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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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vvhich is the last in the vveeke rather then any other if the Church so determine it if it bee obserued vvithout any superstitious conceipt of more holinesse in that day or annexed to it rather then any other The fourth opinion is that the first lavv for observation of the vveekly Sabbath vvas the fourth commandement given from mount Sina that is did bind only the Isralits to keep the sevē●h day of the vveek for an holy Sabbath untill the cōming of Christ but novv under the gospel it is abolish●d in respect both of the particular day also the strictnes of the obseruation only the equity of it remains in the Lords day the obseruation vvherof is commēded to us by the example of the Apostles ●ovv the lavv of keeping it holy is only ecclesiasticall an holy ordinance of the Church· Thus you see vvhile men build vpon vnsure and vnstable grounds not upon the certain vvords of holy Scripture compared together made to runne in a svveet harmony hovv various different they are hovv contrary some of them in their opinions For the removing of all doub●s setling of mens judgments in a sure vvay so farre as God shal enable me I vvill endeavour to select single out vvhatsoever I finde in these severall opinions to be agreeable to the truth to the sacred vvord of God reject the rest vvill ad more over what is wanting to make up a perfect Doctrine not out of mine owne conjections but out of canonicall Scriptures for that is the sure rule of all necessary saving and sanctified knowledge that must be the sure guid when Fathers Councels Churches do lead vs into severall doubtfull wayes First for them who hold that the law of the Sabbath was written in mans heart in the Creation I hold it true insome part to weet thus far That God creating man in his owne Image did print this in mans heart That as he had his whole being from God especially his reasonable soule by which he was made able to understand the will of God revealed to him by his word so hee was bound to obey God and to serue him all his dayes with his whole heart and with all his might And if God did require of him any part of his time and commanded him to obsteine from some good and lawfull workes tending to his naturall good and well being to doe some speciall workes for his Lords pleasure in one day or more selected daies of the weeke or of every moneth or yeare he ought to doe it out of duty and obedience to his Lord and Creatour Thus farre J consent that the law is naturall written in mans heart to weet in generall and in respect of the common foundation J grant also that the law and commandement of God injoyning the rest of men their servants and cattell from hard labour the seventh day or one daie in every weeke is a thing so naturally helpfull needfull for the health and wellbeing of men ever since mans fall and the curse of barennesse laid upon the earth and the punishment of toyle some labour and faint sweating imposed on man kinde that mans own naturall reason will and affection must needes approue it and moue and incline his heart to the obedience of it and his inward thoughts cannot but accuse him of wrong done to his owne body and to the life of his labouring cattell and servants if he disobey it and in this respect it may be called a law of nature Yea I adde moreover that if wee take the law of nature in a large sence as some times it is taken that is for every law which commands such duties and such obedience as in there owne nature are very vsefull profittable to the parties commanded and which is grounded on such just causes weighty grounds as by the judgment of naturall reason are in their owne nature well worthy of such observance then the law commandement of keeping an holy Sabbath on the seventh day in the old Testament in thankfulnesse for Christ promised for a continuall memoriall of that great blessing one the first day of Christs resurr●ction now under the Gospell in thankfulnesse for Christ fully exhibited the worke of redemption by him perfected which so much excels the promise made on the seventh day as perfecting of a worke excels the beginning undertaking of it may both in respect of the particular day the sanctification of it be called a law of nature that is a law requiring such morall perpetuall obedience as is in the nature of it most just and worthy to be performed But that the law and Commandement which bound the fathers to keepe an holy rest one the seventh day of every weeke and us under the Gospel to keepe it on the first day especially and no other was in in the creation written imprinted in the heart of man so distinctlie and expressly that man had an inbred notion of it and a naturall instinct of himselfe to observe this law to keepe a weekly Sabbath on those uerie daies which God hath prescribed both to the fathers us This I must needs deny for these reasons following First Gods sanctifying of the Seventh day by his word and commandement and his institution of the Sabbath by a positiue law giuen as my text here shewes had beene vaine and needlesse if the law and the Sabbath of holie rest had beene expressly and particularly written in mans heart already For what man by the instinct of nature by his own naturall reason will and affection is lead and moved to do that hee is vainly needlesly vrged unto by any law or commandement being of himselfe without any monitor ready to performe it Secondly the very word Sanctify signifieth the setting apart of this day to a supernaturall and heavenly vse euen for the performance of such duties as are aboue the naturalll imaginations and thoughts of man and which his naturall reason would never haue revealed to him not his will lead him to do If God by his word and divine superturall revealation had not directed and moved him Therefore this law by which God sanctified instituted the Sabbath is not a naturall law but a divine and supernaturall precept Thirdly in the creation and state of innocency man was bound to serve God as his creatour and the author of all his being and to be content with that estate wherein God had placed him and saw to be very good and to looke no higher It was the inordinat desire of more knowledge and of an higher estate then God had revealed and promised which made our first parents so yeelding to the devils temptations and vndoubtedly it was an occasion of their sinne in eating of the forbidden fruite Now the serving of God as his Lord and Creatour was the duty of man euery day alike for the heavens aboue and the
condemned cast into hell for their sins Speciall or temporarie laws are they which bind men or all men of some ages and in some times to some speciall service worship fit for the present state condition of the Church or to so some duties workes vvhich for the time are profittable to guid lead men to Christ therfore are sanctified of God set apart for that purpose ●uch are the lawes commandements of sacrificing bringing offerings first fruits to God of oxen sheep other cleane beasts birdes of the increase of the earth some of which lavves did binde all Gods people from the first promise of Christ even all the fathers from Adam untill Moses all Israell untill the comming of Christ such lawes were that of Circumcision given to Abrahā as a seale of the covenant wh●ch God made with him his seed that of the passouer and of the first borne all Leviticall ceremoniall lawes given to Israell by the hand of Moses such are the commandements of Baptisme the Lords Supper which binde all Christians under the Gospell There are also besides these severall kinds of lawes some mixt lawes of these some are partly in some respects naturall because they bind men to some duties vnto which nature binds them in some respects civill for they require things which tend to civill order government partly in some respects also evangellicall commanding things which tend to salvatio● in Christ. Some are partly morall perpetuall in that they require morall duties which are necessary vsefull at all times to the end of the world partly ceremoniall temporary in that they require obedience in things which are usefull onely in some cases and at some times As for example the law which God gaue from mount Sina wrote it in tables of stone it doth binde men not only to all morall duties which engrauen in the creation to weet all duties which man did owe to God as to his onely creatour to men as fellow creatures but also to such further duties degrees of obedience as man doth owe to God his only Saviour Redeemer in Christ to men Angels as his fellow sevants brethren mēbers of one the same spirituall body under the same head Christ. And therefore God presseth and urgeth obedience to that law at the giuing thereof vpon this consideration and for this reason because hee is the Lord God the Redeemer and deliverer who as he delivered the naturall Israell from Egyptian bondage so by that typicall deliverance did foreshew and prefigure the spirituall redemption of all the spirituall bondage under sinne the world and the Devill To loue God aboue all and a mans neighbour as himselfe to honour Parents and to speake truth of euery one to giue leaue to every one freely to enjoy his owne and many such duties requited in the ten commandements are naturall and nature bound man to them in innocencie and in respect of them that law is nature But to beleeve in God as a Redeemer to visite and comfort the sick and distressed to honour parents pastors superiours as fathers in Christ and divers duties of neglatiue precepts as not to make images of God not to pollute Gods name by vaine swearing and such like the knowledge and thoughts of vvhich man had not in his heart by nature in the creation vvhich come into the vvorld by naturall corruptions and man vvas not subject to them untill he vvas seduced and fallen and brought into bondage by Satan they are posituallie morall and as the lavv commands them it is a positiue morall law yea in respect of some of them Evangelicall And as reverence and respect to civill Magistrates and men of higher place as they are superiours and men of greater power and authority which difference and equality came in by mans fall and flowes from Gods distribution of his common guifts in a different manner measure as I say this honour giuen to them as civill rulers ruling for our Good and the good of the common weath is commanded in this law so it is ciuill And lastly as all ceremoniall religious ordinances and outward significatiue worship sanctified by God and appointed as most fit for the time and season receiue their originall authority and first strength from that law given from mount Sina especially from the commandement which bindes man to obey God as his creatour Redeemer in all ordinances so farre as he requires so and in this respect this law is Ceremoniall and bindes to obedience temporary fit for the season opportunity Jn like maner the commandement which the Lord Christ hath given in the Gospell for Baptizing of Christians and for the administration and receiving of the Sacrament of his body and blood as they command an outward sacramentall washing with water and abodily eating of bread and drinking of wine which haue beene of use onely since the comming of Christ and not from the beginning so they are ceremoniall and temporary For whatsoever ordinances are in vse in the Church of God for a season onely that is during the time of the true and proper signification of the world Ceremonia which is compounded of the Gr wordes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies a set time or season and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whice signifies onelie or rather 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to abide or remaine But because the time of the Gospell is perpetuall unto the end of the world and they are commanded to be observed of all Christians at the time of the Gospell in this respect these Commandements may be called vniversall and pepetuall And as in these and all other Ceremonies ordained by God there are required besides the outward bodily rites actions many spirituall duties as inward reverence and holy affections of the heart faith in Christ the blessed Trinity beleeving of the covenant commemoration of Christ his benefits confession of three persons in one God and the eye of faith looking chiefly to the spirituall things signified so the commandement and law enjoyning them may justly be esteemed positiuely and Evangellically morall Thus much for the divers and severall kindes of Gods lawes which hee hath given to men J proceed to that which is the maine thing here intended that is to shew what kinde of law the commandement of the Sabbath is vnder which of these severall kindes it is comprehended And in a word J hold it to be of the last kinde to weet a mixt law that is partly naturall and partly positiue both ciuill and Evangellicall and not onely universall and perpetuall but also speciall ceremoniall and so indeed it takes part of all kindes of lawes which God hath given men and which are mentioned in the Scriptures which thing because the learned haue not heretofore obserued nor well considered but some haue cast their eyes upon
the common ground of this lavv printed in mans heart in the creation and finding it among the ten commandements which are generally held to be the summe and substance of the law of nature doe call it a law of nature Others haue considered it as a speciall commandement given by God immediatly after the creation by word of mouth and not written in mans heart and do call it a positiue morall law Others haue considered it as it commands rest one the seventh day now altered by Christ which rest was a signe of Christs rest from the worke of redemption is a token pledge of eternall rest in heauen there upon hold it to be a ceremoniall law and hence ariseth the diuersity among Christians and almost civill warre betweene the Pastors of severall Churches yea amōg learned preachers of one the same Church Whereas indeed they all hold the truth in part but not wholy They all erre in this that they limit it every one to that speciall kinde of law which he hath hath chiefly in his eye and upon which he hath set his conceit Now make it a mixt law proue it manifestly there needs no more contention except some men wil contend without cause against reason out of a spirit of contention contradiction First this law as all other lawes is indefinitly comprehended in the generall law of nature for the generall law written in mans heart in the creation binds him to attend the wil of God to be ready to obey God his Creatour in all things whatsoever he either had already declared or should at any time to come reveale to bee his will and to bee a duty which he required of man And therefore the observing keeping of a weekly holy Sabbath devoting of a seventh part of every weeke to religious exercises to rest from bodily labour common worldly busines being expresly commanded by God declared at severall times upon severall occasions to be his will man is by the generall of nature bound to performe it in this respect we may truly say that the law of the Sabbath is a law of nature included indefinitly in that generall law dictate of nature written in mans heart in the creation Secondly though J cannot conceive that the keeping of an holy Sabbath weekly was a thing so disti●ct written in mans heart in the creation that man of himselfe by the instinct of his nature or by the light of his reason motion of his will would haue set either the seventh daie or any other of the seven daies of the weeke apart for rest or other duties of the Sabbath which God in the first institution required commanded also in his law giuen from mount Sina Yet because the keeping holy of a weekly Sabbath upon such grounds as are mentioned in this text for such ends vses as God hath ordained to weet commemoration of Gods mercy bounty in promising Christ preserving the knowledge memory of the covenant of eternall life rest in Christ training up of people in religion the feare worship of God in holines by which they are made fit to see enjoy God in glory because J say the keeping holy of a weekly Sabboth is in these respects a thing very good profittable yea necessary for the helpe of man and for the reparing of his nature corrupted Thirdly if we consider the law of the weekly Sabbath as it was given by God in the first institution in his blessing sanctifying of the seuenth day againe renewed inserted among the ten commandements given from mount Sina at other times upon diuers occasions repeated by Moses and by the Prophets from Gods mouth If we also consider that neuer the Sabbath it self nor the ground reason ocasion of it to weer Gods perfecting the creation by promising revealing redemptiō in Christ the rest which J haue before proved demonstrated were written ●n mans heart in innocency but were after mans fall revealed by God thereupon the holy rest commanded to bee kept on that day which God aboue other daies hath blessed and sanctified We may truely affirme that the commandement of the Sabbath in these respects is a positiue law of God not a law of nature requiring such particular duties as man of himselfe without Gods positiue commandement would haue observed Yea the word Memento Remember soe often added to the precept of the Sabbath as appeares Exod. 20.8 doth plainly shew that the keeping holy of a weekly Sabbath was not a thing printed in mans heart for then it had beene vaine needlesse for God soe often to use this word Remember to put them in mind of this duty by Moses the Prophets mans owne conscience would haue been his daily and continual Monitor Remembrancer his own thoughts would haue ben ready to accuse him for every omision neglect of it As the Apostle testifies of the worke of the law written in mans heart Rom. 2.15 Fourthly if we consider the law of the Sabbath as it commandeth man together with his children servants labouring cattell to rest from their wearisome labours bodily paine which came in by sinne by mans fall together with servile subjection difference of the Maister servant which weekly rest intermission from toyle labour granted to servants cattell by their Maisters as well as to themselves makes very much for good order in every state common wealth for peace society among mē in every family serves for an excellent civill politicall use so it is in the judgment of many learned godly Divines not without good reason hold to be a civill and politicall lavv Fifthly if we consider First the time of Gods first institution of the Sabbath as it fals under Chist even upon the seventh day of the world in which Christ was promised to redeeme man who was fallen in the latter end of the sixth day as is before shewed Secondly if wee consider the ground and reason of Gods institution of the Sabbath and sanctifying the seventh day even Christ promised the seed of the woman to breake the serpents head by whose actually undertaking beginning to mediate for man God did perfect the mutable worke of creation setled the world in an higher estate of the perfection supernaturall did rest in Christs mediation being that which was able to giue full satisfaction to his justice Thirdly if we consider that in the first institution the Sabbath day was sanctified blessed aboue the other six dayes that is vvas set apart to heavenly supernaturall vse which cannot be imagined but in under Christ in whome all things are sanctified We must needes know confesse that the commandement of the Sabbath even in and from the first originall and institution is a law Divine and Evangellicall commanding such an
weeke an holie Sabbath to the Lord. But that indeed it came in after mans fall together with the promise of Christ and therefore is more fitly called a law of grace and a Positiue Evangellicall law requiring duties of obedience to God which chiefly and especiallie tend to begit grace and increase holinesse in men Yet it is not simply Positiue nor soe Evangellicallie morall but that it may in some sence and respect bee called naturall also For first it requires some duties of obedience which in their owne nature are Good and profittable though the law giuer had not by expresse commandement revealed his will that they should be done such is the giuing no wof rest int●rmission of bodilie labour and toile to our bodies and to the bodies of our servants and labouring cattell one whole day in everie weeke ouer and besides that which they haue in the time of sleepe in the darknesse dead of the night This is according to naturall reason and common equitie Secondly it commands some duties of Gods Worship and service which man by the law of nature was bound to performe in his innocency and which are naturally morall as lauding and praising God and giuing to him all honour and reverence in the most solemne and pu●lick manner Thirdly it commands such holy spirituall works of grace such duties of sanctification as in thei● own nature worke to the sanctifying of men more more to make them capable of eternall rest in heaven of the full fruition of God As for example Meeting upon a set daie in everie week in holy assemblies for to heare read Gods word publick instructions exhortations mutuall provocations to piety sanctity Christian charity Fourthly the patticular day of the week which the law commands to be kept for an holy Sabbath is separated upon such a just ground reason in the first institution of the Sabbath and blessed by God with such a blessing aboue other daies of the week that whosoever knows the law true intent meaning of it rightlie unde●stands the ground of the Sabbath mentioned in the law he must by the light both of nature grace he forced to confesse acknowledge the particular day which the law commands to bee kept an holie Sabbath both in the old new testament For the law doth not command one day in seven to be an holy rest simply merely for the pleasure of the lawgiuer because he would haue it soe for no other reason but for very good reason upon a ground because he dignified the day of the Sabbath blessed it aboue all other daies with a singular blessing our owne reason doth tell us that the particular day of the weeke which hath in it the true reasons the honour blessing of the sabbath it ought by the law to be obserued for the holy sabbath none other while it retaines that honour blessing hath the true reasons properly annexed to it Now it it most manifest to all who read the Scriptures are well exercised in Gods word law That as the seventh last day of the weeke was blessed honoured adorned by God with the greatest blessing which God gaue to the world in the old Testament to weet the promise of Christ the Redeemer of the world Gods entring into the Couenant of grace of eternall life salvavation with man also Gods perfecting of the whole worke of creation by revealing giving in promise the worke of Redemption his resting in Christs mediation on that day vndertaken begun And therefor every reasonable man must by his own reason be induced lead to acknowledg that day the fittest most worthy of all daies in the week to be the holy Sabbath to be spent in thankfull commemoration of Gods free loue bountie to mankinde During the whole time of the old Testament before the comming of Christ. So likewise God hauing now under the Gospel transferred this honour to the first day of the week that is become a blessed day aboue all other daies being blessed of God with a blessing farr more excellent then that of the seventh day to weet the actuall performance of the promise by giving exhibiting Christ a perfect actuall redeemer in his resurrection without which resurrection all our preaching of Christ all our faith in Gods promises would prove vaine as the Apostle proueth 1 Cor. 15. Therfore every man must out of common reason equity conclude that together with the ground reason of the Sabbath which God hath now removed from the seventh to the first day he hath also remoued the honour festiuall solemnity of the Sabbath Also his first law which enjoyneth man to keep that day for the holy Sabbath which God hath blessed with the grea●est blessing doth bind all Christians to obserue the Lords day for their weekly Sabb●th under the Gospel And in a word that it were a thing most vnequall unjust if a man or any Church should goe about to set up for the weekely Sabbath any other day which God hath not dignified honoured with so great a blessing Now upon these pr●missed reasons I hope it appeares manifestly First that though the Commandement of the weekly Sabbath is no dict●te of nature but a positiue Evangellicall law yet it doth by common naturall reason as well as by the light of grace direct every reasonable man to the partilar day of the weekly Sabbath as to the seventh day in the old Testament so to the first in the new Testament And no resonable man can deny it to be the most equall which this law binds men unto but vpon the true grounds of the Sab well weighed considered must be forced to confesse that as the seventh day was most worthy of the honour of the Sabbath had it before Christs full exhibition in his resurrection so ever since the Lords day the first of the week is become the true Sab of Christians none hath power to giue that honour to any other day Secondly it is here manifest that though Christ the sonne of God made also the son of man mans redeemer is the Lord of the Sab the determination of the particular day of the week depends on him and none other haue the honour pror●g●tiue to appoint the particular day but he only Yet we must not conceiue that Christ by his bare will sets downe the particular day that the day is to be obserued only because of his bare will commandement that any other is as fit worthy as the seventh the first if he would be pleased at any time to comm●nd the same But we are to hold th●● Christ is the Lord of the Sabbath hath the determinatiō of the particular day depends on him the Redeemer onely because the ho●y Sabbath is founded and builded upon him and in him alone
or medle with he did behold take notice of the wisdome goodnesse of God In a word his whole life was a constant obedient seruice of God and there was no inequality nor lesse worship of God in one then in another for he fully serued God at all times W●osoever denyes this must needs deny therein mans perfection constant conformity to God in the state of innocency For where one day is kept better then another there is inequality and noe constant vniformity in himselfe nor conformitie to Gods will In the Second place they who hold that the Sabbath was first instituted after mans fall yet that it was writtē in mans heart in the state of innocency and he then was bound to keepe it they fall into many absurdities First that a man was bound to keepe a Sabbath before ever it was instituted Secōdly that God did by his word cōmādmēt teach má in vain that which he was fully taught alreadie had writtē in his heart Thirdly that God gaue to man a law in vaine after his fall when he knew he was become vnable to keep it 3. They who hold that the Law of the Sabbath was not written in mans heart but was a positiue Law given in the state of innocency of the same nature with that Commandement of mans not eating of the tree of knowledge They doe make this Commandement of the Sabbath vtterly voyd by mans fall euen as that of not eating is now voyd and was not to bee renued after mans fall But of the vnsoundnesse and vanity of these opinions I shall speake more fully when I come to shew what kind of law that of the Sabbath is and how that commandement bindes men Now because I cannot find any solidity or satisfaction in any of these opinions J haue left humane writings even of the best learned and haue betaken my selfe wholy to the searching of the Holy Scriptures Gods most pure infallible W●rd and what light J finde therein for the manifestation of the truth I will not hide nor cover but set it before you openly And for the time when God first instituted the Sabbath I conceive it to haue been not in the state of innocency but after mans fal imediately yet upon the seventh day wherein God rested from the worke of the creation as my text here sayth and although this may seeme to crosse the order of the History as is here laid down by Moses because mans fall related a while after his sanctification of the Sabbath even in the third Chapt. Yet let this moue no man for Moses doth not set downe al thi●gs in order as they were done in this the next Chapter but first he speaks of the finishing of Heaven and Earth and all the host of them and then of Gods rest and of the sanctifying of the seventh day then returnes to speak of thi●gs which were done before as the planting of the garden in Eden which was a worke of the third day and the making of the woman and forming her of a rib taken out of mans side and mans naming of al living creatures before the woman was made which things were done on the sixt day Also in this chapter the forming of the man is related before the planting of the garden and the watering of it with a river which was devided into foure Heads though it is most euident that before there was a man to till the ground God made every plant tree that was pleasant to the eye and good for food to grow out of the ground that is all the trees of the garden amongst the rest ver 5 Wherefore we must not cleave strictly to the order in which Moses sets things downe in this Chapter nor take all things to be first done which are here first related for then wee should beleeve that plants herbes trees man and woman were all created after that the workes of creation were finished and after Gods resting one the seventh day But to passe by all needlesse doubts let us come to the proofes of this point which proue strongly that Gods institution of the Sabbath was not in mans innocency but af●er his fall First the very words of my text affirme that the Sabbath was instituted on the seventh day for first it is said in expresse words that on the seventh day God rested blessed sanctified that day Secondly the things which gaue God occation to sanctifie the seventh day upon which the first institution of the Sabbath was grounded came not to passe neither were they in being vntill the seventh day that is Gods perfecting of the worke and resting from al he work which he had made the words of the text are very plain On or in the seven●h day God ended his worke and rested and because of this resting he blessed and sanctified the seventh day And therefore the sanctifying of the seventh day which was the institution of the Sabbath cannot be before the seventh day The building could not bee beefore their was ground to build on neither could the worke goe before the cause and occation of it Thirdly it is against all reason to thinke that God actually blessed and sanctified the seventh day and made ●it his Holy Sabbath before it came into being Now this ground being very cleare that the Sabbath was instituted on the seuenth day from the beginning of the creatiō not before I proceed to a second ground to weet that man did fall towards the end of the sixt day even on the same day in which he was created which being fully proved Jt well necessarily follow That the fi●st institution of the Sabbath was after mans fall and not in the state of innocency First that man did fall vpon the very day of his creation the sixt day I proue by plaine Scriptures and by strong arguments grounded on them The first testemony is that speech of David Psalme 49.12 Man beeing in honour lodged not a night therein but became like the Beasts that perish Soe the words runne in the originall text we cānot without wresting of the words from their proper sence in the Hebrew expound them of any other person but of the fir●t Adam of his fall the word which is in our translation man is Adam in the Hebrew and the words which we read in our Engglish abideth not Bal-jalim and in the Hebrew signifie lodged not a night therein as appeareth by other Scriptures in which it is continually vsed to signifie lodging or tarrying for a night viz. Exod. 23.18 34.25 Devt 16. 4. where God forbids the Israelites to let the fat of their Sacrifice or any part of the fl●sh of the Paschall lambe lodge with them all night till the morning and 2 Sam. 17.8 where Hushai saith to Absalom of his Father David that he was a man of warre and would not lodge with the people And 2 Sam. 19.8 where Joab saith to David there will
Priests with all their robes and vestments also the sacrifices and all other holy things of the Tabernacle they all were sanctified by the speciall commandement of God and by direction of his word as Moses in the law testifies in Exodus 40. divers other places Soe the temple in Ierusalem and all the Holie things which are consecrated and dedicated to the service of God by Solomon are said to be hallowed and sanctified by God 1 King 9.3 and 2 Cron. 7.17 that is by Gods speciall commandement direction And Moses his dedication of all things in the law is said to bee by bloud and that by precepts spoken to the people according to Gods law Heb. 9. vers 19.22 And every creature of God is said to be sanctified to the use of the Saints by the word of God and by prayer 1 Tim. 4.5 Now if in all Gods word everie thing is said to bee sanctified by the word and speciall Commandement of God And wheresoever in all the Scriptures God is said to sanctifie any thing and to seperate it for holy Use The word Sanctifie doth necessarilye implie a Commandement and speciall law of God given for the seperating of it It were against all reason and common sence to deny heere in this text the wordes Blesse and sanctifie doe necessarilie alsoe implie that God gaue a speciall commandement and law for the keepeing of his holie weekelie Sabbath an holy rest unto him the Lord our God Thirdly whatsoever is sanctified by God and so dedicated to holy vse that it is not in the power of any creature to alter and chaunge and turne it to another use without sinne and transgression against God that is certainlie established by a spirituall law of God for where there is no law there is no transgression Now after that God had sanctified the seventh daie apointed it to be the rest of the holie Sabbath It was a sinne and transgression not to keepe it or to chaunge and alter it to common vse yea it was transgression against Gods commandements as appeares in the place before mentioned Exod. 16.23.28 Therfore Gods sanctifying the Sabbath was vndoubtedlie by giving of a commandement for the due keeping and observing of it But from this point thus proved there ariseth an objection the answering and removing whereof seemes to a matter of some moment For this being granted that God in sanctifying the seventh day immediatlie after the ending of the creation did giue a speciall law for the observation of the seventh day of every weeke as an holy Sabbath And if once consecrared by Gods law to holie use may in no case be turned to common and profane vse and whosoever doth chaunge it sinneth most greeviousl●e as appeares Exod. 30.32 Num. 16.38 and also by the destruct●on of K●ng Belsh●zz●r for turning the hallowed Vessels of the Temple of Ierusalem to common and profane vse Dan. 5. It will here upon follow that Adams posterity in all ages are bound to keepe the weekely Sabbath on the seventh day and no creature may chaunge it to another daie without grieuous sinne And the Christian Churches which haue chaunged the Sabbath to the first day of the weeke haue made the seventh daie a common daie wherein they doe the workes of their private calling their worldlie businesse haue transgressed Gods law in so doing Neither haue they any warrant or ground from this first institution or the fourth commandement which the Sabbath of the Seventh daie to keepe their weekely Sabbath on the Lords day which is the first of the weeke For the satisfying of this obj●ction and clearing of this doubt divers things may be answered First that in the most strict commandement of God by which he binds men to the keeping of holy assemblies and publick solemnities for the performance of religious duties worshippe and service to his majesties memorable of his extraordinary blessings and benefits though the solemne duties be limmited to some certaine and fit daies those particular duties be named in the law Yet if the substance of the Commandement be kept that is the holy solemnitie observed and the duties worship and service be performed in all full and ample manner as the law requires though the particular daies of the month yeare and weeke be chaunged vpon good reason and for weighty consideration The Lord doth dispence with alteration of that circumstance to another day and time which appeares by good reason and for just causes to bee more convenient and doth allow and accept that for the right performance of his law This is manifest by a plain instance and example given by God himselfe For the law of the passover which God gave to Israel did command them to keepe that feast in their generations vpon the fourteene day of the first month and that under paine of being cut off Exod. 12.14.18 Levit. 23.5 And yet upon just occasion such as Gods law approves either of uncleannesse of absence from home vpon a farre jouney it was lawfull to chaunge the particular time and to keepe the passover on another day more convenient even on the fourteenth day of the second moneth Num. 9.11 And soe Hezekiah and all the people of Israell and Iudah kept it and chaunged the day 2 Cron. 30. And hereby the Lord himselfe teacheth us that the Lawes which command holie solemnities and bind all his people in their generations to the due observation of them on certaine set daies such as the law of the weekly Sabbath the yearly Passover may stand in force and bee dulie observed though the particular daie of the weeke be chaunged vpon such grounds as Gods law approveth and for such causes and reasons as make that other day more fit and excellent for the solemnitie then that particular day of the weeke or of the moneth which is named in the law Secondly If any object that the law of the passover was ceremoniall and therefore might admit of some chaunges but it cannot be so in the law of the Sabbath if it be morall and perpetuall binding all man kinde to the worlds end To this I answere that for the time and season wherein ceremoniall lawes are in force they are equall in their obligation and binding of the persons commanded to lawes morall and perpetuall and therefore the argument and answer is good and firme and cannot with any good reason be rejected and denied Thirdly divers positive lawes which are morall and perpetuall and bind Adam and all his posterity in all their generations though they be firme and immutable in themselves in their obligation yet because the Duties of obedience which they impose vpon men and the men up on whom the duties are imposed are in their state and condition mutable and chaungable And the chaunges and alterations of the things commanded in times places and other relations and respects do not at all chaunge the law nor proue it ceremoniall and chaungable
this law to be naturally writen in mans heart doe much differ are diuided into two opinions The one sort holds the law to be wholy naturall and perpetuallie morall both in respect of the rest and sanctification also in respect of the particular day of the weeke even the Seventh from the beginnning of the creation Thus doe Iuda●zing Christians hold who professe Christian religion but reject the sanctification of the Lords day and embrace and cleave to the Iewes Sabbath The other sort do hold that there is a three fould vse of the Sabbath day 1. Religious and holy which is the exercise of holy religious duties 2. Politicall or civill which is rest from worldlie weariesom labour of man and beast 3. Ceremoniall or sacramentall which is a signification and shadowing of spirituall rest in Christ. That in the two first respects the Law is naturall ●mortall and perpetuall and that nature requires that a seventh day of everie weeke should bee for rest and refreshing and for holy exercises of religion they all affirme And because the seuenth and last daie of the weeke was the daie wherein God rested hauing in the sixt dayes before perfected all the workes of the creatiō therf●● they hold that for the signifying sh●dowing forth of spirituall rest in Christ the seventh day was the fittest of all Gods people were by Gods Law bound to observe it for their Sabbath vntill Christ had fully finished the worke of redemption then rested from it as God did from the worke of creation And that ever since the resurection the signe and ceremony of Christs rest being fulfilled The Sabbath is to be kept by the same law of nature and commandement of God on the Lords day the first day of the weeke which is one in seventh vntill the eternall Sabbath and rest in heaven unto which Christ will bring all his elect at last This is the Doctrine of many of the best learned heretofore in our Church and divers godly divines do rest in this opinion which for the maine matter substance of it is pious godly approved by Aquinas the great Scooleman The second opinion is that the law of the Sabbath was not naturall wr●tten in mans heart neither did binde man to observe an holy rest the seventh day of every weeke onelie on the seventh day in which God rested but that it was a possitiue law given by God commanding more then the light of nature did clearly distinctly shew to man or bare naturall instinct move him unto and that it was like the law by which God forbad man to eate of the tree of knowledge which his own naturall appetite did leade him to eate of being good for food to the eye appetite pleasant and desirable But God restrained him from it not but instinct of nature or law written in his heart but by his owne voluntary commandement to shew his authority over man to teach man obedience to make man know that he might as justlie haue restrained him from all or the most part of either fruites that the use of the creatures the power which he gaue to man over them was his free gift therfor man ought to loue serve him his creatour as for his whole being so also for the use benifit of all other crea●urs And soe like wise they hold that by nature all dayes are alike in themselvs mā by the light of nature can disc●rne no difference in thē b●t yet God to make man mindfull of his creation of God his creatour did by his word everlasting commandement given to man seperat one day fot the vses before named 1. For holy use even performance of religious duties only 2. For civill use to weet rest from hard labour 3. For ceremoniall to signifie the rest of Christ after the work of redemption finished to admonish man of rest from sinfull works to be a token of eternall rest in heauē though any one day in the week is of it self naturally as fit as another that it is no matter what day be kept so that one in sevē be for these uses set apart yet because God rested on the seventh day from his work of creation therfor in the old Testament he would haue that last day of seven to be the Sabbath untill the comming of Christ intēding that when the greater work of mans redemption was perfected by Christ then the day of his resurrection in which he rested from that worke even the Lords day should be the Sabbath of Gods people to the end of the world And so this law commandement though it be not naturall yet it is morall a perpe●uall and vnchangable rule of Gods canstant will of mans duty in this particular which is the main substance of it viz that man do keep one day in seven of every week for a Sabbath of rest ' though●ut all ages of the world that it is chaungable onely in the circumstance of the day that onely thus far 1. That while the work of creation was that work vvhich had the preheminence in the eyes of the vvorld the Sabbath vvas to be kept necessarily one the last of the seven in vvhich God did rest from that vvork so this lavv did binde men 2. That after Christ had finished his vvorke of redemption ●ested the seventh day in the graue on the first day vvas risen entered into his rest the vvorke vvhich novv hath the preheminence vnder the Gospel is redemption perfected by Christs resurrection the day of his resurr●ction rest should bee the holy Sabbath to all christian people wherby they should be admonished of the eternall rest in heaven wherin they should be holy devoted to such duties as tend to bring thē on to the fruition of rest with Christ in glory The third opinion is that the law of the Sabbath is not naturall nor perpetually morall at all but only civill ceremoniall some who are of this opinion doe hold that it was giuen of God in the beginning to be obserued only untill the comming of Christ partly in memory of the creation vntill the greater worke of redemtion should come in partly to signifie things to come by C●rist of true rest to bee found in him that now it is vtterly abolish●d together with all the festival Sabbaths of the Iewes Others of them hold that because there was great equity in this law also seting apart of one day in the week for religious exercises is a thing uery profittable usefull for the propogation of religion and for the upholding of order in Gods C●urch therfor the lavv in respect of the particular day is abolish●d for that vvas ceremoniall but the equity of the observation of on in seven still rem●ines And therfore all Christians in imitation of the Ap●stles ought to keep one in seven especially the Lords day
earth beneath and all creatures in them serving daily for mans naturall good welbeing even every day equallie did put man continually in mind of his duty to weet that he was to loue and serue the Lord with all his heart soule and strength at all times for this is the righteousnesse of a mans owne workes and of his owne person which God required of man in the first covenant in the state of innocency even his constant obedience to the vvhole and law and revealed will of God all his dayes withou● one dayes intermission Therefore the Sabbath which requires service of God and worship loue of him as mercifull a Redeemer and that upon one day of the weeke more then all the rest vvas not knowne nor commanded nor observed by nature in the state of innocency Fourthly the lavv of nature written in mans heart requires no particular duty but such as his owne naturall reason and vvill did direct lead him vnto in the creation and vvhich belonged to him in the state of innocency But the lavv of the Sabbath from the first institution commands and requires such things ●nd such vvorkes and duties as did not concerne man in the state of innocency As 1 Rest of man and beast from their vvearisome labour for their refreshing upon one day in seven This man had no need of neither vvas their any need of such rest because the toile and labour of man and beast came in after the fall vvhen God cursed the earth for mans sinne Secondly it requires in generall sanctification of the seventh day by holy and religious exercises and in particular by sacrificing to God by prayer and supplication and by meditating on heavenly things and on eternall rest and by studying all holy duties vvhich might fit men for the sight and fruition of God in heavenly glory All which vvhat soever other holy Sabbath duties and vvorks are mentioned in the word of God do belong to man only since the promise of Christ the blessed seed And in the state of innocency man had no occasion of any such duties he had no need of sacrificing vntill Christ his ransome and sacrifice for sinne vvas promised he neither could have any thought ar meditations of glory in Heauen or studies to fit and sanctifie himselfe for the fruition thereof untill Christ the onlie vvay to eternall rest glory vvas promised vvhat use had he of prayers and supplcations to God for any good thing needful vvhen he lacked nothing or for deliverance from evill vvhen as yet noe evill vvas knovvne in the vvorld What occcasion could he haue to praise God either for Christ before he did so much as dreame of Christ or had any thought of him at all As for naturall guifts and blessings he vvas by them admonished and provoked every day alike to loue serve honour and praise God vvherefore seeing the vvorkes and duties of the Sabbath are holy and tend onely or chiefly to the supernaturall and heavenl● life and to the eternall rest which Christ hath purchased in heauen for man vndoubtedly the lavv of the Sabbath vvhich expresly commands such workes and duties everie seuenth day is a positiue supernaturall and divine law not any dictate of nature imprinted in mans heart in the creation Fiftly every law of nature is common to all man kinde and is written as well in the hearts of heathen as of Christians so that the conscience of men whoe never heard of God or of his word is a monitor to admonish them of the duty which that law requires and an accuser if they transgresse that law and men haue no more need to be put in mind of those duties then of any other which the law of nature requires But the law of the Sabbath hath no footsteppe of impression in the hearts of barbarous heathen nations It is quite forgoten among them and onely Gods people who have his written law and word continually read and preached do keepe the Sabbath And God in giving it to Israell in written tables in repeating it often afterwardes still calls upon them to remember it thereby shewing that it is not as the law of nature printed in mans heart but is a law giuen by word and writing and from thence learned and therefore easilie and quickly forgotten Sixthly If it were a naturall law founded upon the creation and binding man to keepe a weekelie holy day in thankfulnesse for his creation and for the creatures made for his vse then it should in all reason binde man to keepe Holy the six dayes in vvhich God Created all things and especiallie the sixth daie wherein God made man himselfe and gaue him rule and dominion over all creatures For holy celebrations are kept weekely or yearely one the dayes in which the blessing and benefits solemnized and celebrated were first bestovved one men Therefore it is not a naturall law grounded on the creation Lastly Christ came not to chaunge the law of nature nor to take away any part of the obedience therof but to establish and fulfill it in every jot and title as he himselfe testifieth Mat. 5.17.18 And yet the law of the Sabbath soe farre as it requires keeping holy the seventh day as the fathers were bound in the old Testament is changed by Christ and by his resurrection in which hee finished the worke of redemption and was exhibited a perfect redeemer And the observation of the seventh and last day of the weeke is abolished And the first day of the weeke even the day of Christs resurrection is sanct●fied and substituted in the place of it and so was obserued by the Apostles after them by all true Christian Churches for the Lords day and for the Queene and ch●efe Princesse of all daies as the blessed Martyr Ignatius cals it Epist. ad magnesi●s pag. 31. Therefore it is not a law of nature printed e●grauen in mans heart J could alleadge more reasons but J hold this perfect number of seven sufficient for this present purpose J will therefore proceed to the next thing which is the discovery of the seuerall kindes of lawes which God hath given to men the briefe discription of every kind particularly by which J shall come to demonstrate what kind this of the Sabbath is CHAP. 11. THE Lawes of God which he hath given to men are of two sorts either lawes printed in mans heart which we cal lawes of nature Or else Positiue lawes which God hath commanded in his word over and above or besides the lawes of na●ure Th● Law of nature is that will of God which hee as Lord and creatour hath imprinted in mans heart in the creation even that naturall disposition which God gaue to man when he made him in his owne Image by which he doth informe man in the knowledge and moue him to the practise of all duties which belong to him and which he requirs of him for naturall wellbeing continuance in that life good
estate wherein he was created The law of nature may be distiguished into two sorts The one is Generall and indefinit which binds man definitly in a generall bond The other is speciall and particular which doth define prescribe speciall particular duties workes to men The generall and indefinit law is this That man being Gods creature and hauing his whole being life motion and all things from God of free gift is in duty bound to obey God to the utmost of his power in all things whatsoever God either by naturall light or by his word either hath revealed or shall at any time reveale and make knowne unto him to be his will that he should doe them The bond and obligation of this law is very large and reacheth through all lavves binds men to doe whatsoever God commands by any law whatsoever The speciall definit and particular law of nature is that commanding will of God engrauen in mans heart and in his upright naturall disposition which directs man to know moues him to performe such speciall kinds of duties and such particular workes as he ought to do and God reveales to him declar●s to be his wi●l that hee should do them Of these speciall lawes some are primary And some are secondarie lawes of nature A speciall primary law of nature is the will of God concerning such speciall duties and particular workes as mans owne pure created nature and naturall disposition did direct lead moue him vnto which his naturall reason in the state of integrity did shew unto him and his pure naturall will and affections did moue and stirre him to performe As for example to know and acknowledge God for his sole Lord and Creatour and one onely God to serue and worship him with such worship and reuerence as his pure reason taught him to bee meet for God to thinke and speake of God accordingly to beare himselfe towardes the creatures and to rule them according to the wisdome which God had given him to increase and multiply and to replenish subdue the earth and such like A Secondary speciall law of nature is a rule or precept concerning such speciall and particular duties and workes as mans owne right reason or Gods word discouers vnto him to bee in there owne nature good and just and profittable either for his owne naturall being and wellbeing as the cause now stands with him since his fall and for any other good end and use agreeable to Gods revealed will As for example that men should not liue idle but labour painfully to provide for themselves and families this is a duty which vvas knovvne to man before his fall but ever since the curse vvherevvith God cursed the earth for mans sinne Gods vvord requires it and mans ovvne naturall reason vvel informed and his vvill and affections vvell ordered doe naturally moue him to the performance of it for his naturall vvelbeing So diuers negatiue precepts vvhich forbidde such euils and sinfull deedes as man never knevv nor had any thought of them in the state of innocency but novv true naturall reason affection and conscience teacheth and moueth man to hate and abhorre them they are lavves of this kinde And if vve should extend the lavv of nature to the utmost as many do and bring under it every law which commands duties which are in their owne nature just and honest and very vsefull and profittable to the doers and to others ●nd serve directly and naturally for Gods glory We might reduce to this kinde of naturall lawes every positiue morall and perpetuall precept commanding any just or holy work duty which is just in it selfe though there were no expresse commandement given for the doing of it A Positiue law of God is that vvhich God in his wisedome by his word giues to man by which he bindes man to some obedience which he of him●elf by his own naturall vvit reason would not haue found out discerned to be good just neither would haue done or performed by the instinct of nature and the motion of his will affection for such an end as God hath appointed them unto There are diuers lawes and precepts of this kinde all which as they require that which God justly wisely willeth man to do do command things which are in respect of the present state condition good for man so they al are after a generall manner included in the generall law of nature and bindes men to obey them all Of these positiue lawes there are divers sorts Some are Positiue commanding things which tend to preserve maintain good order society peace not onely between God the creatour and man his creature but also betweene man other creatures among men themselves Such was the law which God gaue to man when he commanded him vnder the paine of death to obsteine from the fruite of the tree of knowledge of good and evill that for a wise just end even to put man in mind that he was not absolute Lord of all the visible creatures to vse them at his pleasure but that he was a subordinate Lord and ruler under God and that all other trees berbes fruites which God alowed him to eate of were Gods free guift also to teach him that hee was chiefly aboue all to looke to the service of God obedience of his will to omit the serving of his owne turne the doing of that which his owne vvill might moue him to doe when God at any time should call him another way And of this kind are all the judiciall lawes vvhich God gaue to Israell by Moses for the well ordering of their common vvealth all precepts of obedience vvhich inferiors ovve to superiours in things lavvfull and that for peace sake Some positiue lavves are Evangellicall and religious vvhich command vvorks duties tending to an holy heavenly supernaturall end use such are all lavvs cōmādments vvhich God hath given vpō occasiō of Christ revealed to mā in through Christ vvhich require duties service due to God as he is mās redeemer bind mā as he expects benefit by Christ the mediatour redeemer to such workes such obedience as come to be of vse in respect of Christ. These Evangellicall lavvs are of two sorts 1. Some are vniversall perpetuall requiring necessary works duties of all such as are to be saued by Christ. 2. Some are special temporary which require some speciall service workes of obedience them of some only for some times in some condition of the Church Perpetuall vniuersall Evangellicall lawes which bind all Gods redeemed ones require things necessary to salvation by Christ are the commaundements of God by which he bindes all men to repentance reformation of life to godly sorrow humiliation for sinne to beleeue in Christ under penalty of loosing salvation of perishing for euer
seuenth day Yet the Apostle calls it a shaddow onlie in respect of the particular day of the promise of Christ which day is a bolished giues place to the first day in which the promise was fullie performed and Christ became a perfect Redeemer actuallie in his resurrection The Anti-Sabbatarians haue onely two objections which haue some shew and coulour of reason at the first hearing The first is that if it had beene the minde and will of Christ that the weekly Sabbath should be continued and remoued to the Lords day vnder the Gospell then would he either by himselfe or by his Apostles haue giuen some expresse commandement to that purpose which they say he did not To this I answere First that our Saviour spake fully to this point when he said that he came not to destroy but to fulfill the law It remaines therefore on their part to shew that the Commandement of the Sabbath is no part of the morall law or else they do but beate the aire and labour in vaine Secondlie the Apostles themselves kept their holy assembles ordained in all Churches of the beleeving Gentiles that publick assemblies should be kept and exercises of the holy Sabbath perfomed ordinarily on the first day of the weeke as I haue before proved from Act 20. 1 Cor. 16.1 2. And whatsoever they ordained was the comma●dement of che Lord 1 Cor. 14. vers 27. Thirdlie while the first temple was yet standing in the daies of the Apostles and Moses was not yet buried and quite taken out of the way Jt was not convenient that the Apostles should chaunge the day of the Sabbath among the beleeving Iewes Yea they themselves in Iudea and all places among the Iewes kept the seventh daie among the Gentiles the Lords daie We never read that the Lords day was called a Sabbath in the Primitiue times next after the Apostles nor since by any but onely by Iewish Sabbatarians Howsoever these adversaries put on a bold impudent face to colour and countenance this objection Yet herein publish a manifest untruth For Igna●ius immediatly after the Apostles saith That the Christians must keep their holy sabbath not after the man̄er of the profane Iews of those times with excessiue feasting dauncing and such carnall sports and pleasures nor on their seventh day But on the Lords day the day of Christs resurrection which he calls the Queene and supeeme Lady of daies as I haue formerlie shewed Saint Hilary saith Nos in prima die perfecti Sabbathi festiuitate latae mur. i.e. We Christians rejoyce in the festiuity of our perfect Sabbath on the first day of the weeke St. Augustine in the 25. sermon de tempore Hauing rehearsed diuers notable blessings and prero●atiues which God of old honoured the first day of the weeke the Lords day doth there affirme that upon those grounds the holy Doctors of the C●urch to weet the Apostles Who were taught by Christ and inspired by the holy Ghost in all things which they decreed and ordained haue by their decree remoued or rather transferred all the glory of the Iewish sabbathisme vnto the Lords day And immediatly he adds this exhortation Let us Christians therefore obserue the Lord day and let us sanctifie it so as of old the Law giver commanded the fathers concerning the Sabbath saying From evening to evening shall ye celebrate the Sabbath And further he saith that if wee from the evening of the Iewes sabbath the satturday to the evening of the Lords day sequester our selves from all Rurall workes and all seculiar busines and devote our selves onely to Gods worship then we rightly sanctifie the Lords sabbath according ●he wordes of the law Yee shall not doe any worke in it Also Psalm 32. He affirmes that keeping of the Sabbath is one of the things which belong to the loue of God and thus he exhorts every true Christian. Observa diem sabbati non Carnaliter non Judaicis delicijs c. that is observe the day of the sabbath not carnally with Iudiciall delicacies for they abuse their rest and rest to naughtinesse for indeede it is better that men should digge all the day then daunce as they doe But doe thou meditate on the rest in God and doing all things for obtaining that rest abstaine from servile worke And in his 3. Tract at vpon Iohn He saith We are more strictly commanded to keepe the Sabbath then the Iewes For we are injoyned to keepe it spiritually Jewes keepe it carnally in luxury and drunkennes and it were far better that their women should be busied in working all the day in woll then dance The true Christian keepes the Sabbath spiritually by refraining from servile worke These and diuers other testimonies of the Auncients shew ●ufficiently the falshode and vanity of this Objection And that in the judgment of the most godly and learned fathers the law of God bindeth us to keepe the Sabbath holy on the Lords day weekly It is true that some part of the sevēth day was by reason of great multitudes of Iewes abounding in all countries soe frequent and soe commonly known called by the name of the Sabbath that name was so proper to the Saturday in those times that if any had called the Lords day by that name his wordes would bee understood by the hearers of the Iewes Sabbath except ●e had expounded his meaning as those fathers before named do in their speeches b●f●re mentioned And againe the Iewes were soe superstitious in observing their Sabbath ●o contrarie to the Christian sanctifying of the Lords day even with feasting dauncing and profane pomp that the name of Sabbath through their abuse of it grew distastfull to godly Christians even as in our time the old name Catholike by reason of the Antichristian Papists falsly vsurping and approbria●ing it to their Apostaticall Church and false religion is growne to haue an ill sound in the eares of reformed Christians And therefore t●e Auncients were very sparing in calling the name of the Sabbath and seldome did they call the holy weeklie rest of Christians by that name except onlie in case when they opposed it to the Jewish sabbath and preferred it farre before their carnall observation But wheras in this Objection the aspersion and reproachfull name of Iewish Sabbatarians is laid on all them who call the Lords day the Cbristian Sabbath and urge the sanctification of it by the law of God This is a point of such notable impudency and intemperancie that it deserues the scourge whip of Ecclesiasticall censure punishment to chastise and correct rather then any arguments of reason or divinity to convince such Raylors For in the Homilies which are comprehended and commanded in the Articles of our Religion by law established the Lords day is frequently stiled by the name of Sabbath even no lesse then eight times in one Homily which treateth of the time place of praier And both there and in the
shew that the promises of Christ were solemnly rehearsed And out of Moses and the Prophets every Sabbath day So also they shew that Moses and the Prophets were publickly read and heard in their weekely holy assemblies and by this meanes the people were taught not onely in the promises and prophecies of Christ to beleeue in him a redeemer to come but also in all the righteousnes and duties of the law morall and all the judgments ordinances ceremonies of the law ceremonial w●ich was their Scoole-maister to lead them to Christ. Wee haue also to this purpose another plaine testimony Luk. 4.16 Where it is said that our Saviour as his custome was went into the Sinagogue on the Sabbath day stood up to read and the booke of Isaiah the Prophet was delivered unto him And he read a place which was written concerning himselfe and expounded it vnto them with the generall aprobation of the assembly Also Ast 13.15 27 verses Jt is testified that the Iewes in their Sinagogues on every Sabbath daie had Moses and the Prophets read unto them publickely both in forraine countries where they were disperced and also at Ierusalem and in their own countrie And that this was an auncient practise even from Moses and in the time of the Iudges and the Kings of Jsraell and Iudah to reade the law in the holy assemblies and to heare it read by the Priests we may gather from Exod. 24.7 Where it is said that Moses read the Covenant in the audience of the people Deut. 31·11 12 Where the Isralites are commanded to read the law in their assemblies in the hearing of all men women children I● may also be collected from I●sh 8.34.35 Iudg. 18.3 2 Cron. 17.7.8.9 30.22 35.3 That it was in vse after the Captivity the Historie of Nehemiah testifies Nehem. 8.4 9.3 The auncient division of the five bookes of Moses into 54 lectures that th●y might be read over once in every yeare by reading one lecture every Sabbath is a thing soe auncient that we finde no mention of the author of it therfore it may be supposed to be from Moses the writer of those books And the reading of a lecture also out of the Prophets everie Sabbath is recorded to be a custome long before Christs birth begun by occasion of the Tirant Antiochus who prohibited the Iewes to reade the law of Moses in their Sabbath assemblies vnder the paine of death As we read in the Apocripall History of the Macchabees lib. 1. c. 1.59 Whereupon they were forced insteed of the Law of Moses to read lectures out of the Prophets as Elias Leuita saith and euer since that custome is retained and was in use in our Saviours daies Luk. 4.16 The fifth speciall dutie of sanctification was the worshipping of the Lord which as it is required of Gods people in priuate and upon particular occasion at all times So publick upon the Sabbath day and in all holy yearlie Sabbaths The dutie of worshippe consists in confession of sinnes praiers supplications lauding and praising God singing of Psalmes and offering of free will offering and the like as wee read Neh. 9.33 Levit. 26.3 Deut. 5.5 Where confession acknowledging Gods favours is called worship and set downe for apart of it Gen. 4.26 12.8 13.4 and Psa. 79.6 Where the name of invocation and calling upon God by prayer is used by Synechdoche for all worship in in generall and Exod. 15.1 Iud. 5. Lauding and praising God with singing of Psalmes and holy Songs are rehearsed as a speciall part of Gods worshippe Now this worshippe of God by publick confession praiers and singing of praises cannot be but in publick assemblies and holy convocations which are especially kept on the Sabbaths and therefore this worshippe must needs be a speciall duty of the Sabbath and one part of the sanctification of it David also shewes this Psal. 42 3. Where he saith that he was wont to go up to the House of God among the multitude which kept holy day with the voyce of joy and singing And the 92. Psalme which is intitul●d a Psalme for the Sabbath day doth proclaime it to bee a good and necessarie duty on that day To giue thankes and to sing prayses to the name of the Lord to shew forth his loving kindnesse and truth from morning to night to Triumph in his works to speake of them with admiration and to declare his mercies and judgments and what a rock he is to rest on These are the most notable duties which Gods people were bound vnto in their sanctifying of the seventh day in the old Testament The third and last principall head comprehen●ing the rest of the duties which did belong to the observation of the Sabbath in the old Testament is the day it selfe which they were bound to keepe for their weekly Sabbath that is the last day of the week even the seventh from the beginning of the creation That this and no other was to be kept for their weeklie Sabbath in the old Testament appeares most plainlie by three things First because it vvas the day which God blessed with the greatest blessing of al which were giuen and reveal●d before the resurrection of Christ to weet the promise of Christ of the redemption of the world by him Gods entering into the Covenant of grae with man Christs open actuall undertaking to be mans mediatour Saviour in whom the mutable worke of creation is perfected and God is well pleased and resteth satisfied as J haue before proved Secondly because as the fathers and Isralites obserued it according to Gods commandement in the first institution Exod. 16. before the giving of the law from Mount Sina So in giving of the law to Jsraell in the renuing of the Commandement by Moses vpon divers occasions the Lord doth expresly require the keeping of the seventh day for his holy Sabbath as we see Exod. 20. 31.35 Deut. 5. Thirdlie because not onely as the Prophets and holy men of God urged taught all men to obserue that day vntill the comming of Christ. But also our Saviour himselfe all his life time on earth and after his death kept this Sabbath by resting in the ground And the Apostles also while they lived among the Jewes and the tabernacle was yet standing and Moses was not yet buried did obserue keep for orders sake the old Sabbath of the seventh day as appeares Luk. 4.16 Ast 13.13 and diuers other places CHAP. 18. I Am come now to the last place to the speciall Sabbath duties vnto which all Christians are bound under the Gospell In the right observation of the Lords day which is their holy Sabbath And these speciall duties may be reduced to the common generall heads before named The first which come here to be handled in the first place as the ground upon which the rest are builded is the consideration of the particular day
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