pentecost the beginning of the New year the day of Atonement and the Feast of Tabernacles And with leave I rather use the word Assemblies then Feasts in this place because the name of Feasts is proper to those Solemnities which are to be celebrated with joy and chearfulnesse whereas in this number the day of Atonement was to be observed with the greatest humiliation that could be expressed The Originall word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 conteining all Assemblies such as all these are commanded to be and as I take it none else For that which is read Psal lxxxi 3. Blow up the Trumpet in the new Moon in the time appointed against the day of our Feasts dependeth upon the Law Numb x. 10. Also in the day of your gladnesse and in your solemn Feast dayes or rather dayes of Assemblies for the word is the same that I translated so afore and in the beginning of your Moneths you shall blow with your Trumpets over the burnt-offerings and over the sacrifice of your peace-offerings that they may be to you for a memoriall before your God Where we see three sorts of Solemnities distinguished First the day of your gladnesse conteining Solemnities to be celebrated with chearfulnesse of heart that is Feasts Then the solemn dayes of Assemblies as the word signifieth conteining besides those Assemblies for humiliation as the day of Atonement And last the beginnings of your Moneths wherein peculiar sacrifices are injoyned Numb xxviii 11. And here it is provided that Trumpets should be sounded over those sacrifices by the Priests in the Tabernacle but that no Assembly is appointed to be upon them the difference here made between them and their dayes of Assemblies is presumption enough But in particular the first and last dayes of the Passeover and Feast of Tabernacles the one whereof was kept for seven dayes the other for eight were to be solemn Assemblies which the rest were not and therefore in the Greek of the Septuagint are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or great dayes to wit of those Feasts in comparison of the lesse Esay i. 13. The New Moons and Sabbaths the calling of Assemblies I cannot away with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The calling of Assemblies is here translated Great dayes as in the Gospel John vii 37. In the last day the GREAT DAY of that Feast By which Translation that which is generall in the Originall is restrained to the first and last dayes of those two Festivals Now the Sabbath was the greatest of all Solemnities appointed for Assemblies For they were commanded so to rest from bodily labour as not to kindle fire to dresse the meat they eat upon it For as in Exod. xvi 5 16 29. God contesteth that he gave them a double measure of Manna the day before that they might dresse it against the Sabbath So we have again Exod. xxx 3. You shall kindle no fire throughout your habitations upon the Sabbath The same Levit. xxiii 3. where Abenezra IN ALL YOUR HABITATIONS that is in your land and out of your land at home and upon the way To teach us that it was not for the time that they lived upon Manna in the wildernesse that they were forbidden to kindle fire upon the Sabbath but through ALL THEIR HABITATIONS wheresoever they dwelt afterwards And many have observed that in Levit. xxiii it is not said of any other day but of the Sabbath and the day of Atonement Thou shalt do no work upon it but of the other dayes of Assemblies Thou shalt do no Servile work upon them to shew us the difference between them that upon the Sabbath and day of Atonement it was prohibited to dresse the meat of the day but upon other Solemnities that was permitted but to do any work that men were wont to put their slaves to was prohibited which is the received practice of the Jews and hath a just ground in the Scripture Exod. xii 16. where of the first and last day of the Passeover is said No manner of work shall be done in them save that which every man must eat that onely may be done or dressed of you Abenezra upon that place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of none of the solemn Assemblies beside the Sabbath and day of Atonement it is said NOMANNER OF VVORK Onely of the Passeover he saith it and addeth an exception of the meat of the soul that is requisite for the sustenance of nature Here is a strict command of bodily
Law which they begin to reade over again the next Sabbath pointed at Nehem. viii 9. ix 1. as Scaliger De Emend Temp. vii Not. in Comp. Jud. hath excellently observed It is first to be known that the Festivals of the Law were appointed to be solemnized with mirth and gladnesse of heart wherefore they are called Num. x. 10. The dayes of your gladnesse And in the Psalme for the Sabbath xcii 4. the Psalmist in this respect For thou Lord hast made me glad through thy works saith he I will triumph in the works of thy hands expressing the subject of that gladnesse the remembrance of the Creation upon that day celebrated Though the observance of rest upon the Sabbath was strict yet when our Saviour went into the house of one of the chief Pharisees to eat bread on the Sabbath Luke xiv 1. this invitation and entertainment is argument enough that it was Festivall for the manner of observance Hereupon it is that the people falling to weep upon hearing the Law read the first day of the Feast of Tabernacles Nehem. viii 9. are forbidden to violate the Law of the Feast and commanded to observe the day in the right nature of it Whereas the people then being forbidden to mourn on the Festivall are said ix 1. to have fasted on the xxiiii of that moneth we have cause to presume with him that the Fast whereof they acknowledged the cause upon the first day of that Feast was deferred till the usuall Solemnities of it were past which by the Law ending upon the xxii and the Fast not kept till the xxiiii it is plain that the reason was the Festivall of the Law falling then and observed upon the xxiii as now not by the Law but by the Constitution of their Elders The third is the Feast of the wood-offering of which Nehem. x. 34. And we cast lots among the Priests the Levites and the People for the wood-offering to bring it into the house of our God after the houses of our fathers at times appointed yeare by yeare to burn upon the Altar of the Lord our God as it is written in the Law And xiii 31. And for the wood-offering at times appointed The same Scaliger conceiveth out of Josephus that this Festivall fell upon the xxii of the moneth Ab to which sense he referreth the words of Orach Hajim AB est rex quòd in eo caederent ligna in Sacrificium AB is a King among Moneths because upon it they cut wood for the Sacrifice But the truth is that which the Misna relateth Mass Taanith C. iv n. 5. that it was held for nine dayes of severall moneths whereof a great part fell in that moneth For this is that which the Scripture saith At times appointed yeare by yeare The last is the Dedication of the Temple by Judas Maccabeus which our Lord observed John x. 22. neither is it within the compasse of common sense to imagine that he did otherwise in the rest of the Solemnities which were then for certain in the Jews Calendar As for their times of Fasting the day of Atonement stood by the Law of Moses and the rest appointed for it as strict as that of the Sabbath but the nature of the observance quite otherwise with humiliation and afflicting the Soul There were divers other Fasts which that people took upon them to observe not upon the Law but upon publick Order and Custome upon set dayes of severall moneths as in their Calender is yet to be seen whereof some are remembred in the Scriptures Zach. vii 5. and viii 19. we reade of the Fasts of the fourth and fifth and seventh and tenth moneths in remembrance of those calamities which God had punished the sinnes of that people with upon those dayes most of them still remembred in their writings Besides that which is read in the Law of Moses Num. x. 9. And if you go to warre in your land with your enemies that distresse you then you shall blow an alarm with the Trumpets hath been from old time understood in the practice of that people of all distresses that came upon them for their sinnes and of Proclaiming Fasts for strict repentance and diverting Gods wrath Maimoni Taanioth C. i. num 1. The Order of which Fasts was grounded upon that which the words of the Pharisee point at Luke xviii 12. I fast twice in the week For without doubt the second and fifth day of the week Mundayes and Thursdayes were observed many ages afore that for the purposes which the same Rabbi specifieth Tephillah Ubircath Cohenim C. xii n. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Our Lord Moses appointed Israel to reade the Law at morning Prayer upon the Sabbath and the second and the fifth that they might not rest three dayes from hearing the Law and Esra appointed to reade it at evening Prayer upon the Sabbath because of idle persons And he ordered that three men should reade upon the second and fifth and not lesse then ten verses And in Megillah C. i. num 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those that dwell in villages that Assemble not in the Synagogues but upon the second and the fifth These are his words by which it appeareth that these dayes were more solemn for Assemblies then the rest of the week seeing that in villages they Assembled upon them in the Synagogues which upon every day they did not The words of the Pharisee bear further that they were observed with fasting and besides Epiphanius their own writers have delivered no lesse But the observance without doubt was not so strict upon them else could not the Pharisee have alledged it for his own praise And the Order of proclaimed Fasts whereof I began to speak argueth no lesse It was at the least for three dayes beginning at the Munday and so on the Thursday and Munday next Maimoni Taanioth C. i. n. 5. But if seven dayes of fasting were appointed then they went on interchangeably from the first Munday C. iii. n. 5. So the Congregation fasted not on Sabbaths or Festivals neither did they begin fasting on New-moons or the Dedication or Purim or the working day of a Feast that is the dayes that come between the first and last of the Passeover and Tabernacles but if they had begun afore they went on upon these dayes C. i. n. 6 7. If these dayes then had been fasted ordinarily with such strict observance then could not the extraordinary Fasts which were purposely cast upon the same dayes have been perceived The institution and observation of these Solemnities in the Synagogue as it regarded no Ceremoniall Service which figured things to come but the Service of God by publick Prayers and the Praises of God with hearing his Word upon the remembrance of his blessings or of our misdeeds was a due President for the Church to follow according to the chief occasions ministred by the Principles of our Faith The Resurrection of our Lord in the first place Who can