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A16523 The doctrine of the sabbath plainely layde forth, and soundly proued by testimonies both of holy scripture, and also of olde and new ecclesiasticall writers. Declaring first from what things God would haue vs straightly to rest vpon the Lords day, and then by what meanes we ought publikely and priuatly to sanctifie the same: together with the sundry abuses of our time in both these kindes, and how they ought to bee reformed. Diuided into two bookes, by Nicolas Bownde, Doctor of Diuinitie. Bownd, Nicholas, d. 1613. 1595 (1595) STC 3436; ESTC S113231 229,943 300

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hath beene spoken before that they are not onely the seruants of men but also and especially the seruants of God who hath created redeemed doth preserue them hath as great care of them as of others will be serued of them as wel as of any other will therefore reward all equally alike for there is no respect of persons before him And therefore as they feare to displease men who haue authoritie to punish them so let them especially feare to displease the Lord who hath power to throw body and soule into hell Therefore let men away with these pretences which will not serue to say I am vnder authoritie therfore must obey alas I would faine do otherwise if I could I am thus commanded what would you haue me to do I grant it is a grieuous thing to be thus punished and that which must cause vs to mourne before God for our sin but yet when men commaund vs to worke at the same time that the Lord would haue vs to rest we must with all humilitie and reuerence answer them as the Apostles doe in the like case Whether it be right in the sight of God Act. 4.19 to obey you rather then God iudge ye And we must be willing rather with patience to suffer their displeasure to beare their rebukes and chidings yea to vndergo all their chastisements and corrections then to bee drawne one foote from this obedience to God which he requireth at our hands and will not leaue vnrewarded with manifold blessings both in this world and in the world to come Moreouer as the household gouernour is charged to see that all his familie do rest vpon the Sabbath as much as lyeth in him so the rulers in the Common-wealth are bound so much the more to see the same performed of themselues and all the people by how much the Lord hath giuen them more means in their hands to performe it both because their authoritie is greater to commaund and their power mightier to punish them that doe disobey Magistrates are bound to restraine the people by lawe from working vpon this day And indeede this is that which is ment in the words of the Commandement That is within thy gates For euen as the walles and the gates of the citie are the surthest part of it and whatsoeuer is within the gates is vnder the gouernment of him that ruleth the citie so by a figuratiue speech he meaneth the vtmost coasts and the furthest border of the iurisdiction of any euen vnto the very gates of it as it were and when he sayth within thy gates he speaketh by name to him that is ruler within the gates that he should diligently looke vnto all them that be vnder his gouernment that they doe obserue the rest of the Sabbath as well as himself yea euen vnto the stranger and him that is not of the same countrie and religion yet now as he enioyeth the benefit of his gouernment so he should yeeld to this outward practise of the Church at least that hee doe rest together with them that so it might no waies be broken neither publikely nor priuatly in the household nor in the Common-wealth by the freedenison nor by the stranger The Prophet Ieremie spying this abuse of the Sabbath in his time speaketh first vnto the Princes of Iudah saying Iere. 17.20 Heare the word of the Lord ye Kings of Iudah And Master Caluin vpon this place noteth that he was commanded to begin with the King himselfe because he as hauing authoritie should represse so great licentiousnes Therefore it behoueth al Princes and Magistrates that be in highest authoritie to prouide that lawes bee enacted for the preseruation of this rest with ciuill punishments to be inflicted vpon them that shall breake it according to the qualitie of their offence and that both themselues and other the inferiour officers should euery one of them within their circuite looke diligently vnto the faithfull obseruation of such wholsome lawes by al the subiects throughout the whole realme by which meanes as a great many sinnes might bee preuented that they should neuer bee committed so the Common-wealth might be preserued from many grieuous punishmēts and common plagues which either haue alreadie come vpon it or doe most iustly hāg ouer the head of it for the neglect of the same By which meanes it might come to passe that there should bee no Faires kept vpon that day no trauailing thitherward no such common carrying of wares from towne to towne as is no such haunting of Tauernes Ale-houses and Innes no buying selling of victuals any where no such making of Marriage dinners and other needles feasts riding and going vp and downe no such working in the time of hayfield and haruest in the fields and at other times in the shops of Taylors Shoomakers and others If vnto those good lawes that we haue alreadie in this behalfe others that bee wanting might bee adioyned vnto them which we pray for and hope shall be in time and for the good execution of euery one of them diligent inquirie might be made at the generall assises and quarter Sessions in euery shire throughout the whole land as for the keeping of other lawes so of these and the malefactors and offenders this way might be seuerely punished that others might feare to offend by their example the mouthes of the wicked might be stopped offences vnto the godly remoued sin taken away frō among vs. And this is that which they in the Councel of Paris laboured to effect when they sayd Concil Paris lib. 1. cap. 50. That they would humbly sue vnto the Emperours highnesse that the authoritie and power which was in them ordained of God for the honour and reuerence of so great a day might strike feare into all men that they might not fall into such breaches of the day as are there named euen the very same almost which I haue here set downe because as they doe alleadge there whiles men doe commit such things they both staine the honour of Christianitie and doe open the mouthes of blasphemers to speake euill of the name of Christ Vnto the which that you might be the rather encouraged take it vpon you happily in the feare of God I doe most humbly vpon * My knees meekenes beseech you vpon whose shoulders the whole burden of the common wealth doth lie that you would enter into the deepe consideration of so weightie a matter according to the sage and aduised wisdome that is within you and that amongst your manifold and earnest consulatations this might not bee the last as it is not the least The great zeale of Nehemiah in this behalfe is a● worthie example to follow And therefore that you would set before your eyes as a great many of other things which the scripture doth affoord that might perswade you vnto it so especially that worthie example and practise of the famous and renowned Nehemiah
is most certaine that we are not onely commanded to rest from these that we haue spoken of but from al other things which might hinder vs from the sanctifying of the sabbath as well as these of which sorte are all honest recreations and lawfull pleasures which are permitted vnto vs vpon the other dayes to further vs in the workes of our callings which we doe stand in neede of euen as of meate and drinke and sleep for if those worldly duties which we are commanded to walke in and be of necessitie required and without the which the common wealth cannot stand at all are then forbidden when we should attend vpon the Lords work because we cannot bee wholie occupyed in both much more those things which serue but for pleasure without the which mankind may continue though not so well continue must be giuen ouer because we cannot haue the present delight in the vse of them and yet at the same time bee occupyed in the hearing of the word such other parts of Gods holie worship and seruice as he requireth of vs vpon the Sabbath day Nay because men cannot be both at Church seruing God with the rest of their people and in their houses sporting themselues with their companions together nor in the great congregation praysing God with their brethren and in the open fieldes playing with their fellowes at one time And God vpon the sabbath requireth these of them therefore the other must giue place to it and we must not thinke it sufficient that wee doe no worke vpon the sabbath and in the meane season be occupyed about all manner of delights but wee must cease as well from the one as from the other And wee must doe it so much the more by how much the workes of our recreation are lesse needefull then the workes of our vocation and yet doe more hinder vs from the sanctifying of the sabbath then they For experience which is the mistresse of very fooles may teach vs and our nature is such that it must needes be so how much we are moued with delectable things euery one in his kinde some this way another that how marueilouslie they do affect vs how all our senses are taken vp with them and all the parts of soule and bodie wholie possessed with them that for the present time none of them can be occupied about the Lords work immediatlie at least wise as they should be Therefore vpon this day all sortes of men must giue ouer vtterlie all shooting hunting hawking tennise fensing bowling or such like and they must haue no more dealing with them then the artificer with his trade or husband man with his plowe and as men must not come to Church with their bowes and arrowes in their hands so neither with their hawkes vpon their fists which they hadde neede to doe so much the lesse because a liuing creature which is stirring which must so beheld in the eye of the bearer and in the open view of others is more able to hinder the minde from being attentiue then a senselesse creature or a peece of a sticke which a man may cast behinde him or throw where he list Obiection And be it that the faulkner say it troubleth him not one whit because by custome he doth not so account of it though I am sure he is more hindered by it in prayer and in hearing the word then if he had it not at all Answere yet how if others should be hindered by it which haue not their senses so at commaundement that they can keepe them from such vaine and hurtfull spectacles Is it not a sufficient cause to keepe them out of the Church where all things should be done both of the minister and people to the edifying and building vp of one another in godlines 1. Cor. 14.26 and not to the pulling downe and destroying of them therein And if they themselues would be ashamed to holde them vpon their fiftes when they should receiue the sacrament vpon what ground doe they holde them in the ministerie of the word Vnlesse they will lightlier regarde the worde then the sacrament or put asunder those things which God hath ioyned So then wee see they are greatlie deceiued who when vpon this daye they haue abstained from all kinde of worke doe thinke they haue marueilouslie kept the commandemēt though in the meane season they haue been occupyed in all kinde of pleasure and delights because they know no meane betweene working and playing thinke it sufficient that they restraine themselues of the one and then giue themselues all libertie to the other Now if these and such like honest and lawfull recreations doe hinder men in obeying the commandement of rest in so much that they can in no wise stand together what shall we say of so many vnlawfull games as are vsed euery where Much more from all vnlawfull pastimes Ephe. 5.16 which onely and truelie are called pastimes as they be because there is nothing in them but a mere idle and fruitelesse mispending of the time and passing of it away which they should redeeme If such as be tollerable at other times vpon this daye are inexcusable because they hinder vs from sanctifying the daye what profitable shew of reason can be brought for the maintenance of those which being at all other times worthie to bee condemned yet vpon this daye are most commonly practised and are made as it were proper and peculiar vnto it as though the time did make them lawfull and gaue some priuiledge and credit vnto them Here therefore wee may iustly complaine vnto God and men of the manifolde abuses and sundrie breaches of this holy rest by all the disorder and confusion that accompanieth Lords of misrule wherein whole dayes nights are spent euen vpon the sabbaths and at that time especiallie when they would seeme to be most deuoute keeping the remembrance of the greatest benefite that euer was or can bee bestowed vpon mankinde euen the birth and incarnation of Christ Iesus and therefore they will not worke at all for sooth that they might giue themselues more wholie to the consideration of it as they should but that their dooing doe manifestlie speake against them that they doe celebrate the feast of the drunken god Bacchus rather then any thing else So that here we may iustlie complaine with that ancient father and godly diuine Bullinger in Apoc. concio 4. as he did in his dayes That whereas Dauid when hee was vnder Saules persecution chiefely bewaileth that hee had not free accesse vnto the Lordes tabernacle our men count it one of the chiefest happines neuer to come into the companie of the Sain●es Et die dominico abuti ad lusus and to abuse the Lordes day vnto gaming Musculin Matth. 12.11 vnto drinking vnto dauncing and vnto prophane things And with another learned man Vanitati student die dominico Many giue themselues wholie to vanitie vpon the Lords day and spend away
the time in their delightes in feasting in drunkennes in whoring Whereupon it comes to passe there at no time seene more vanitie filthines and riote then vpon that day which should be accounted holy vnto the Lord. August in enarrationem tituli Psal 91. So that here that saying of S. Augustine is true Quanto melius est arare quam saltare How much better is it for men vpon this day to goe to plow then to dancing Yet if wee had this one complaint onely to make it may be we could hold our peace but because wee may iustly say with the Lord in the Prophet behold a thousand abhominations more Ezek. 8.13.15 we must needs renew our complaint of the ordinarie Enterludes and Stage-playes wherein some spend their whole life and when they die their conscience vncomfortablie telles them that they haue not wrought but played all their dayes and also of the common Bearebaytings Bulbaytings Cockefightings and such like wherein there is nothing els but an vnnaturall pleasinhg of our eyes and feeding our affections with the crueltie of one creature against another to no purpose of the May-games and setting vp of May-poles and of so many other as the very wisedome of men hath iudged vnlawfull and therefore not to bee suffered in a Christian common wealth much more hath the word of God condemned them as the vnfruitfull workes of darknes and more meete for the night either of Atheisme among the Heathen from whence they sprung or Idolatrie among the Papists in which they grewe vp then for to day and cleere light of the Gospell in which we doe liue and therefore as it is a sinne to bee occupied about them at any time so a double sinne at this time and if we ought to rest from them altogether then most of all vpon the Sabbath and day of rest and if they be workes not agreeable to the daies of our own works then much lesse with the day of the Lords worke And here we had need to pray that the ancient lawes of Christian Princes Emperors might be reuiued and where they be that withall leueritie they might be put in execution whereby a number of abuses might be constrained to shrinke in their hornes which nowe without all controulment too shamelesly lift vp their heads here in England Canutus in his lawes among other thinges which he forbad vpon the Lords day Canutus lege 15. as we haue seene before sayth Let huntings and all worldly worke bee forborne And in the impe●iall lawes the same thinges with great seueritie are forbidden for when it is first sayd Dominicum d●em semper honorabilem ita decernimus Wee decree that the Lordes day should alwaies bee so honorable and reuerenced c. Then it followeth Leg. final C. de ferij● Nihil eodem die sibi vendicet scena theatralis Vpon that day let there be no state playes or other games nor the lamentable spectacles of fighting with wild beasts Etiamsi in nostram natalē celebranda solemnitas inciderit differatur Though it so fall out that the solemnitie of our birth day should then be kept let it be deferred Si quis vnquam spectaculis interesse c. Let all his goods be confiscated and lose them Whosoeuer shall be present at any spectacles or games they say die festo I would it were with vs but die Dominico vpon the Lords day August de temp serm 251 Saint Augustine amongst many other thinges which he dissuadeth his hearers from vpon the Lords day in his sermons sayth Neque in venatione se occupet diabolico mancipetur officio Neither let any man vpon this day bee occupied in hunting and herein become the diuels seruant to doe his busines by ranging the fieldes and the woods shouting hollowing crying out Most of all ought such things to be kept out of the Church neither should men be suffered so to play the fooles there nor to come in thither from their games with such vnseemely behauiour as in some places they doe in this respect we had need of the doore keepers that were vnder the law to keepe out such prophane dogges and filthie swine for as one man saith complaining of sundry abuses of the Lords day Et quod omnium turpissimum est And that which is most shamefull of all Muscul in Math. 12.11 men runne with such vanitie and imprudencie vnto the assemblies of the Church when others meete to exercise the discipline of faith of modestie and of the framing of their whole life I say they come thither with no lesse want of modestie Quam si ad vanissimas saltationes impudica spectacula Then if the people were called together vnto most vaine dancing and shamelesse spectacles Nihil est disciminis inter habitum saltantium ecclesias ingredientium There is no difference betweene the attyre and behauiour of dauncers and of them that come into the Church Notwithstanding I am not of that minde neither would I be mistaken to think that men shuld neuer take their delight It is not vnlawfull to vse recreations we onely restraine men from thē vpon this day and that all recreation were sinfull I am not so stoicall to binde men onely vnto things of necessitie seeing the Lord of his great mercie hath giuen so many for pleasure be it farre from mee that I lay any heauier burden vpon any man then the Lorde himselfe hath layd For I know that to all things there is an appointed time and a time to euery purpose vnder the sunne But as in the former treatise we did not condemne the works of mens callings because we iudged them vnlawfull vpon the day of rest nay we held them commendable and necessarie and therefore would haue men faithfully to trauaile in them vpon the sixe dayes that so they might rest from them vpon the seuenth when they haue done all their worke before So in determining that we must giue ouer then our ordinarie recreations we do not conclude that they should altogether be left but aduise men rather to take them at some other time and wee doe exhort them that be in gouernement to giue some time to their children and seruants for their honest recreation vpon other dayes that they be not driuen to take it vpon this seeing they can no more want it altogether then their ordinary food And as we haue seen they are bound to giue them some time to worke for themselues vnlesse they will by their ouer much straightnes compel them to it vpon the day of rest so must they spare also some fewe houres for their refreshing now and then seeing they can no more want the one then the other But that we might throughly perceiue the largenes of this rest and know the full measure of it for our good we must stretch out our line yet further for it extendeth it selfe beyond all this that hath beene spoken for in this commandement the Lord doth not onely bind
teach vs that these are the meanes to sanctifie it by and that they are proper vnto the day Now though prayer be not here named yet we are to presume that neither the word nor sacraments were ministred withouth it seeing the fruite of both dependeth vpon the blessing of God which is obtained by prayer and seeing that in other places they are ioyned together And that the ministrie of the word is so vnseparably ioyned to the Sabbath and hath alwaies beene further appeareth by that which is most plainely in many words set downe in the 13. Acts 13.14 chapter of the same storie where it is thus written When Paul and Barnabas departed from Perga they came to Antiochia a citie of Pisidia and went into the Synagogue on the Sabbath day and sate downe 15. And after the lecture of the law and Prophets the rulers of the synagogue sent vnto them saying Ye men and brethren if yee haue any worde of exhortation for the people say on 16. Then Paul stood vp and beckened with the hande and sayd Men of Israell c. as followeth in that chapter to the 42. verse where againe it is written that when they were come out of the Synagogue of the Iewes the Gentiles besought that they would preach these wordes to them the next Sabbath day 44. And the next Sabbath day came almost the whole citie to heare the world of GOD which words doe sufficiently shew that it hath alwaies beene diligently obserued of the Church to sanctifie the Sabbath day in the publike reading and preaching of the word as in the most singular part of Gods seruice For Paul came and founde the Church alreadie met together vpon the Sabbath and reading the lawe and the Prophets and then was desired to preach and afterwards being desired to preach againe they came and heard him vpon the Sabbath And in the 15. chapter wee haue heard alreadie That Moses hath of old time Acts 15.21 in euery citie them that preach him seeing he is read euery Sabbath day in the Synagogues Besides that which is written of Paul in the 17. Chap 17.1.2.3 chapter that he comming to Thessalonica where was a Synagogue of the Iewes as his manner was went in vnto them and three Sabbath daies disputed with them by the scriptures opening and alledging that Christ must haue suffered and risen againe from the dead and this is Iesus Christ whom sayd he I preach vnto you But it were an endlesse labour though profitable in order to reckon vp all the seuerall places which shewe that these are the holy works of the Sabbath which the Lord requiteth all men to bee occupied in if they will sanctifie the day according to his commandement and as the practise of the Church giueth vs example And vpon these considerations it seemeth it was enacted in a councell held in Germanie vnder Charles the great for the maintaining of the publike preaching euery Lords day Concil Mogūt cap. 25. that Si forte Episcopus If the Bishop be not at home or be sicke or vpon any other vrgent cause be not able himselfe Nunquam tamen desit diebus Dominicis qui verbum Dei praedicet Yet let it bee so prouided that there neuer want one to preach the worde of God vnto the people on the Lords daies Phil. Melanct. in praecept 3. Master Melancthon reckoning vp many parts of sanctifying the Sabbath sayth Piè fungi ministerio where he makes this not onely one but the principall thing for a man well to discharge his ministerie in which answer he includeth the preaching of the word because a little before he sayth that the Prophets when they lament the desolation of the Sabbath they complaine Abolitum esse ministerium docendi That the ministerie of teaching was abolished and that the priests lips did not keepe knowledge But as themselues say they were dumme dogs and delighted in sleeping Bucer in Mat. 12.11 And Master Bucer in this argument writing of the practise of that Church wherein himselfe liued sayth Dominicis diebus in singulis Parochijs ad minimum duae si non tres habentur conciones Vpon the Lords dayes in euery parish there are two sermons at the least if not three Which also as it may be truely sayd of a great number of Churches in England for the space of these many yeares vnder the most happy raigne of her maiestie to the great glory of God her singular renowne and the saluation of many soules so in that respect we are to bow our knees vnto God day and night for the preseruation of her royal maiestie that it may be so by her meanes for euer as also that in those places where it is yet wanting it might be brought in in Gods most blessed time if our vnthankfulnes doe not hinder vs euen as that zealous and good King Iehosaphat could not doe all things in his time that he would for the reformation of the Church because the people then had not prepared their hearts to serue the GOD of their fathers 2. Chron. 20.33 Therefore to be short let vs looke vnto that which is in the chapter immediatly following Chap. 18.4 That Paul abiding at Corinth disputed in the Synagogue euery Sabbath day and exhorted the Iewes and the Grecians Here the holy Ghost witnesseth of him that hee did openly teach the scriptures euery Sabbath day and in the forenamed place that it was his manner so to doe then it must needs be the custome of the Church to come to the publike ministrie of the word vpon those dayes Al men ought to resort to those places where the word is preached and it must be a common manner with them which is spoken to this end that we might not be of that brutish mind that some are of that know no other thing to do vpon the Sabbath but to rest and take their ease and therfore lye many times at home sleeping most prophanely and so their oxe and their asse in ceasing from their worke keepe as good a Sabbath as they neither to be so ignorant as others are who content thēselues with their owne priuate readings at home or with the bare reading of the word in the Church neglecting the preaching of it not labouring to procure it to themselues nor repairing to those places in the meane season where it is though it be the chiefest part of Gods seruice and therefore the most especiall meanes whereby the Sabbath is sanctified and without the which all other things in the seruice of God are lesse accepted of God and more vnprofitable to our owne selues Therefore how many places of scripture haue wee seene before commanding vs so straightly to sanctifie the Sabbath so many are there binding all men of what estate and cōdition soeuer to listen after the preaching of the word and to be at it euery Sabbath if they haue any care to discharge themselues of that obedience vnto God which he
that superstition of the Iewes which that graue father singularly wel deseruing of al the Church of God Beza in Cantic Solō Homil. 30. Master Beza speaketh of When it is counted such a great sinne to open a shop windowe Non item si lusum si potatum si scortatum fuerit But not so great if a man vpon this day giue himselfe to gaming to swilling and to playing the harlot Yea as another learned diuine sayth Gualt in Act. 13. Homil. 88. Hodie eò res deuenit In our time things are so come to passe that amongst Christians they may be accounted very good men who breake the Sabbath by their handie labor when they most doe prophane it with horrible wickednes neither at any time doe they more offend in pride and disdaine in drunkennes ryot lust then vpon that day which should be wholly consecrated vnto God and to the meditation of his workes and of our eternall rest And seeing these thinges are done openly and commonly sayth hee doe we yet maruaile what is the cause of the calamities of our time And Master Bucer complaineth yet a great deale more Bucer in Psal 92. I am nihil ferè scelerum est Now there is almost no wickednes which is not especially committed vpon the Lords holy day there is op●●●●ying drinking filthy dauncing harlotting fighting and quarrelling and I would to God greater things then these were not committed I will not say as he sayth Et nusquam ferè licentiùs quam in ipsis principum Episcoporum aulis For I hope better things of them and such as accompanie saluation but in too many places of towne and countrie So that I may say of them as father Chrysostome doth Chrysost de Lazar. conci● pri Thou hast receiued the Sabbath day of God to clense thy soule from sinne and thou vpon that day dost most of all ●ommit sinne Whereupon it comes to passe that all the weeke following they are so much the more wicked b● how much that which was appointed for their good they haue turned into sin vnto themselues so that as the Gospell which in it selfe is the sauour of life vnto li●e by mens abuse is turned into the sauour of death a●d the bread of the Lords table which is the food of life is turned into poyson when men doe not rightly therein discerne of the Lords body and so by eating it and dri●king the Lords cuppe 1. Cor. 11.29 they procure his iudgement against ●hemselues so this day of the Lords resurrection which is therefore the day of life vnto vs is by their wickednes ●ade vnto them the day of euerlasting death Euen as Master Caluin sayth Caluin vpon Deut. 5. ser 34. When the Sunday is spent not onely in games and pastimes full of vanitie but in things which are altogether contrary vnto God that men thinke they haue n●t celebrated the Sunday except GOD therein be by many and sundrie waies offended when men I say vnhallow in such sort this holy day which God hath instituted to leade vs vnto himselfe is it any maruaile if wee become brutish and beastlie in our doings all the rest of the weeke But to reserue all such prophane beasts vnto the iudgement of God whose holy daye of rest as they doe despise so vnlesse they repent and amend GOD hath sworne long agoe Heb. 3.18 that they shall neuer enter into his heauēly rest There are others of whom in the same place he speaketh Caluin ibid. Who glut themselues by ryotting and are shut vp in their houses because they dare not shew a manifest contempt of their duetie in the open streetes so that the Sunday is to them a retreat to withdraw themselues from the congregation of God whereby one may see what affection they haue to all Christianitie and the seruice of God when by this which was giuen vs for an aide and helpe to drawe neerer vnto God they take occasion to withdraw themselues the further from him For as he sayth a little before if we imploy the Sunday to make good cheere to sport our selues to goe to games and pastimes shall God in this bee honoured Is not this a mockery Is not this an vnhallowing of his name But let vs that be Christians be of another minde and let vs as Saint Augustine sayth shewe our selues Christians by keeping holy the Lords day August ad Casul ●pist 86. vnto whom so manie as feare God let me say as they did at the Councell of Paris Concil Paris lib. 3. cap. 5. Salubriter admonemus We do admonish all the faithfull for the saluation good of their soules that they would giue due honour and reuerence vnto the Lords day because the dishonour of it is both contrarie vnto Christian religion and doth without all doubt bring destruction to the soules of all that continue it And there is great reason of it For seeing that daye is appointed for all the partes of Gods worship Bulling in Ier. c●ncio 65. He that despiseth the Sabbath makes no great account of the true religion as master Bullinger very wisely noteth and therefore the Sabbath is many times put for the practise of all religion and the Prophets when they complaine of the decay of all religion say that the Sabbaths are polluted as hee also obserueth in the same place according to which rule if wee will iudge of the religiō of men we shall find that amongst a great many it is very little or none at all because they haue not that due care of the Sabbath that they should And thus saith Master Caluin Caluin vpon Deut. 5. ser 34. that the Prophet Ieremie in many places rebuking the Iewes for breaking of the Sabbath speakes vnto them as if they had in generall broken the whole law and not without cause for he which setteth at naught the Sabbath daye hath cast vnder foote all Gods seruice as much as is in him and if the Sabbath daye be not obserued all the rest shall be worth nothing Now besides seeing the end of all is that the fruit of Gods worship might appeare in our godly conuersation to the glorie of his name and our eternall saluation euen as it was ordayned of God at the first to keepe Adam in his integritie if we by the grace of God escape all these horrible prophanations of this daye and haue attained vnto some tolerable care of keeping holy the day then let vs see what we are bettered thereby and what is the fruite of our profession thereon For then may wee haue comfort that we vse it aright when there proceeds that good of it thereby for which God ordained it and which wee see it bringeth forth in many others And therefore I may say with Master Bucer Bucer in Mat. 12.11 if we do truely and religiously serue God vpon the Lords day aboue all others Declarent hoc mores Let our manners shewe it let the holinesse
THE DOCTRINE OF THE SABBATH Plainely layde forth and soundly proued by testimonies both of holy Scripture and also of olde and new ecclesiasticall writers Declaring first from what things God would haue vs straightly to rest vpon the Lords day and then by what meanes we ought publikely and priuatly to sanctifie the same Together with the sundry abuses of our time in both these kindes and how they ought to bee reformed Diuided into two Bookes by Nicolas Bownde Doctor of Diuinitie Hieron Prolog Galeat In the Church of God euery one doth offer that which he is able some gold siluer and pretious stones others blew silke and purple and skarlet and fine linen t is well for our part if we offer skinnes and goates haire AT LONDON Printed by the Widdow Orwin for Iohn Porter and Thomas Man 1595. HONI SOYT QVY MAL Y PENSE TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE MY VERY GOOD LORD ROBERT Deuoreux Earle of Essex Ewe Vicount of Hereford Lord Ferrers of Chartley c. Master of the Q. Maiesties horse Knight of the most noble order of the Garter and one of her Maiesties most honorable priuie Counsel the increase of all true honor and fauour with God and men RIght Honorable if there were so many good reasons to moue your Honour graciously to accept these my labours as I haue iust causes to induce me to preferre them to your Honor then I should haue good hope that as they haue most willingly come from mee so they should haue good countenaunce at your Honors hands For besides your late Honorable fauour extended vnto me requireth this and al other duties of me wherby I might shew my selfe thankefull to your Honour for the same euen so the desire also that I haue that this truth of GOD might come forth with the best credite hath moued me in the conscience of mine ovvne tenuitie to become humble sutor in the behalfe thereof for your honorable gracious protection Wherein if I haue intruded my selfe further then I ought and pressed neerer to your Honor then it becommeth mee crauing your Honorable pardon for this my boldnes I beseech your Honor to accept either my feruent desire to tender all duties vnto you or my great care to purchase best fauour for this worke or both vvhich haue compelled me hereunto And herein I am so much the more importunate vvith your Honor not for my selfe but for this part of Gods holie truth that it might be countenanced as one of your Honors fauorites because as wee be fallen into these euil daies wherin too many are readie vnaduisedly to set themselues against whatsoeuer they dislike and therfore the best causes are driuen to seeke patronage where it maie doe them most good So the Lorde hauing inlarged your honorable name aboue a great manie which as a precious ointment flowing from your selfe comfortablie refresheth and perfumeth a great number this part of Gods trueth also might enioie the common benefit of it with other to be ouershadowed thereby and by that meanes haue entertainment there where otherwise happily it should be finally regarded And so it becomming for your Honors sake a welcome guest vnto them it might deliuer vnto them in the name of God as sent by your Honor that message of his that it centaineth to the honor of his name to whom all honor is due from whō all honour commeth whome trulie to honour is the greatest honor Thus ceasing anie further to interrupt your Honor from your weightie affaires my praier vnto God is long to preserue your Honor zealous of the glorie of God faithful to her Maiestie profitable to the whole realme and comfortable to your owne soule most humblie with all dutifulnesse taking my leaue Your Honors most humble at commandement alwaies in the Lord Nicholas Bownd Norton in Suff. Iune 1595. To the Godlie and Christian Readers and namely to the reuerend wise and godly learned Fathers and brethren Ministers and Preachers of the Gospell grace and peace hee multiplied RIght reuerend and welbeloued in the Lord when as about nine yeeres since I was solicited to publish my Sermons vpon the tenne Commaundements by certaine of my godly brethren auditors then of the same I had manie reasons that preuailed to disswade me from that enterprise and especially be●ause I thought it superfluous in such great variety of learned writers of that matter especially wherein I haue been since more ●onfirmed by all those who of later times haue trauailed in that ●●nde And moreouer besides mine own vnsufficiencie for so great 〈◊〉 matter J was of opinion that hee that bendeth himselfe vnto ●riting had neede to haue some relaxation from preaching vn●esse hee bee of great gifts and meruailously fitted for both and ●herefore being necessarilie tyed vnto the one I durst not vnder●ake the other yet their importunitie preuailed thus farre with ●●ne as to make triall what I could doe in this commaundement which I had then in hand whereunto also I was the rather indu●●ed because it contained that argument which as it is of all o●her most excellent so it was least of all dealt in by anie largely ●●nd of purpose Hauing then within a fewe moneths at my best ●●asure finished this treatise as diuers of my fellowe Ministers ●●n whose hands it hath bin are sufficient witnesses and by them further encouraged to communicate it vnto all men I yeelded thereunto slowly indeede because I knewe a reuerend godly M. Robert Greenchā and learned father who for the most part of his life time greatly trauailing in this matter by his own reading meditation and conference with sundrie learned men had long before finished a great volume and wayted but his opportunity to furnish it to the presse though I neuer read one leafe of that booke whome I did for iust cause so highly reuerence that I was vnwilling to preiudice any of his godly proceedings especially in this thing wherein I knewe he had trauailed aboue most of his time and thereupon suspending my purpose for a time when I had imparted vnto him what I had done he gaue me this aduise to take his booke and to compare it with mine owne and to make one of them both which I refusing as being vnmeete for such a purpose and not knowing how I should well sorte out to the Reader such varietie of matter as was like to arise out of them both nor cunningly to fit the one to the other as it were to put a new piece of cloth to an old garment determined wholly to suppresse mine own expecting the comming foorth of his in time whereunto also I solicited him by writing and that also was my iust defence to those that still called vpon me for the comming foorth of mine owne In which expectation I continued vntill most vntimely I vnderstoode to my great grief and to the vnspeakable losse of the Church of God that hee was fallen a sleepe in the Lord And then I reuiued my former purpose and
reuised mine owne labours in which hauing at the first contented my selfe with the bare proofes out of the scriptures which I then thought sufficient especially for that auditorie to whome they were first ment did now compare the seuerall positions therein contained with the doctrine of former times and other Churches as I found the same set downe in the writings of the fathers Greeke and Latine new and olde so many as I had or could conueniently get and as I had time to reade them whom I finding to agree with me in the same points or rather my selfe with them was thereby the rather confirmed therin and thought that by their testimony and consent as it were by the pillar of truth I might sustaine and defend the same against al those that should oppugne or gainsay it Thus hauing so many learned men on my side managing the same cause with me or rather my selfe fighting vnder their colours haue at the last brought foorth this treatise vnto the view of the world and haue adventured it vnto 〈◊〉 the censures and speeches of all men wherin as I haue sought the ●●ory of GOD in the publishing of his truth so I pray the same ●ord to maintaine defend and blesse the same so far foorth as it 〈◊〉 his trueth And here derely beloued in the Lorde as I haue ●●imply and as it were with a naked breast declared vnto you the ●auses of my beginning and proceeding in this worke and that I ●aue not rashly and on the sodaine fallen into these opinions and ●hrust foorth my selfe into the world so I most humbly craue of ●ou this fauoure that all preiudice and sinister affection being ●ayd aside al things might be weighed in an euen ballance before they be refused as not hauing their iust weight euen there where they might cary some shew of vntruth according to the Canoni●all rule of the Apostle much more that al friuolous wranglings contentions gaine saying ambitious desire to ouercome and peruerse drawing of things to a wrong sense beeing forborne where I seeme to erre as I acknowledge my selfe subiecte vnto it I might charitably and Christianly bee admonished by your godly wisdomes that so I might also either by better proofes second the truth or els vpon more mature deliberation retract mine errour ●f there be anie For I doe most willingly submit my selfe vnto the Church of God by it in all things to bee censured and reformed according to his word Which I doe so much the more earnestly entreate at your hands because besides the conscience of my great vnsufficiency to deale in so weightie a matter before so many hundreths as the Lord in our time hath raysed vp fit for euery purpose I am not ignorant that this argument of the Sabbath is full of controuersie aboue many other points of diuinitie wherein many learned godly men dissent one from another which as I was perswaded of at the first so now of late since I attempted the ●ublishing of this booke I haue founde it to bee true by a most ●nwilling experience euen among those who for their great va●ietie of all learning deserue singularly to bee admired And ●●ough it were to be wished that we should be like minded being ●●one accord and of one iudgement yet seeing wee are men and haue but our measure of knowledge and that in euerie thing and so may easily dissent in that whereunto wee are come let vs proceede by one rule and if any be otherwise minded GOD shall reueale the same vnto him Thus commending my selfe vnto your praiers and these my labours vnto your fauourable good liking I bid you most heartily farewell in the Lorde who keepe vs alwaies his and one anothers in Christ Norton in Suffolke Iune 27. 1595. next after the yeare of Gods heauie and vnknowen iudgements by sundrie tempestes continued and renewed of boysterons windes great raine and outrage of waters fearefull thunders and lightnings pintching dearth and vntimely fruits to the destruction and losse of men cattell and goods Your dutifull brother and fellow seruant in the Gospel of Christ NICHOLAS BOVVNDE The first booke shewing the Institution and necessarie Continuance of the Sabbath and from what seuerall things we are commanded to rest vpon that day Exod. 20.8 Remember the Sabbath day to keepe it holie 9. Sixe daies shalt thou labour and doe all thy worke 10. But the seuenth day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God in it thou shalt not doe any worke thou nor thy sonne nor thy daughter thy manseruant nor thy mayd nor thy beast nor the stranger that is within thy gates 11. For in sixe daies the Lord made the heauen and the earth and the sea and all that in them is and rested the seuenth day wherefore the Lord blessed the seuenth day and hallowed it AS in the first Commandement the substance of Gods worship is set downe and in the second the manner of it in the third the end so here the time when and how long this should be openly and publikly thus practised In giuing of which Commandement the Lord vseth such manner of words and matter as might most stirre vs vp to the carefull keeping of it for in the practise of it consisteth the practise of all the other and in the neglect of it is the neglect of all religion Our naturall corruption rebellion therefore against this Commandement especially appeareth in that the Lord stirreth vs vp to it so many wayes yea in the first pronouncing of it How this Cōmandement differeth from all the rest For first whereas in the other Commandements he contenteth himselfe with bare commanding this or forbidding that yet to this he putteth an especial marke saying Remember that is thinke of it afore hand for indeed the want of remembring it in due time is many times one cause that it is no better obserued when it commeth And in Deuter. Deut. 5.12 Moses repeating the Law forgetteth not this word but vseth another of like importance saying Obserue or looke vnto the Sabbath to sanctifie it and further addeth As the Lord thy God commandeth thee referring them to the first giuing of it yea euen in this marking Secondarily in all the other Commandements when he simply forbiddeth a sinne it is to be vnderstood that he commandeth the contrary vertue though not expressed and when he willeth the good to be done he forbiddeth the contrary euill though it bee not named as wee haue seene in expounding the other Commandements yet in this not onely the good is plainly commaunded Keepe holy the Sabbath day but the euill is expresly forbidden In it thou shalt doe no manner of worke Thirdly it differeth from all other Commandements in that the Lord hath adioyned more reasons to it then to any other because our nature is most against the obseruation of it for whereas some Commandements haue no reason at all ioyned vnto them and especially in the second table in which our nature is not so corrupt
as hauing the light of it shining more cleerely within vs for the preseruation of the societie of mankinde in Common-wealths as Thou shalt not kill Thou shalt not commit adulterie Thou shalt not steale c. yet in the first table in which we are as blind as beetles euery Commandement hath some reason annexed vnto it As in the first The first Commandement hath one re●son ioyned to it I the Lord am thy God which brought thee out of c. Where because of that mercifull Couenant that he hath made with vs to blesse vs in all things eternally which as he first made it in Christ so he confirmed it in our miraculous Redemption wrought by him whereof the deliuerance out of Egypt was a type and figure therefore he requireth that wee should serue him with all that wee haue and none but him and so that we should take him only to be our God And the third Commandement one In the third Commandement there is one reason vsed namely that the Lord will most assuredly and seuerely punish all them that do dishonor his name and therefore we are charged not at any time to empaire his credit but rather most highly to aduance it as the very end wherefore we were first created Yet the second Commandement is more fortified The seconde Commandemēt hath two and hath as it were a double barre I meane tvvo reasons as against the which the vanitie of our reason and crookednes of our heart hath yet more appeared in so cunningly deuising and willingly embracing so many kinds of false religion neither conceiuing nor liking that true manner of Gods seruice which he hath prescribed in his holie word And therefore as he requireth that neither in an Image nor in any thing els deuised by vs we should serue him but according to his owne wisedome and wil made knowne vnto vs in his written word so he first wil plentifully reward in mercie euen to the thousand generation them that shall in loue thus serue him according to his Commandement and secondarily howsoeuer passing ouer many other sinnes yet as a louing and iealous husband will prosecute to the full the punishment of that spirituall adulterie whereby the hatred vnto God appeareth in that the heart is stolen away from him by a false worship But yet in this fourth Commandement the Lord goeth beyond all that hath been spoken The 4. Commandement hath three and bindeth vs vp with a threefold cord that can hardly be broken For he setteth downe three reasons not onely to commend vnto vs the excellencie and to shew the necessitie of keeping of it but also to giue vs to vnderstand how rebellious and corrupt our nature is here especially As it is indeed for many are not perswaded that there should be any day at all kept others doe not agree vpon the day which it should be some preferre other daies before it or make them equall with it they that are otherwise minded yet are not established in the precise resting and straight ceasing from so many things as God requireth much lesse doe men agree vpon the publike and priuate manner of sanctifying and keeping it holie Therefore the Lord doth not onely command it but also first sheweth vs the equitie of it in that he hath giuen vs sixe daies to be occupied in for our selues and therefore it is good reason that we should rest vpon the seuenth to attend vpon his busines as it were Secondarily we should doe it so much the rather because he hath gone before vs in his owne example who therefore rested vpon the seuenth day when he had created the whole world in sixe that wee thereby might the rather be allured vnto that order which he was purposed to establish namely that wee should rest vpon the 7. day from our owne works as God did from his and so be like vnto our Creator Thirdly and most especially that we should doe thus because God hath bestowed an especiall blessing vpon this day distinct from the rest euen the blessing of sanctification and therefore it is not lawfull for vs to vse it to any other end but to this holie sanctified end for which God in the beginning created it The fourth difference of this commandement from all the rest Last of all whereas all the other Commandements are giuen forth in such manner of words as binde onely our selues Thou shalt not take the name of thy Lord thy God in vaine Thou shalt not steale c. though I grant that more is implyed and they not only binde vs thus to looke to our selues but to so many also as bee committed to our ●●arge the Lord hauing giuen vs authoritie ouerthem ●●at we might see them practise all the lawes of both Ta●●les so much as lyeth in vs yet I say much is not ex●ressed in the deliuerie of them but in this Commandement in expresse words God speaketh to vs and chargeth vs with the care not onely of our selues but others ●lso saying Thou and thy son thy daughter thy manseruāt thy maidseruāt thy cattell the stranger that is within thy gates Thus we see how many waies this Cōmādemēt is charged vpon vs by the Lord how straightly he requireth it at our hāds how in the very giuing of it al things are ioyned vnto it by God himself that might commend ●●t vnto vs with greatest credite and care of obedience It remaineth that wee should see That the Sabbath ought to be continued what are the speciall things contained in it but first of all it is needfull to proue vnto you that the Sabbath ought still to be continued with vs because without this perswasion all doctrine or exhortation tending to the true manner of sanctifying it falleth to the ground and is vnfruitfull First of all therefore it appeareth in the storie of Genesis that it was from the beginning Gen. 2.3 and that the seuenth day was sanctified at the first so soone as it was made in so much that Adam and his posteritie if they had continued in their first righteous estate should haue kept that day holie aboue the rest seeing the Lord sanctified it for their sakes and though it be so indeede that they should haue been occupied in some honest calling and work vpon the sixe daies according as it is sayd to Adam that the Lord put the man into the garden of Eden Gen. 2.16 that he might dresse it and ●eepe it yet notwithstanding vpon the seuenth day they ●hould haue ceased from all wordly labour and giuen ●hemselues to the meditation of Gods glorious workes and haue been occupied in some more immediate parts of his seruice according to the former Commandement And that we might vnderstand indeede that the law of sanctifying the Sabbath is so ancient the Prophet Moses in Genesis doth of purpose vse the same words which the Lord God himselfe doth in pronouncing it as it is set downe in Exodus namely
vnperfect that thereby wee might be brought vnto our first perfection againe Yes surely vnlesse we be too much louers of our selues and ouerweaned with the pride of our nature must wee beleeue that if the perfect image of God in Adam not lightly shadowed but drawen out with most liuely and orient colours by the finger of God himselfe could not continue in his first beautie except by the pure meanes of Gods worship as ●t were by the first colours it were now and then refre●hed or at the least wise kept in the same freshnes then ●hen this goodly Image is so fowly defaced with sinne that not so much as the first draught thereof doth appeare nay all the colours of it are by Sathan sullied with iniquitie or rather cleane put out haue we much more neede to sanctifie many daies by the word Sacraments and prayer c. that so the Image of the first man might be renued in vs Coloss 3.10 Ephes 4.24 in knowledge in righteousnes and in true holines after the Image of him that created him euen as the Lorde God himselfe doth make this the vse of the Sabbath saying Keepe yee my Sabbaths for it is a signe betweene me and you in your generations Exod. 31.13 that yee may know that I am the Lorde which doe sanctifie you calling it a signe that is an instruction or that which teacheth because by the obseruing of it they should be taught that it was the Lorde that created them and would sanctifie them and therefore he saith that hee would haue them obserue and keepe the Sabbaths that therby they might know that the Lord which made them would also sanctify them by those meanes and so by a new birth shape them into that Image whereinto hee had created them at the first Vnto which agreeth that which the Prophet Isayah speaketh in the 56. chapter where hee promiseth vnto the barren in stead of sonnes and daughters that this shall bring them a better and more lasting name then they if they will in true knowledge of his will and holines of life serue him as hee requireth of them in his couenant and that they might doe so will diligently keepe the Sabbaths Esay 56.4 saying Thus saith the Lord vnto the Eunuches that keepe my Sabbath and chuse the thing that pleaseth me and take holde of my couenant euen vnto them will I giue within my house and within my walles a place and a name better then of the sonnes and of the daughters and I will giue them an euerlasting name that shall not be put out In which words we see he requireth this of them if they would enioy the promise that they should serue him in knowledg in holines according to his couenant and therfore that they would keepe the Sabbaths whereby the Lorde himselfe would giue vnto them that which he also promiseth in his couenant euē that knowledge and holines which hee requireth and according 〈◊〉 which they were first created whereby they might ●nioy all other promised blessings Thus then we ought to bee so farre from the brutish minde of a great many who minding nothing but their backe and their belly know no vse of the Sabbath sauing ●hat they see it is thus commanded by authoritie and ●hus publikely obserued as that wee should acknow●edge it to be the singular mercy of God towards vs in Christ Iesus that hee hath giuen vs his Sabbaths giuen them to vs I say who when wee were plunged in the bottomlesse pit of all miserie and there pressed downe with the weight of our owne sins had no meanes to be raysed out of it againe as from the dead sauing his holy word and blessed Sacraments in which he offereth vnto vs assuredly Christ Iesus to bee our Sauiour and redeemer hath together with them giuen vs his Sabbaths that vpon them we being so fully and altogether occupied in ●hese meanes as we should be and as we can not bee in ●he other daies because of our callings might through the blessing of God be made partakers of him who was made of God the father for vs wisedome righteousnes 1. Cor. 1.30 holines and redemption and so be saued by him And indeede what would become of vs If there were no Sabbath Gods worship would be altogether neglected if wee had not the Sabbaths For that I might not speak of the wicked who vpon the sixe dayes seldome or neuer pray neuer reade the worde neuer giue themselues to any good meditation or conference of the Scriptures as the things not appertaining to those dayes but are wholly possessed and caried away with the profits and pleasures of this worlde as it were with a streame yet through Gods mercifull ordinance are driuen to heare vpon the ●abbath and doe that which otherwise they would not whereby happily some good is wrought in them or else are left more without excuse before Gods iudgement seate to their iust condemnation That I might not speak of these wee may pitifully behold the children of God themselues many times neglecting the publike and priuate exercises of religion euen of the word and prayer in the weeke dayes being partly distracted in their callings for want of heauenly wisedome to diuide out their times and partly hindered by that vntowardnes and vnaptnes that is in their nature to all goodnes and partly by a carelesse forgetfulnes the world thrusting it out of their minds the diuell stealing it away wherby they do not so grow in the graces of God as they might therefore they are to too vnthankfull if they doe not acknowledge with thankes this vnspeakable benefite of the Sabbath in which God hath commanded them for their good to supply their former wants to make vp the breaches as it were of the other dayes and to build vp the decayes of them and to doe that wholly which before they did but in part and to doe that an whole day which before they did but by peeces and to doe nothing but that which before they ioyned with other thinges that so they might come to that happines which GOD would haue them to the which otherwise they could not come For lamentable experience in themselues doth teach them that though they obserue the Sabbath neuer so diligently according to Gods good commandement yet by reason of sinnes which is so bred in the bones that it will not out in the flesh they finde themselues failing in many dueties to God and men very vnto ward many times to those that they doe and so corrupting them falling into many sinnes prone vnto a great many moe and so hardly with great striuing to keepe an eeuen course of life that in their consciences they doe assuredly subscribe vnto this truth that if there were no Sabbath at all they were most miserable and should become like vnto the rest of the world And so let vs conclude this matter confessing and acknowledging vpon the premisses with all the Church of
he may perswade himselfe to eate what and when and where and how it pleaseth himselfe but as the Apostle saith All the Creatures of God are sanctified our vse by the word and by prayer 1. Tim. 4.5 and thefore if we will haue the right vse of them wee must so vse them as the worde requireth and pray vnto GOD for his blessing in the sober vsage of them so must we say of the Rest which God hath commanded vs to sanctifie and keepe holy the sanctification of which was the highest and most principall end of it according to the Commandement Remember the sabbath day that is the day of Rest to k●epe it holy and therefore though the Rest was made for man and man hath the disposition of it yet man being made for the glorie 〈◊〉 God he must so vse his Rest as by the sanctifying of it ●e may bring glorie to God indeed And therefore the ●ame Master Gualter a little after saith Gualt ibid. These things are ●ot so to be vnderstood as though it were lawfull for vs in ●hese things to appoynt or doe at our pleasure what liked vs ●est but Christ doth here teach the right vse of all outward ●hings least that we should through superstition abuse those ●hings vnto the hurt of our selues or other men which God ●ath appoynted for our safegard and good Therefore let vs marke how our sauiour Christ doth saye Man was not made for the sabbath or rest but he doth not say man was not made for the sanctifying of the Sabbath or keeping ●oly the day of Rest For as it is true that all the Creatures were made for mans vse and therefore they were made before him that he being made might vse them so man was made that hee might keepe the whole lawe of God ●nd euery part of it and therefore it was not giuen out ●ill man was made so man is aboue the Creatures but ●he lawe is aboue him and hee is made to worship God to ●allow his name and to sanctifie his sabbath And so I may say with Peter Martir Here consider the order of things P. Martir in Gen. 2. some things are created for man therefore man was made ●fter them but man was made for the seruice of God there●ore straight way after the Creation was brought in the ●lessing and sanctification of the sabbath And thus wee may conclude the truth of this doctrine ●hat wee haue in hand notwithstanding any thing that ●ath been spoken against it namely that as there hath ●een a sabbath day from the beginning so there is great ●●ason that it should continue to the ending and though had neuer so many aduersaries that haue bent their ●●ree against it yet they are not able to ouerthrowe it as ●●ing that which is strengthened by Gods Commande●●nt and as it were fortified by his owne hand yet I am not ignorant that it hath many and mightie enemies ●nd those that haue a great deale more to say against it then I haue vttered nay I doe not thinke that there is any one poynt of our Religion that is so in controuersie among the learned of all sortes as this of the sabbath wherein many friendes doe disagree but my purpose is not to deale so farre which thing I leaue to them that haue trauailed a great deale more then my selfe in this matter and I doe praye that this my labour might bee a spurre to the godly learned to take more paynes in so worthie an argument and to publish abroad that which I knowe some haue in their handes concerning this doctrine though I haue not read the same and then I would thinke I had reaped a sufficient fruite of my labour and in the meane season I will remember my purpose to conteine my selfe within the compasse of my first preachings Now as we haue hitherto seen that there ought to be a Sabbath day so it remaineth that we should heare vpon what day this Sabbath should bee kept and which is that very day that is sanctified for that purpose For I know it is not agreed vpon among them that doe truely hold that there ought to be a Sabbath which is that very day vpon which the Sabbath should alwaies bee Herein the Lord hath beene mercifull vnto his Church and succoured the infirmitie of man in this behalfe and decided the endlesse contention that might haue beene about this matter The Sabbath ought to be vpon the seuenth day and vpon none other Gen. 3.2 Exod. 30.10 Deut. 5.14 in that he hath told vs that it is the seuenth day which he hath sanctified for that purpose For it is in expresse words sayd in Genesis that God blessed the seuenth day and sanctified it and in Exodus The seuenth day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God and afterwardes the same words bee repeated by Moses in Deuteronomie Therefore it must needes be vpon that day and vpon none other for the Lord himselfe sanctified that day and appointed it for that purpose August epistol ad ●anisar 119 cap. 10. and none but it And therefore it is truely said of that great clerke Saint Augustine De solo Sabbatho dictum est c. This is said onely of the Sabbath GOD sanctified the seuenth day In so much that a man being in conscience persuaded that he shuld keepe holy vnto the Lord some one day or other should ignorantly chuse out some other day neglecting the seuenth to sanctifie it by resting from his labours and wholly applying himselfe to Gods seruice he could not looke for that blessing from GOD which no doubt the Church of God doth find at his hands vpon that day by vertue of his especiall promise for he blessed that day and sanctified it Pet. Mart. in Gen. 2. And as Peter Martyr alledgeth it out of Rabbi Agnon This blessing doth light vpon those who obserue and sanctifie the same Sabbath that God hath appointed and wee doe not reade that hee bestowed that blessing vpon any other day which we know he did vpon the seuenth So that the substance of this law is naturall as Master Iunius say●h Iunij pralect in Gen. 2.3 and to bee obserued of all men alike namely that euery seuenth day should bee holy vnto God And so it is true not onely that of euery seuen daies as Peter Martyr saith one must bee reserued vnto God Pet. Mart. in Gen. 2. and a little after it is perpetuall that one day in the weeke should bee reserued for the seruice of God but that this must be vpon the seuenth In setting downe of which I doe not so farre forget my selfe but that I remember that some whom with all humilitie I doe reuerence in the Lord and giue thankes vnto him for their labours that I say they are otherwise minded and do not thinke that the Church is necessarily tyed to the number of seuen in obseruing the day Yet I doe not see bee it farre from me that
Lords Supper Why then might not the day be changed nay 1. Cor. 10. was it not the great wisedome of God to change the day with all these to shewe that there was a thorowe change indeede in the whole gouernmēt of the Church of the Iewes whē the day it selfe vpon which all the other things were practised was changed together with them And whereas all other things were so chāged that they were cleane takē away as the Priesthood the sacrifices and sacraments this day was so changed that it yet remaineth which sheweth that though all the other were ceremoniall and therfore had an ende this onely was morall and therefore abideth still So saith Master Gualter Gualt in Mal. 3. Homil. 23. The Primitiue Church thought it did abolish the Iewish Sabbath Olim illud sacrū non aboleuit yet it tooke not away the holy day of rest but did translate the obseruation of it vnto the day following therefore there is the same vse of it now which was of the Sabbath in times past among the true worshippers of God Why the Apostles changed the sabbath of the Iewes into this day that we now keep rather then any other When thus it seemed good to the Apostles vpon these waightie considerations being herein gouerned by the holy Ghost to change this day they were directed by the same spirite aduisedly to chuse this day which we now keepe and must keepe to the end of the world rather then any other vpon speciall groundes and most singular reasons laide open to the Church who seeing into them and being perswaded by thē gaue their free consent vnto it For seeing that our God and sauiour Iesus Christ taking vpon him the wonderfull worke of our Redemption did finish and make an ende of it vpon that day when he did most victoriously rise from the dead and so declare that he had conquered all and that he dying in the state of a condemned sinner for vs taking vpon him all the punishment that was due to vs euen to the ransaking and confounding of all the partes of his soule and bodie Luk. 22.41.44 with droppes of water and blood trickling down from him when hee kneeled vpon the colde grounde and to the powring forth of that lamentable crie with great anguish My God my God why hast thou forsaken me And being thus caried to the graue Math. 27.46 and put vnder the ground as a man forlorne and cast away death holding him fast and chayning him vp as it were for the space of three dayes and three nights hee did notwithstanding all this at the time appoynted Act. 2.24 euen vpon this very day loose the sorrowes of death because it was vnpossible that hee should be holden of it and rising vp with wonderfull great glorie d●d shew that all things were ended and that hee had redeemed mankinde and all the Creatures into the glorious libertie of the sonnes of God Rom. 8.21 according as it is set downe in the Gospell When the first day of the weeke began to dawne Math. 28 1. Mary Magdalene and the other Mary came to see the sepulchre and behold there was a great earthquake for the Angell of the Lord descended from heauen and came and rolled backe the stone from the dore of the sepulchre and sate vpon it and sayd to the women feare ye not for I knowe that you seeke Iesus that was crucified he is not here for he is risen as he said Now that it might appeare that all the Ceremonies of the Iewes were at this time ended in him that was the fulfilling of them and that all those shadowes were taken away by his death who was the substance and bodie of them Because Christ did rise from the dead on that day they did make choyse of that day specially vpon which he rising againe from all things which he suffered did declare that he had ouercome and ended them indeede And besides that it might be an effectuall teaching to the Church that al the libertie and freedome from sinne from hell and death and from the eternall wrath of God is purchased vnto them by the accursed death shamefull sufferings of Christ Iesus vpon the Crosse by none other and that all glorie happines and life commeth vnto them from his righteousnes and glorious resurrection they did preferre this day aboue any other as most worthie in the which he hauing before suffered all these intolerable things for them and being pressed downe with them euen vnto death did afterwards recouering himselfe as it were and gathering new strength like vnto the most victorious lyon of the tribe of Iuda did I say Reuel 5.5 Rom. 1.4 mightilie raise vp himselfe in glorie for their sakes by the inuincible power of his Godhead Chrysostome among the sundrie names which he reckoneth vp that this day had in the Primitiue Church sayth it was therefore called the Lords day Chrysost serm 5. de resur Quia solemnis erat memoriae resurrectionis Christi because was solemnely appoynted for the memorie of the resurrection of Christ August epist ad Ianuar. 119 cap. 13 ad Casul 86. Whereunto agreeth S. Augustine The Lords day was declared vnto the Church by the resurrection of the Lord vpon that day And in another place The Apostles did appoynt the Lords day in stead of the Iewish Sabbath Idem de temp serm 251. Quia in eo redemptor noster à mortuis resurrexit because vpon that day our redeemer did rise from the dead which also therefore is called the Lords day So that not so much the Apostles as Christ himselfe brought in this chaunge and was the author of this day And this is that which one sayth Wolph chronol lib. 2. cap. 1. Nouum Christus Sabbathum substituit Christ did appoynt the new Sabbath when our last enemie death being ouercome he made an end of the labors of our redemption which in his humanitie were to be borne and the next day with the new man restored he brought out of the graue a new time the time of our redemption and of the new Couenant and did prepare an euerlasting Sabbath into the which himselfe then entered for vs also at the time appoynted by vertue of his resurrection to be entered into therefore as in the time of the Creation that day which was first of the Creation finished was made holi● for the worship of God so now in the time of the redemption that day which is first after the finishing of it is to bee accounted holie of vs. August de tēp serm 251. It appeareth in the Scripture sayth S. Augustine that this day is of great account for it is the first day of the world in it were formed the Elements in it were created the Angels in it Christ rose from the dead in it the holie Ghost descended vpon the Apostles and God first rained Manna in the wildernesse so that by these and
called the Lords day because it declareth vnto vs Christ crucified and raised vp againe and it is worthilie commanded to bee kept as the Lords day that wee might giue thankes vnto thee O Lord Christ for all these benefites for say they there is that grace bestowed vpon vs by thee Quae sua magnitudine omnia beneficia obscurat which by the greatnes and as it were brightnes of it doth obscure and darken all other So that though the day was once changed vpon these considerations nay they being such as they be it could not but be changed yet for so much as the like cause cā neuer be offered vnto men to moue them to enter into this consultation therefore the day must not onely not be changed any more but it must not so much as enter into mens thoughts to goe about to change it And therefore I doe so much the more maruaile at him who sayth That the keeping holie of the Lords day is not commanded by the authoritie of the Gospell Brētius in Leuit 23 2. but rather receiued into vse by the publike consent of the Church And a little after The obseruation of the Lords day is profitable not to be reiected but yet it is not to be accounted for a commandement of the Gospell but rather for a ciuill ordination And That the Church might haue appoynted but one day among ten or foreteene Idem in Leuit. 25.8 for the publike rest and Gods seruice And That herein consisteth part of our Christian libertie that it is lawfull if so be it be done by publike authoritie to keepe holie weekelie not onely not the Lords day but as they call them Munday Tuesday or any other day Wherein that we might be the rather established we must remember that not only that name of the day was changed together with it but it was changed into that very name it hath now vpon these speciall reasons that we haue alreadie heard The name of the Sabbath was changed into the name of the Lords day which also must be retained For it is called the Lords day euen of the Lord Iesus and it hath the honorable name of him who vpō that day did arise in greatest honor in so much that we ought not onely to keepe the day but to keepe it in his right name especially seeing part of the honour of it is in the name For as we doe breed reuerence of the Sacrament in mens hearts by speaking of it after his owne proper name the Lords Supper the cuppe of the Lord the Lords table 1. Cor. 11.20.27 and 10.21 so it maketh the day more highly to bee esteemed as it ought when we call it by his right name religiously the Lords day and doe not miscall it by a wrong name as the heathen haue done prophanely the Sunday who hauing ascribed the gouernment of the seuen daies in the weeke vnto the seuen Planets and hauing accordingly giuen them their names as appeareth more euidently in the Latin Dies solis Lunae Martis c then in our English names yet so it is that any of the daies might be called Sunday as well as that which is without any offence But it is not so in the name of the Lords day for as by it can bee ment no other day but that which wee keepe for our Sabbath so the name cannot be imparted to any other day without sacriledge Therefore as the Iewes did carefully retaine the name of the Sabath according to the first institution so ought we to acquaint our selues with the name of the Lords day Thus did the Christians vse to call it in former times as it is well obserued by that ancient writer Beda Mos Christianus appellat Beda in Luk. 24.1 It is the manner of the Christians to call it the Lords day because of the resurrection of our Lord where he sayth that not onely now and then they did so speake but that it was an vsuall maner among them And we had need to doe it so much the more because it behooueth vs to vse al good meanes to aduance the credite of this day in mens consciences in these prophane and irreligious times especially wherin as the contempt of all religion appeareth in many places so especially it bewrayeth it selfe in this that the Lords day is euery where so vnhallowed Nowe if the wisedome of the world hath taught the heathen to be so circumspect in their generations as by the false names of dayes to keepe the memorie and honour of their false gods should not the wisedome of Gods spirite teach vs to bee as carefull in our generations to take into our mouthes that holy name of the Lords day which as it is commended vnto vs in the word not deuised by man as the other so it doth greatly aduāce the dignity of the day as that which is deriued from the name of the most high And if a mortall man doth take himselfe to bee disgraced Therein consisteth part of the honor of this day not onely when hee is called by a wrong name but also when hee hath not his right name and iust titles giuen vnto him so no doubt the honour of the day appeareth not to be so great as it is when it wanteth that most excellent name by the which it is commended vnto vs in the scriptures I grant indeed it will seeme strange vnto vs at the first to change the name as all new things for a while bee strange but wee knowe that euery thing must haue a beginning and that which is at the first begun in a fewe particulars is afterwards in time receiued of multitude so by custome groweth into a law that hardly can bee changed Therefore as there was a time in which the names of the heathen were vnknowen and yet by the obstinatee endeuours of some when they were begun they were receiued and so continued euen so if any man would begin himselfe thus to ve the name of the Lords day though he were alone at the first I doubt not but in a fewe generations the true and holy name should be receiued among vs. But to returne to that which we spake of before wee haue plainly seene that the day and the name ought thus to bee changed whereby the Sabbath is made now so much the more excellent and renowmed vnder the Gospell then it was in the time of the law because that wheras the one caried vpon it indeed the badge of the creation of the world which made it famous vpon this is engrauen the liuely Image of the redemption of the world which maketh it so much the more famous by howe much the benefite of the one exceedeth the benefite of the other not onely that but it freshly representeth the memorie of the first creation also and so by a double marke is more highly commended that being the very day in which the creation of the first and olde world was begun and the
To morowe is the rest of the holie Sabbath vnto the Lord where he is not contented to say to morowe is the Sabbath which was as much to them and was so knowne as the day of rest to vs but he doubleth the word and sayth It is the rest of the holie Sabbath as though he had sayd It is a day of rest euen of the holie rest indeede noting out ths necessitie of the rest and how straightly the Lord requireth it of them and that the rest might not be omitted at all Exod. 31.15 Vnto which agreeth that which is in the 31. chapter where he doth not onely say that he that worketh about the Tabernacle vpon the seuenth day should dye the death but also addeth as it were giuing a reason of it the seuenth day is the the Sabbath of the holie rest vnto the Lord. Where he both calleth it the Sabbath day as it were expounding it the day of rest and though in the first tongue both the words be of one nature and signifie one thing yet it hath seemed good to the Interpretors thus to translate them that retaining the proper name of the day in one the other might shew the nature of it and both of them ioyned together might declare how necessarily the rest is to bee adioyned vnto the day and what a principall regard the Lord hath vnto that in this Commandement which is of men least of all considered And as Moses in the Mount had receiued this from God in so plaine words that notwithstanding all that was to bee done the Sabbath must be a day of rest So in Exod. 35.2 he comming to declare all that should bee done beginneth with this namely with resting vpon the Sabbath in so many words giueth it in charge vnto the people in how many he had receiued it from the Lord in the chapter mentioned before Sixe daies thou shalt worke but the seuenth day shall be vnto you the holie Sabbath of rest vnto to the Lorde whosoeuer doth any worke therein shall dye where besides the ciuill punishment of death vpon those that did not rest which he forgetteth not as he had receiued it he doubleth the word rest vnto the people as the Lord did to him before Leuit. 16.31 calling it the sabbath of Rest So in Leuit. 16. though he speaketh not of this very seuenth day but of the day of pacifying as wee haue seene before yet because it had the nature and name of the Sabbath he doth not only say In it doe no worke at all but also calleth it a sabbath of Rest Leuit. 23.18 as also in the 23. chapter of the same booke where he speaketh of it againe and with more words standeth in requiring the Rest at their hands as you shall doe no worke the same day vers 30. and euery person that shall doe any worke that same day the same person also will I destroy from among his people ver 31. you shall doe no worke therefore and in the ende concludeth 32. this shal be vnto you a sabbath of rest Out of which places wee must needes confesse that the Lords meaning is not to fray vs with a vaine shew of words but that he as earnestly commandeth the thing as the words bee many that he vseth for our dulnes sake For if the wisedome of a man bee discerned in that his words be proportionall vnto his matter and that thereby wee know the matter is waightie when his words are many then much more must we be perswaded that the holie scripture was written by such a heauenly wisedom that it containeth not a confused heape of vaine and vnprofitable wordes and that it is full of idle repetitions which were blasphemie to thinke but that the Lorde hath in wisedome tempered his speech for our good and framed it to our capacitie and therefore foreseeing the pronenes of our nature to breake out in this Commandement hath set vp so many barres as it were against vs and doth thus beate that into our eares which we are so vnwilling to heare and more loth to followe And here that I might not seeme tedious vnto you let vs in one worde consider of that which is in this same chapter spoken of the seuenth day it selfe therfore no exception can bee made against it in the 3. chap 23 3. verse of the same chapter where the Lord speaking of the yearely feasts which they should keep beginneth with that which was the chiefest euen the Sabbath and commanding them first of all to rest vpon it which is indeede the first thing required vpon that day vseth thus many wordes Sixe daies shall worke be done but in the seuenth day shall be the sabbath of rest you shall doe no worke therein it is the sabbath of the Lord in dwellings where he is not contented twise to haue repeated the word sabbath which signifieth rest and further to adde that no worke should bee done therein but repeateth the wordes as wee haue seene heretofore calling it the sabbath of rest that is the rest euen the most notable rest giuing them to vnderstand that vpon that day they must rest yea they must rest indeede But I will shut vp this poynt with that which is in the 25. Leuit. 25.4 chapter of the same booke of Leuiticus where the Lord speaking of that rest that should be giuen vnto the land euery seuenth yeare which was a childish instruction to them of the nature of the Sabbath according to the dispensation of those times that they might knowe how necessarie it was for them to rest vpon the seuenth day doth very straightly require that the land should rest vpon the seuenth yeare and therefore doth so speake of the rest of the land as of the rest of the Sabbath because that was a figure of it The seuenth yeare shal be a sabbath of rest vnto the land it shall bee the Lords sabbath thou shalt neither sowe thy field nor cut thy vineyard where as we see he doth not only call that yeare twise a Sabbath that is a rest and forbiddeth them vnder two kindes that were the chiefe all manner of worke but calleth it the sabbath of rest vnto the land Shewing how necessarie a thing it was that the land should rest that the shadowe might bee like the bodie and that this rudiment might teach them that for the which it was ordained he telleth them that vnto the land a singular rest is to bee performed vpon the seuenth yeare because the like speciall rest is to bee obserued vpon the seuenth day Thus wee haue hetherto seene concerning this matter not onely that the Lord requireth in this Commandement that we should rest vpon the seuenth day but how necessarily he requireth it of vs and what great care we ought to haue of it and that it is a greater sinne to work vpon that day then it is taken to be and that it is not an indifferēt thing to work or
at the gates that there should be no burthen brought in on the Sabbath day 20. So the chapmen and Marchants of all marchandise remained once or twise all night without Ierusalem 21. And I protested among them and sayd vnto them why tarrie ye all night about the wall If you doe it once againe I will lay hands vpon you From that time they came no more vpon the Sabbath Out of which description of their vngodlie practise in the storie it is as cleere as the noone day that there was a common market or faire vpon the Sabbath it is set out so plainly and in so many words for there was selling of all wares and there were both Marchants and chapmen not onely within Ierusalem but which came from other places to buy and sell but he reproueth the one and the other and conuicteth them all of the manifest breach of the Sabbath in not obseruing the rest of it yea euen those that sold victuals and those that did but carrie things to and fro And so this scripture teacheth vs that the holie rest of the Sabbath is so inuiolably to bee obserued that no persons at any time may breake it no not vnder the pretence of buying and selling then when most may be gained either waies no nor vnder the colour that they doe but carrie things to bee bought or sold no nor vnder the shewe of doing that which might seeme most tolerable as buying and selling of victuals All which things are so palpable and grosse a breach of that Commandement which requireth a resting from such things that they are not onely condemned in the iudgement of them that haue seene most cleerely by the light of the word but also of such as being stone blind and therefore could not discerne them with the eye yet were able with their hands as it were to feele them For in the very depth of Poperie it was by the authoritie of the Parliament ordained Ann. 27. Hen. 6 cap. 5. That all manner of Faires and Markets should vpon the Sundaies cleerely cease and that there should not be any shewing of goods and marchandises vpon the same vnder paine of forfaiture of all the goods aforesayd so shewed to the Lord of the Franchise and therefore by authoritie aforesayd power was granted vnto all such as had no daies to keepe their Faires but these that they might keepe the same three daies before or after they signifying the same by proclamation vnto the Countrey aforehand And they which of old time had by speciall Commission sufficient daies before or after should in the manner as is aforesayd keepe their Faires and Markets the sayd Sundaies except Where also it is worthie to bee considered by what reasons the King the Lords spirituall and temporall and the whole Commons of this Realme of England were then induced vnto this resolution as they bee set downe at large in this statute Namely they did consider that I might vse their owne words the abominable iniuries and offences done to almightie God by the occasions of Faires and Markets vpon these daies accustomably and miserably holden and vsed in the Realme of England In which daies for great earthly couetousnes the people were more willingly vexed and in bodily labour troubled then in other workedaies as in fastning making their boothes and stalles lifting and setting their marchandise outward and homeward as though they had nothing in memorie the horrible defiling of their soule in buying and selling and so specially withdrawing themselues and their seruants from diuine seruice These are the words of the Statute in which though I am not ignorant that they made other daies in the weeke Saints daies as they bee called equall in this thing with the Lords day nay preferred them before it according to the ignorance of those times yet it is sufficient for my purpose that the Sundaies so called were not excluded but rather with the other included in a branch of this Statute Yea this law was in force here in this land long before this time euen before the Conquest when as in the daies of Canutus Canutus lege 14. 15. amongst other lawes made by a councell of his sages at Winchester which as some write are yet extant it was enacted Item that Sunday be kept holie Faires Courts Huntings and worldly worke on that day to bee forborne But to shut vp this matter in a word we doe vnderstand that the Lord hath not only by his generall Commandements often repeated shewed vnto vs that a rest vpon this day must needes bee obserued of vs but also hath in particulars met with all these exceptions of times and busines which might least of all seeme to be included within the compasse of it that we might not measure the length and breadth of this rest by the crooked rule of our owne imagination as the greatest part doe but by the vndeceiueable line of his holie word which is only able to giue vs the full measure of it But yet if you further demaund from what things wee should rest seeing it is agreed vpon among vs that wee must rest indeede 5 We must rest from whatsoeuer doth hinder vs from Gods seruice surely the answere partly appeareth by that which hath been alreadie spoken and doth more fullie arise from the words of the text For first of all seeing the principall end of resting is that the day time might be sanctified in the holie worship of God as the Worde the Sacraments and prayer it must of necessitie followe that whatsoeuer thing doth hinder vs from spēding the time profitably in these things we must rest from them And therfore wee see that alwaies this reason is brought why wee should rest from other things euen that wee might giue ouer our selues to Gods seruice As when Augustine sayth August de tēp serm 251. We are commanded to rest vpon the Lords day from earthly businesse that wee might bee more fit for Gods seruice And also in a Councel held vnder Charles the Great in which many worldly things are expresly by name forbidden as husbandrie keeping of Courts dealing in marchandise Arelat Synod 4 cap. 16. c. This is the conclusion His solummodo peractis those things onely being done quae noscuntur which are knowne to appertaine to the seruice of God So that I may say generally as M. Caluine saith Caluin vpon Deut. 5. Ser. 34 Wee ought to cease from those workes which hinder the workes of God let vs from calling vpon his name or stay vs from exercising our selues in his holy word Secondarily it may appeare by that opposition which is made betweene the workes of the sixe dayes and the Rest of the seuenth day that whatsoeuer are the workes of their calling wherein they are occupied in the sixe dayes from them they must rest vpon the seuenth according as it is said As from the workes of our callings Sixe dayes shalt thou labour and doe all thy
the Iudges to heare the controuersies of men pleading before them And generally in one word that I might not stand vpon the particulars which are infinite euery man in his seuerall roome place or calling high or low bond or free olde or yong ruler or ruled one and other Yet in themselues they are good necessary and lawfull but not vpon this day euen from him that sitteth vpon the throne to the maid seruant that is at the Mill and the captiue that is in prison must rest from their ordinarie works which are vpon other dayes not onely lawfull and commendable but also necessary yet vpon this day are so wholly to be left that they can in no wise agree with it no more then light agreeth with darknes and resting with working So that when wee doe forbid men all worldly trauell and labour vpon the Lordes day as the thinges from which God their creator would haue them rest according to the plaine words of his Commandement we do not finde fault with such works wee doe not condemne the things we iudge them not to be wicked and vngodly but we confesse with all humilitie as becommeth vs that they bee lawfull commodious and necessarie and wee will ascribe as much vnto them as themselues can iustly chalenge but wee say at this time and vpon this day they are vnnecessary vnfruitfull and vnlawfull because the Lorde hath forbidden them that other thinges might be done The circumstances of time place c. change the nature of our actions Neither must it seeme strange vnto vs that the time should thus change and alter the nature and qualitie of things making that vnlawfull which was lawful before for so we see it is in all other circumstances of places persons and ends according to the diuersitie of which one and the same thing is not onely diuerse from but also cleane contrarie to it selfe Many things are commendable in the Magistrate and doe deserue great praise as the cutting off of the malefactor Rom. 13.4 that so sinne might bee taken away seeing hee beareth not the sworde in vaine which if a priuate man shuld but attempt it were a thing intollerable most seuerely to be punished as our Sauior Christ saith Mat. 26.52 All that take the sworde shall perish with the sword So in other thinges we know that to giue almes is a sacrifice Prou. 19. that the Lorde is well pleased with in so much that he accounteth all that wee giue to the poore as lent to himselfe and he promiseth to repay it vs in the greatest time of our neede but to giue it before men that we might be seen of them doth so defile and staine this most excellent vertue and as it were change the nature of it Matth. 6.1 as that it hath no promise of reward from God at all nay it is plainely forbidden of him For men to sleepe in their houses vpon their beds or otherwise to take their naturall rest is allowable and that without the which they cannot continue but to sleepe in the Church Act. 20.9 and in the time of diuine seruice and ministery of the word sacraments and prayer is not only forbidden but hath been most seuerely punished Euen so that worke which is not onely permitted but also commanded vpon the sixe dayes and which might not bee left vndone yet is altogether forbidden on the seuenth day as vnlawfull that with the denouncing of most fearefull punishments vpon them that will not obey as wee haue seene heretofore in the gathering of Manna building the Tabernacle buying of victuales and selling Therefore as no reasonable man will saye this or that is lawfull in it owne nature therefore euery man may doe it and euery where and at all times so it is no good reason to say God hath commanded vs to doe these things therefore why should we rest from them vpon this day vnlesse wee can shew that vpon that day also he hath commaunded them but let vs rather say as the truth is The Lord hath commanded vs to doe these things vpon the sixe dayes therefore we must rest from them vpon the seuenth And in so dooing our purpose is not to perswade men to idlenes and to do nothing neither is it the meaning of the commaundement but to rest from those workes of our owne that are forbidden that we might wholy and without all lette be occupied about those workes of God which hee hath prescribed as shall hereafter more euidently appeare vnto vs. But that we might yet more deepely consider of this and be more fullie perswaded that the Lord would haue this generall rest from euery thing so carefully obserued and that no kinde of worke should be done by any besides the first and generall commandement of resting that we haue seene All degrees of mē both high and lowe are commaunded to rest vpon the Lords day he more particularlie forbiddeth all estates and degrees of men as well the principall as the accessorie and helpes all manner of worke and not onely them but all other creatures which are most fit for it and whose labour man might be most readie to abuse for the breaking and interrupting of this rest as it appeareth in the wordes following as they are set downe in the 10. verse of this 20. chapter of Exodus In it thou shalt not do any worke thou nor thy sonne nor thy daughter thy manseruant nor thy maide nor thy beast nor thy stranger which is within thy gates And is repeated againe Deut. 5.14 in as many or more wordes Thou shalt not doe any worke therein thou nor thy sonne nor thy daughter nor thy manseruant nor thy maide nor thine oxe nor thine asse neither any of thy cattell nor thy stranger that is within thy gates that thy manseruant and thy mayde seruant may rest as wel as thou In which places we doe see that there is none of any calling or estate whatsoeuer nor of any kinde or sexe or age that may be exempted from this rest but that particularlie and by name all gouernours both in the familie and common wealth and all vnder gouernment are charged with it whether it bee father or childe sonne or daughter mayster or seruant man or mayde magistrate or people freedenison or borne without the liberties euen to the stranger and so many as be within their gates that is within the compasse of their iurisdiction and gouernement yea and the very beastes themselues whereof some are named as the Oxe and the Asse which are the chiefe and were most vsually occupyed among the Iewes and therefore no worke is to bee done any where seeing there is none to doe it for euery one is by name expressely forbidden without the exception of any person Therefore concerning these particulars more fully we may perceiue As the Magist●ate and gouernour that the magistrate and gouernour in authoritie how hye soeuer cannot take any priuiledge vnto himselfe whereby he
might be occupied about worldly busines when other men should rest from them For the Lord beginneth with them first saying Thou euen thou that art a father a master a gouernour and hast any within thy gouernment and vnder thy hand as it were within thy gates And al that be in subiection And as the gouernour may not pretend his authoritie for excuse as though hee might escape by that no more may the inferiour his subiection as though that should hide him seeing the Lord who is gouernour of both speaketh vnto both and nameth both whether he be sonne or daughter manseruant or maydseruant bond or free borne at home or a stranger as it is in the words of the text And there is great reason of this if we consider the subiects themselues and especially the seruāts As seruants especially whose condition were intolerable and not to be borne if when they haue for many daies been wearied with continuall labour they should not haue some good time to rest in and the Lord in his wisedom hath appoynted one whole day in seuen and therefore no lesse can be giuen And seeing that the rest was made for man that is Mark 2.27 appointed for the benefit and commoditie of man there can be no shewe of reason that they should want it who doe stand in most neede of the benefite of it but because it is most commodious vnto seruants it ought especially to be affoorded vnto them And therfore Exod. 23. Exod. 23.12 where this lawe is repeated hee bringeth this reason That the sonne and the mayd and the stranger should rest namely Arias Mont. Vattabl Tremel Deut. 5.14 that he might bee refreshed thereby and as it were take his breath as the word doth import and is so translated by the most skilfull in that tongue And in Deut. when Moses would perswade the gouernours willingly to bestow vpon their seruants this benefit of rest he willeth them to remember the heauie bondage of Egypt in the which they had no rest that by their own experience they might confesse that it was equall and iust before God and men that the wearied seruants should haue rest Master Caluin vpon this place sayth Let thy seruant rest and why For thou wast sometime in bondage Caluin vpon Deut. 5. Ser. 35 the time hath been thou couldest haue wished that one had giuen thee some rest and release from thy labours thou oughtest then to vse such gentlenes towards them which are vnder thy hand If thou wert in bondage wouldest thou not that one should giue thee some release Wouldest thou alwayes bee oppressed with labour and trauaile Surely by thy good will thou wouldest not it behoueth then that thou beare also with others And how full of discomfort and continuall miserie should their liues be if this comfortable refreshing common vnto all the creatures euen to the oxe and the asse should bee denied vnto them Moreouer if the masters doe but looke to their owne priuate gaine they may bee induced to shewe this mercie vnto their seruants that thereby they might be more inabled vnto all new dueties of their calling the weeke following hauing thereby renewed their strength which otherwise would haue decayed which when it is not in that conuenient measure extended towards them that the Lord requireth some of them fall into sicknes others into great weakenes and manifold aches lamenes in their limmes or haue their bodies consumed and their bloud dried vp before the naturall terme of their life bee expired wherein besides the crueltie offered vnto their persons they doe wrong vnto themselues that they cannot inioy their labours so long and with so great profite as otherwise no doubt they might doe And this is that which Master Caluin in the same place obserueth Caluin ibid. When you shall haue this consideration namely of dealing thus mercifully with your seruants then shall you knowe that this day shall further serue you for some earthly profite and commoditie albeit in the meane time this is not that you ought to seeke after To speake in a word our Lord in this place declareth vnto vs that which in like manner hath been pronounced by Iesus Christ Matth. 6.33 that when we shall seeke the kingdome of God all other things shall be cast vpon vs. But last of all if wee looke into that which is the chiefest the honor and seruice of God in sanctifying the Sabbath which he as straightly requireth at the hands of the seruants as of the masters Ephe. 6.9 Coloss 3.11 seeing there is no respect of persons before him neither Grecian nor Iew circumcision nor vncircumcision Barbarian Scythian bond or free For he that is called in the Lord being a seruant 1. Cor. 7.22 is the Lords freeman Likewise also he that is called being free is Christs seruant Therefore that they might serue their high Lord and heauenly master who is aboue all and Lord ouer al vpon the seuenth day as they haue serued their earthly masters vpon the sixe we must needes confesse that they also ought to rest from those workes of their calling which otherwise would hinder them in it or altogether keepe them from it vnles besides the hinderance of their saluation wee would set our selues against the glorie of God to our endles confusion whilest wee hinder them from doing that seruice that he requireth of them seeing because of our busines they can in no wise performe it vnto him The like is to bee sayd in some part of the beasts The cattell must rest vpon this day as the oxe and the asse or any other cattell as wee haue alreadie heard it Deut. 5.14 that they also might haue the benefite of rest which they cannot want that so they might more commodiously be preserued for the vse of man for the which purpose they were made in the beginning and which is the very end of this rest And therefore it is sayd of them also In the seuenth day thou shalt rest Exod. 23.12 that thine oxe and thine asse may rest and be refreshed But chiefly and aboue all this was commanded vnto them that thereby as by a sure bond themselues might bee kept vnder obedience of this rest whom it did most of al concerne when they did see that the beasts themselues might not breake beyond the libertie of it of whom notwithstanding the Lord had a lesse principall regard but as they might be seruiceable vnto men in this behalfe Euen as Master Caluin doth very plainly lay it foorth intreating of this matter Caluin vpon Deut. ● ser 35. This was to the end the Iewes seeing the stables closed vp should be put in minde to say God setteth here before our eyes this signe euē in the bruit beasts and this is to the end that wee on our part should be the better kept and holden in his seruice Thus it behoued the Iewes deeplie to weigh euen in the bruit beasts this visible
vs to doe all such things as doe not directly hinder the sanctification of the Sabbath or if they bee against it in their owne nature yet necessitie that could not bee foreseene nor deferred crauing them at our hands they are iudged to be farre vnlike vnto themselues and haue as it were a new qualitie put vpon them And here is the olde prouerbe of the heathen true Necessitas non habet ferias Necessitie as it is without lawes so without holie daies And though it bee so that we are giuen to take too much libertie to our selues and therefore had neede to bee restrained vnto the full and it were more profitable for vs to heare from what things wee should rest then wherein wee may labour yet there is a trueth in all things which must bee knowne and though some are readie to abuse it yet therefore it must not be kept from them who haue care rightly to vse it For though they that bee ignorant will be ignorant still yet wisedome shall be iustified of her children Which is to be considered of vs the rather least any through a grosse superstition should fall into the extremitie of the Iewes of whom it is written and namely of certaine heretikes called Essaei Cent. 1. lib. 1. cap. 5. that they are ouer precise in this rest so that they dresse all their meate the day before vpon that day they kindle no fire they remoue no vessell Aluum non purgant they doe not ease themselues And in this respect Mac. 2.3.4 Mattathias and the rest of the Iewes condemned iustly the fact of their brethren who for lack of defence suffered themselues their wiues and children to the number of 1000. soules to bee slaine of their enemies vpon the Sabbath day P. Ram. comment de rellig lib. 2 cap. 6. Concerning which fact of theirs also a learned man sayth Superstitio fuit ex ignorantia It was a superstition bred in them for want of the true knowledge of the law of God Hereunto also may bee referred that which the most famous Historiographer and Diuine Master Foxe reporteth in his worthie booke of the Acts and Monuments of the Church sayth hee Master Foxe Some English histories make mention of a Iew who about the yeare of our Lord 1257. fell into a priuie at T●kesbury vpon a Sabbath day who for the great reuerence he had to his holy Sabbath would not suffer himselfe to be plucked out and so Lord Richard Earle of Glocester hearing of it would not suffer him to bee drawne out vpon the Sunday for reuerence of the holie day and thus the wretched superstitious Iew remaining there till munday was found dead in the dung Therefore let vs acknowledge the bountifulnes of God there where it might seeme vnto vs that we are most of all restrained and let vs not breake his hands and cast his cords from vs but vse his freedome well that he hath set vs in and seeing we haue libertie to doe things of necessitie let vs not venture vpon them too boldly but first of all be sure that they be necessarie and therefore lawfull And let vs not imagine a necessitie and dreame of it when there is none nor bee of the number of those whom Salomon of in the Prouerbes Prou. 20.25 Who deuoure the holie things and then inquire after the vowes that is first doe the thing and then inquire whether it be lawfull or no but let vs see in the wisedome of Gods spirit What workes are necessarie and therefore lawfull vpon this day and what are not whether it may not conueniently bee deferred vntill some other time and therefore not necessarie so no worke of the Sabbath and therefore abstaine from it For the wise men of this world make many things necessarie which indeede are not by doing many things then when the ought not to bee done to preuent a necessitie which they haue imagined may fall out in time But if they will say it is now necessarie they must bee sure that it cannot bee deferred For what maketh a thing necessarie in this time but that no other time will serue cōueniently for it To this agrees that which a learned writer sayth Si quis roger If any man demaund Wolph lib. 3. in Nehe. 9.14 what is lawfull or not lawfull to be done vpon the Sabbath sayth he Tenendum est respōsum Sceuolae he must answer as Sceuola did who being asked what was lawfull to be done vpon the holie daies it is reported that hee made answere Euen that which would haue hurt if it had not been done Which is true Exod. 54.21 if it be rightly vnderstood Therefore they which in the time of haruest and hayfield worke vpon the Sabbath contrarie to the expresse words of God as we haue seene heretofore for feare of the change of weather and least that happily some thing might be lost vnlesse they can say certainly that to morowe there will be such weather and therefore it will be lost how can they tell that onely this present time is necessarie for it and that no other time in the world can serue for it and therfore it must needes then be done For how if it fall out otherwise on the morow Shall not both other men condemne them of follie and themselues also bee iudges against themselues that the things might haue been deferred and therefore that there was no such necessitie as they presumed vpon Obiection But say they vnto vs how if it had fallen out so and so Was it not good to prouide for the best We answer them as it is in the cōmon prouerbe Answere How if the skie had fallen As no man that hath any religion and care of his dutie to God will voluntarilie absent himselfe frō church for feare of that which might come to passe he knowes not when as that if theeues come he may call for helpe or if he spye his neighbours house on fire hee may giue warning of it or will wander vp and downe in his pastures fearing least a sheepe should be fallen into a ditch that he might helpe it out so ought we not in any other time of an imagined necessitie and without iust cause suspected doe that vpon the sabbath which otherwise wee will confesse ought to haue been done neither would we haue taken it in hand at all but taking the occasion of that which present necessitie doth offer vnto vs in deed we must committe the successe of those things vnto the Lord which we could by no wisedome foresee though he hath giuen vs libertie to iudge of the time present yet he hath reserued this preeminence to himselfe alone to be iudge of the time to come and he would haue vs for the dispensation of that to depend vpon his prouidence in obedience to his commandement who hath promised to giue vs fit times for the accomplishment of all things here below so farre forth as he knoweth it to be
braines wee may iudge to the contrarie So that if any man when he hath had the whole weeke before him to make his prouision will neglect the oportunitie and passe the time ouer and then goe vpon the Lords day to the butchers or such like places to buie victuals hoping to get a better penniworth or because he would not lette his busines before or for that he maketh no difference of dayes and all this while grosselie imagineth that hee committeth no sinne excusing his fact with this that meate must needes bee had and it cannot bee deferred daubing it vp as it were with the vntempered morter of necessitie hee must bee admonished that howsoeuer hee may set a fayre face on his before men and may bleare their eyes that cannot well see yet in Gods iudgement i● is lesse then nothing who must be iudge of all but will melt away as snowe before the sunne seeing that hee hath to cut off the head and tayle of those idle pretences spoken aloude and proclaymed long agoe that the sabbath is to bee obserued and remembred for these causes which we must doe so much the rather because he promiseth vnto vs that in sixe dayes we shall be able to doe all our worke for so is it in the wordes of the commandement Sixe dayes shalt thou labour and doe all thy worke Euery man in the sixe dayes may doe all his worke in which words because he vseth it as a reason to perswade vs to rest vpon the seuenth day there must needs bee secretly included as there is a promise of the blessing of God vpon our labours in the sixe dayes that in them we shal be able to do al our work euen al our work I say which properlie belongeth vnto vs and which the Lord would haue vs to doe and therefore calleth it our worke As Master Caluin noteth vpon these wordes Calu. in Exod. 20.8 Vniuersum opus All thy worke hereby saith he is signified that though the sabbath be taken away there will be time enough for all our busines otherwise this reason we see were insufficient to perswade men to rest vpon the seuenth day if in the sixe wee might truelie obiect they cannot doe all their worke But the Lord who knoweth what hee would haue vs to doe and therefore what is our worke better then wee our selues and what is our strength to doe it and what time we haue allotted out for it he saith in the sixe days we may doe all our worke and this he speaketh to the busiest bodie in the worlde and to the most couetous who knoweth no ende of working whereby any gayne is gotten and therefore when we take vpon vs so many things that we are ouerwhelmed with them cannot bring them to an ende with the end of the sixe dayes then haue we intermedled with that which belongs not vnto vs and haue entered as it were vpon other mens busines and it is not the Lord but the diuell that hath set vs on worke and he will one day pay vs our hyre Master Caluin doth lay forth this whole matter very plentifully in most significant wordes Caluin vpon Deut. 5. serm 35. and followes it with great power in his sermons vpon Deuteronomie When it is sayd Thou shalt labour sixe dayes our Lords would hereby signifie vnto vs that wee ought not to complaine of yeelding vnto him one certaine day when hee leaueth vnto vs sixe for one as if hee did say shall the cost and charge bee great vnto you to chuse one day which may bee wholly giuen to my seruice that you doe no other thing in it but reade and exercise your selues in my lawe or heare my doctrine which shall bee preached vnto you a day to come to the Temple to the end you may there be confirmed by the sacrifices which are there made a day to call vpon my name to declare and protest that you are of the number and companie of my people ought this to bee grieuous and troublesome vnto you seeing you haue sixe daies free to traffique and to doe your busines in when I vse such gentlenes towards you that I demand but one day of seuen is not this an ouer gre●t vnthankefulnes on your part if you complaine of this time as being euill imployed If you bee such couetous and niggardly wretches as not to spare me one seuenth part of the time I haue giuen you your whole life wheresoeuer the sunne shineth vpon you you ought to acknowledge my goodnes and how that I am a liberall father towards you for this sunne which J make to shine is to giue you a meane to goe and walke by to the end that euery one may doe his busines and yet for all this why is it that I shall not haue one day among seuen in which euery one should withdrawe himselfe from his trauaile and labour that you bee not wrapped in the care of the worlde and so haue no care to thinke vpon me Now then we see that this sentence of trauailing the sixe dayes is not placed as a commandement but is rather a permission which God giueth and that to reproch the vnthankefulnes of men if they obserue not the Sabbath day and sanctifie it in such sort as we haue spoken So then when men shall haue well considered of this thing they shall be conuinced that God beareth with them as a father which should shew himselfe pitifull to his children and therefore let vs take diligent heede that we be not vngratefull but be prouoked and allured to serue our God so much the more seeing he commandeth vs not those things which might seem ouer bitter and painefull vnto vs but hath a due regard to our power and abilitie therefore when he beareth with vs after this manner and leaueth vnto vs our profits and commodities so much more dissolute wicked and inexcusable are wee if we be not inflamed to yeeld our selues wholly vnto him Thus farre Master Caluin See then what an impudency and rebellion this is that men are growen vnto the Lord sayth In sixe daies they may doe all their worke and therefore willeth them to rest vpon the seuenth and they most wickedly crie out as loud with more then a whorish face by their speeches and practises that in sixe daies they cannot doe all their worke and therefore they take vp also all our part of the seuenth what a crueltie then is this that they charge the Lord withall that he should bind them vnder the paine of eternall condemnation to rest vpon the seuenth day and yet should not giue them sufficient time vpon the other dayes to end their worke in which once but to imagine were horrible impietie But let vs iustifie the Lord in his mercie and confesse as the truth is that wee ought so much the more carefully to remember the Sabbath to rest vpon it because in the sixe daies wee may doe all our worke if wee will pray vnto God for
wisedome in our calling and so we shall be deliuered from that necessitie of working many times which otherwise we doe voluntarily pull vpon our selues Thus wee may conclude this point that seeing the Lord of his great liberalitie euen vpon that day wherein hee requireth our rest most precisely hath not cast vs into that bondage that we should doe nothing at all but hath left vs that freedome that in needfull things we may labour it standeth vs in hand so much the more carefully to looke to our selues that wee be sure the things we go about could not haue bin done before not deferred any longer and therefore were necessary to be done at that time which when wee bee throughly persuaded of by Gods word then may wee in faith and a good conscience take them in hand knowing that the Lord exempteth vs as it were at that presēt from the generall lawe of resting and by some speciall occasion calleth vs to worke and therefore wee doe it as vnto him Works of necessitie vpon the Lords day must not be done for gaine but of mercy and pitie In which consideration wee ought not to take any thing for our worldly labours vpon the Sabbath and we should not make a gaine of our trauaile vpon that day if necessitie driue vs vnto it for we do it not as a worke of our calling from the which wee must cease nor as that by the which wee get our liuing with which wee must not meddle but only because some of the creatures doe stand in neede of our helpe for whose preseruation the day of rest is appointed and therefore in pitie and compassion vnto them we yeelde them our labour and doe it as a deed of mercy and vnto the Lord. And therfore though that constitution of Gregorie the 9. Cent. 13. cap. 6. be not in all points sound when he saith Let men and cattell rest vpon the Lords day vnlesse vrgent necessitie compell them vel nisi gratis fiat or vnlesse it be done freely for the poore or for the Church because the free doing of a thing will not excuse it when there is no necessitie or when it is not a worke proper vnto this day yet it seemeth that herein he aymed at the truth when he requires that that which is done should not be for gaine but of loue to the poore and to the Church of God and therefore freely And this is that indeed which commonly men do pretend when they are charged with their needlesse trauailings that it was a good deed to help such a one in miserie and it did lye vpon his vndoing and hee could not but doe it for very pitie and a great deale more they can say for themselues Therefore let it appeare by their doings that nothing mooued them but pitie and that of very conscience to relieue the necessity of others thy were mooued vnto it by not onely not receiuing but not looking for any reward of men no more then you doe of the almes which you giue and for visiting the sicke and imprisoned that so it may be counted as an holy worke indeed when you doe it not respecting your owne profite in it but onely the good of others Therefore let the Phisition or chirurgian and such as attend vpon the sicke or are any wayes imployed about him take nothing for their paines vpon the Sabbath but let them doe it freely that it may be a gift and not accounted as a work of their calling but a deede of loue and the apothecarie though he receiue money for his stuffe yet let his labour be free The like must be vnderstoode of all other works of necessitie And therefore if the lawyer counsellor or sergeant will needs trauaile then about his clients cause let him doe it onely for Gods sake and not bee occupied about it as a worldly thing and a matter of gaine for that is proper to the sixe daies in the which God would haue them in the sweat of their face to eate their bread Obiection But if they say it may be the men with and for whom we deale stand in no such need of our liberalitie nay they would thinke scorne of it and they may better giue vs a pound then wee them a penny Answer then yet at least wise dedicate it to the poore and taking it with the one hand giue it with the other that you may haue the testimony of a good conscience the spirite of God bearing you witnes that your worke was onely for the Lorde as this day is appointed out wholly for his seruice and that no priuate commoditie of your owne mooued you vnto it for the Lord hath giuen you the sixe dayes to make prouision for yourselfe for otherwise we shall make no difference betwixt the sixe daies and the seuenth the works of the one and of the other if we shall in all of them alike be conuersant in the same things with the same minde and for the same ende and purpose Therefore that I might end this matter we doe see that excepting these cases of necessitie in which the Lord would haue vs thus cheerefully to be occupied as about the works of mercy and his seruice onely from whence no gaine is to be looked for 1. Tim. 6.6 though godlines indeed be great gaine and he that hath pitie vpon the poore lendeth vnto the Lorde and looke what he layeth out Prou. 19.17 it shall be repayed him wee are bound most straitly in this commandement to rest and that the Lord looketh for a rare and singular kinde of rest euen such a one as wee haue heard out of his worde and that hee will not dispence with vs in any wise but as it hath beene shewed and therefore that wee ought to haue a principall respect and regard vnto it as to the thing that doth most neerely concerne vs. And in this one point though I am not ignorant that I haue a great cloud of aduersaries against me who are otherwise minded and cannot be thus persuaded as indeed many things in this commandement are greatly controuersied yea among the learned as in any one that I know yet I desire them in the feare of God that as they will obserue the rule of the Apostle Iames 1.19 who would haue vs swift to heare slowe to speake and slow to wrath they would indifferently and as it were in an eeuen ballance weigh such things at haue been alreadie alledged for the proofe of it before they begin to giue out their censures against it Obiection If we be thus straitly bound to rest we are still in as great bondage as the Iewes were vnder the law Therefore whereas some men might hereupon gather that if the case be thus betwixt the Lorde and vs in the matter of the Sabbath and that the commandement of resting doth stand in such force and strength and bindeth vs so strongly as it doth then our estate is no better then the Iewes the same
in our Idlenes but hee hath therefore sundered the Sabbath from other dayes which hee hath appoynted for worke It is then sanctified when we bestowe it vpon Gods worship that we resting from our workes vpon this one daye might more freelie heare the law of God and worship him For by this meanes in deede all the things that euer haue been vsed in the sacred worship of God haue been hallowed in so much that of what kinde or nature soeuer they were before yet now the holie God whom onely they serued and his holie worship vnto which they are made proper hath sanctified them and made them so wholly to differ from all other as though they were not of the same nature and kinde and so from that they were before as though they were not the same any more Thus we doe reade that the tabernacle and the temple were holy with all the ministers of both Which also sanctifieth all other creatures vsed therein Exod. 29.44 Leuit. 27.30 whatsoeuer thing els serued in them euen vnto the very garmēts of the priests as it is in the 29. verse of the same chapter and the tithes of the land giuen vnto the maintenance of Gods worship and them that serued in it So then as all other things are called most holie vnto the Lord in the same chapter because they are separated from that common vse vers 28. wherein other of the same nature are imployed and may not bee vsed but to the Lords vse So the Sabbath day or day of rest is then sanctified of vs when wee doe not vse it in the affayres of this life from the which it must be seperate and from which vpon it we must rest and therefore it is called a day of rest as wee haue seene but vse it in the Lords seruice and make that day proper vnto it and to nothing principally but that So likewise in the 40. chapter of Exod. where mention is made of the rearing vp of the Tabernacle and how euery thing was sanctified by Moses and made holie that which the Lord speaketh of Aaron is true of all other things that serued in the Tabernacle Thou shalt put vpon Aaron the holie garments Exod. 40.13 and shalt annoint him sanctifie him that he may minister vnto me in the Priests office where in the latter words he expoundeth what is ment by making him holie euen to appoynt him to that holie office that hee might serue the Lord in his holie seruice For as the Lord himselfe did then sanctifie the day when he appoynted it to this holie end so when he commandeth vs to sanctifie it he requireth that wee should vse it onely to that holie ende for which it was ordained and so by the right vse of it to maintaine as it were that holines which at the first was put vpon it Euen as Moses did then sanctifie all the forenamed things when he dedicated them to Gods worship and the Priests by vsing them in that manner alone did keepe them holie still which they should haue vnhallowed whensoeuer they had abused them to any other end or not vsed them to this holie end As the water bread wine in the Sacraments Thus wee may easily vnderstand what is the true hallowing of the day euen to spend it in all the parts of Gods worship which maketh euery thing appoynted vnto it holie euen the very time that is spent about it Therefore as the common water being once brought into the Church and appoynted for Baptisme is no more common but holie water being seperated from the common vse of water which is to wash c. and now appoynted to assure vs of the forgiuenes of our sinnes by Christ and of our new birth in him at the commandement of God which is holie And as the common bread and wine set vpon the table of the Lord appoynted for the Sacrament of the Lords Supper which is holy and so put apart from the common vse of these creatures which is to feede our bodies and applyed to that vse which is not common but holie namely that we thereby might bee assured as by most certaine pledges that our soules and bodies shall be nourished vp by faith in Iesus Christ vnto euerlasting life are no more common bread but holie during this most holie vse and the Lord Iesus Christ at the first by appoynting them to these endes did sanctifie them the Ministers and the people by thus vsing of them doe hallow them or keepe them holie So what time soeuer is bestowed of any vpon the seruice of God he keepeth that holie and the Lord commanding vs to keepe holie the day of rest doth require that wee should spend it in the holie seruice of his maiestie vnto which he himselfe appointed it at the first and so sanctified it And this that wee might doe the better he commandeth vs to rest from all other things in the world that so the day might not bee taken vp with any thing els saue this which maketh it holie And thus we doe not onely see that it is further required in this Commandement that Gods holie worship should be practised vpon this day To worship God vpon this day is the most principal thing in the Commandement but also that this is the most especiall thing contained in it and vnto which all other things are to be referred therefore the Lord himselfe in pronouncing the lawe vseth as many words to commend vnto vs the sanctifying of the day as he did to establish resting from worldly affayres as namely when first of all he sayth Remember the Sabbath day to keepe it holie and afterwards calleth it the Sabbath of the Lord thy God that is a day of resting from all other things that it might be bestowed in seruing the Lord thy God for it is called the Sabbath of the Lord not so much because it was appoynted by the Lord as for the Lords vse therfore ought rather thus to be translated Tremel Ari. Mont. Vatabl. The Sabbath vnto the Lord or day of rest for the Lord. And amongst other great learned men which thus reade it so also writeth Tertullian Septima die Sabbatiza Domino Deo tuo Tertull aduersus Marcion lib. 3. Keepe the seuenth day an holie Sabbath vnto the Lord thy God And to this ende as the Lord himselfe doth oftentimes call them his Sabbaths so the ancient and learned father well obserueth it Hierom. in Ezec. 45. Obseruandum saith he it is to be marked that he doth not say absolutely and you shall sanctifie the Sabbath but with a note of difference Sabbatha mea my Sabbaths And so writeth Wolphius Wolph Chronol lib. 2. cap. 4. De Sabbathis plerunque God doth often so speake of the Sabbaths that hee calles them his not for difference sake because the people of God then had none other but that he might shewe that the Sabbath was appoynted for the
honour of his name and dedicated vnto his seruice And as he giueth vs libertie to worke our owne worke vpon the sixe dayes so he commaundeth vs straightly to cease from them vpon the seuenth that we might worke for the Lord seeing it is appointed to bee a day of resting from all other affaires for the Lords busines sake And last of all hee addeth that whereas the Lorde did create the worlde in sixe daies hee himselfe entered into a new worke distinct from the former vpon the seuenth and therefore bestowed an especiall blessing vpon that day which all the rest haue not euen the blessing of sanctification that it might be kept holy to himselfe For as Master Caluin sayth Benedixit sanctificauit Caluin in Gen. 2.3 secundum verbum est exegeticum prioris Of these two words the Lord blessed and sanctified the latter doth expound the former Pet. Mart. in Gen. 2. Whereunto agreeeth Peter Martyr To blesse is to giue and bestow something this did he chiefly giue vnto it that therein wee should rest and apply our selues to the seruice of God which so many words aboundantly testifie that the waightiest thing in this commandement is that the day of rest should bee bestowed vpon Gods seruice in so much that if we had attained vnto the perfect obseruing of the rest yet we are not come to the end and goale as it were of this commandement no not vnto the midde way of it which is so much the more diligently to be taken heed vnto because many through a grosse and palpable ignorance and want of religion as they cannot be persuaded of that precise rest which we haue seene here commanded so more prophanely dreame that though not all yet the greatest part of obedience vnto this commandement consisteth in abstaining from al worldly busines and therefore they that haue some care of this yet neuer or very seldome thinke of the other and making some conscience of working that day thinke it to bee a veniall or no sinne at all to neglecte the seruice of God which is most especially required or at least wise not to be throughly occupied about it Cal in Exod. 20.12 as the Lord on that day doth require For as Master Caluin sayth God was not delighted with the idlenes of his people but when hee bad them rest vpon the seuenth day there was relation to an other end For as the same man saith in another place This were a very bare and naked thing Idem vpon Deut. 5. ser 34. that our hands onely and our feete should rest and that nothing else should bee done What must we doe then wee ought to apply this rest vnto a more high and excellent thing And a little after he shewes it more particularly saying When our shop windowes are shut in on the sunday when wee trauaile not after the common order and fashion of men this is to the ende wee should haue more liberty and leasure to attend on that which God commandeth that is to wit to be taught by his word to assemble our selues together to make confession of our faith to call on his name to exercise our selues in the vse of his sacraments Therefore the seruant of God Moses to meete with this grosse corruption in the 5. of Deuteronomie doth not onely vse the forenamed word of sanctifying the day but further addeth in the same place As the Lord thy God hath commanded thee Deut. 5.12 making the greatest part of the commandement to consist in hallowing of the day For when God sanctified the day Iunij praelect in Gen. 2.3 he commanded man to sanctifie it that is to bestowe it in holy exercises So then looke howe many reasons there were before for the establishing of the day of rest so many more are there for the keeping it holy seeing this is the principall end of resting that it might be hallowed which because it cannot be in that manner that it should vnlesse we doe rest for we cannot wholly bestow it vpon Gods seruice if wee bestowe it vpon our busines in whole or in part therefore that this principall might haue his due roome al other things must giue place vnto it And though there were many other causes of ordaining the day of rest as we haue alreadie seene yet none so chiefe and principall as this For Adam being in paradise whiles he had not yet sinned though he was therefore exempted from many causes of resting which his posteritie did stande in need of yet for this cause was bound vnto it as much as any that resting from the works of the garden he might sanctifie it according to the commandement which otherwise he could not doe And therefore in the wordes of the commandement we are willed to remember the Sabbath day to keepe it holy Therefore we ought to remember the Sabbath to this end especially not so much remembring that we rest vpon it as that we sanctifie the time of our rest and therfore remember to rest before hand that nothing might hinder vs from the worship of God vpon the day of rest but therfore rest and therefore remember to rest that the seruice of God might bee taken in hand And as it is a sin not to be carefull of the Sabbath that we might rest vpon it so it is a greater sinne not to obserue it that it might be a Sabbath vnto the Lorde by sanctifying of it and if for want of heedfulnes any thing do compell vs to worke vpon the day of rest it is our sinne in not marking the Sabbath day so if by our negligence we cannot sanctifie the day of rest vnto the Lorde it is a greater sinne of not remēbring to keepe it holy which is the first greatest thing in this commandement Master Musculus sayth Polluitur Sabbathum cum cuius gratia instituitur Muscul in Math. 12.11 à plerisque plane non curatur The Sabbath is broken of many when they consider not to what end it was ordained How many in the world can and do remember well enough the Sabbath day to rest vpon it but how fewe doe remember to imploy that time about the Lords busines and so to keepe it holy One maketh account of the Sabbath day for this ende another reckoneth of it for that and euery one remembreth it for some purpose but the Lord would haue vs to remember it that wee might altogether bestowe it vpon his worship yet none almost looketh vnto that Therefore it was the wisdome of God to meet with this blockishnes of our who remember euery thing sauing that that we should and those good things which we doe remember wee thinke of them to farre other ends then wee ought to doe and to tell vs plainly that this is the chiefest ende of marking the Sabbath that we might keepe it holy which if we doe not as we cannot so well marke it as we should so wee doe marke it to a wrong ende and doe
as it were take our markes amisse of it Master Caluin vpon these words sayth Hinc colligimus Wee gather from hence that God speakes not of a small matter Caluin in Exod. 20.8 when he commends the sanctification of the Sabbath not in a word but doth exhort them vnto the diligent marking of it and so doth pronounce that their want of care to marke is a breach of the commandement And Master Musculus vpon the same words saith Notādum quod It is to be noted that he doth not simply say Sanctifie the Sabbath day but remember to do it This kind of commanding is not light but waightie hereby is signified Muscul in eundem locum that a matter of great importance is commaunded and that which by no meanes is to bee neglected but with great care to be kept For so do parents and masters vse to commend the doing of those things vnto their seruants children which aboue all other things they would haue least of all neglected So then if it be necessary to rest vpon this day as it hath been strongly prooued vnto vs then is it much more necessary to sanctifie the day as we haue seene in part and it shall more fully appeare vnto vs hereafter Which wee had need so much the more carefully to take heede vnto because the common practise of men is so cleane contrarie vnto it and the sinne as it is more common so it is greater and more dangerous And now we may more plainely vnderstand the great necessitie of that precise rest which hath beene so often spoken of and is so hardly receiued euen for because that otherwise we cannot so keepe it holy vnto the Lord as we ought to doe For this is the law of things consecrated vnto the Lord that they may not otherwise be imployed thē to his vse they must not be partly his partly ours but altogether his if they be holy to him therfore seeing the day must bee hallowed it must not be vsed in other affaires sauing in the lords busines it must not be partly ours by dooing our owne worke and partly the Lords by dooing his but his alone as it is called a Sabbath vnto the Lorde and therefore we are willed to doe no manner of worke in it And that the truth of this doctrine might appeare vnto vs so clearely as the noone daye The sanctification of this day is very precisely vrged in the Scriptures euen that the Sabbath ought most vndoubtedlie to be sanctified of all sortes let vs vnto all this which hath been alreadie spoken adde the consideration of so many scriptures wherein the spirit of God speaking of the Sabbath doth in most significant words commende according to our capacitie this truth againe and againe to vs. And first of all in the sixteene chapter of Exodus Exod. 16.23 vers 25. To morrow is the rest of the holy Sabbath vnto the Lord and afterwards To day is the sabbath vnto the Lord in both which places he calleth it a Sabbath vnto the Lord and in the former place an holy rest not onely shewing that they should rest vpon it but especially to what ende namely that they might keepe the day holy vnto the Lord by seruing of him and therefore he standeth vpon it calling it an holie rest and further adding a Sabbath vnto the Lord as purposing to let them see into the most especiall end of their resting euen the sanctification of the daye in the holy seruice of God Moreouer in the thirtie one chapter of the same booke Exod. 31.14.15 Ye shall keepe the Sabbath for it is holie vnto you Sixe dayes shall men worke but in the seuenth day is the Sabbath of the holy rest vnto the Lord where he calleth it both holie and holy vnto the Lord shewing what manner of rest it must bee not an idlenes or sleepie taking of our rest and ease but a carefull spending of that time in Gods seruice in which we must rest from all other things especially for that purpose Likewise in the 35. chapter of the same booke Sixe dayes shalt thou worke Exod. 35.2 but the seuenth day shall be vnto you the holy day of rest vnto the Lord where Moses declaring that message vnto the people which he had receiued before from the Lord for them telleth it to them fully and in the same number of wordes almost straightly requiring at their hands the keeping holy of the Sabbath day as a thing of great importance as appeareth by his speech so earnest and doubled calling it an holy Sabbath and then a day of rest vnto the Lord. But what should I here stand vpon all the places of Gods word in the olde and new testament which are infinite giuing most certaine testimonie and authenticall credite to this doctrine the time would not serue and the treatise would grow into a greater volume then I am willing it should these may suffice to shew vnto vs that the keeping holy of the Sabbath day must be the principall matter in this commaundement and as it were stand in the first ranke when it is in so many places and in such ample wordes commended and recommended vnto vs. For if it be the wisdome of a seruant there to be very attentiue where his master vseth many words and to be assured that that is a matter of great waight then much more ought wee to iudge the hallowing of the Sabbath daye to bee a thing then the which nothing ought more to be regarded of vs when vnto the words of Remembring and Marking that are set in the beginning of the commandement this thing also is in so many words spoken vnto vs and as it were beaten into our eares That I might not speake any thing of such other places wherein the seruing of God in the place appoynted by himselfe is adioyned vnto such exhortations as are made for the keeping of the Sabbath thereby declaring by what meanes especially the Sabbath is kept holie Leuit. 19.30 as ye shall keep my Sabbath and reuerence my sanctuarie where the Prophet Moses exhorting the Israelites to the diligent keeping of the Sabbath daye speaketh vnto them of that worship of God which was practised in the sanctuarie as the onely way to keepe it Vnto which agreeth that which is set downe in the 23. chapter of the same booke Sixe dayes shall worke be done Leuit. 23.3 but in the seuenth day shall be the sabbath of rest an holy conuocation Ye shall do no worke therein it is the Sabbath of the Lord in all your dwellings For in this place hee doth not onely call it a sabbath vnto the Lorde so many times before but also saith Holy assemblies were cōmanded to be kept vpō these dayes that vpon it must be an holie assemblie which assemblie then should be holie because they must meete for an holy purpose not to deale about any worldly affayres which notwithstanding they did at
so straightly requireth at their hands As we may see in the scriptures how they that feared God liuing in the corrupt times of the Church and so not hauing their ordinarie teachers haue vpon the Sabbath day frequented those places though farre off where by the doctrine of the word they might sanctifie the day in some good acceptable manner In which consideration the Shunamite as it is recorded in the second booke of the Kings when his wife tolde him that she was going to the Prophet 2 King 4.23 but concealed the cause from him which was for the restoring of her sonne to life which she had obtained by his meanes before he demaundeth of her why she should goe that day seeing that it was neither new moone nor the Sabbath day as though he had sayd if it had been any of these daies which the Lord had commanded to be kept holy then no maruaile if she hastened thitherward so fast For so it ought to be and so it appeareth she vsed to doe that by hearing of his doctrine she might keepe holie the day and so thereby bee furthered in all other holie dueties In this respect I would to God wee might say of our time Iustin Martyr Apol●g 2. as Iustine Martyr doth of his Die qui solis dicitur omnes qui in oppidis vel agris morantur in vnum locum conueniunt Vpon the day that is called Sunday all that dwell in the townes or villages doe meete in one place and for the space of an houre the canonical scriptures of the Prophets Apostles are read It is a Canon in the prouincial Councell of Malisgon That if any man haue a Church neere them they should goe together and there vpon the Lords day to bee occupied in prayer c. Where their meaning was not to dispense with them that were further off but to inioyne all to goe to their next Churches And in another Councell this is the maine reason why they should giue ouer all worldly affayres Quo facilius ad ecclesiam venientes Concil Alater 3. cap. 27. That they might the more easily come to the Church and pray c. And vnto this doth that learned father and Bishop Augustine exhort his auditors in a sermon which I haue often alleadged which is worthie of all men for this purpose to be read ouer August de tēp sermon 251. Let no man separate himselfe from diuine seruice Neque otiosus quis domi remaneat neither let any man tarrie idling at home Idle when other are gone to the Church Which also as it is very Christianly prouided for vnder her most excellent Maiestie both by statute and also by her Iniunctions Q. Iniunct articl 46. that all should resort vnto their parishes vpon all Sundaies and there to continue the whole time of godly seruice vnder the paine of penaltie So it had been happie for this land if in all places it had been executed but with halfe that care that it was first meant But I may complaine of it with Master Caluin Caluin vpon Deut. 5. Ser. 34 rather thē amend it That whereas if we were so feruent in the loue of God as wee should all would morning and euening assemble themselues together to the end they might be edified more and more in the seruice of God we see that with much adoe men will assemble themselues on the Sunday and that many are to bee holden to this order by force and violence and a little after it sufficeth not that euery one withdraw himself to his owne house either to reade the holie scriptures or to pray vnto God but it behoueth that we come into the companie of the faithfull and there declare the concord and agreement we haue with the whole bodie of the Church and celebrate in such wise this order as the Lord hath commaunded So then as wee haue seene heretofore that it is lawfull vpon these occasions to trauaile vpon the day of rest now we learne that it is necessarie not only tolerated but inioyned vnto vs because it is the day that must be sanctified and therefore all labours commanded whereby wee may hallowe it in the best manner Therefore let vs in all conscience and care to serue God cast away such vaine pretences as that the weather is too hot or too cold the wayes are too foule the iourney too long and a thousand more which might hinder vs at any time frō the preaching of the word and common prayer in which consisteth the head and the foote of keeping holie the Sabbath day For these are so necessarie and haue been so continually practised of the Church by succession as it were from hand to hand deliuered to the posteritie that wee should too much degenerate from them if wee should debarre our selues from these holie things The Apostle writing to the Corinthians where he had before taught euery Sabbath day and so by his example and doctrine shewed them the right manner of keeping holie the day when afterwards some great abuses were crept into the Church he writeth vnto them and correcteth the faults that were in their solemne assemblies vpon the Lords day as appeareth most plainly in the processe of the whole chapter but more especially when he so many times repeateth their generall comming together Corin. 11.17.18.20 seeing then he findeth fault with the corruptions in prayer prophecying or preaching and the Sacrament it is most euident and must needes bee granted that these were the holie exercises vpon that day vsually in their common meetings whereby the day was made holie vnto the Lord and most glorious to them If thē it be so as it cannot be denyed vnles we will denye the cleere light of the Sunne at midday that the chiefest poynt of hallowing the Sabbath day consisteth in comming to Gods house where he offereth vnto vs the speciall parts of his seruice to be occupied in and no where so much as there Where the word is not prea●hed or men come not to it this day cannot be hallowed as it ought then it must needes bee subscribed vnto that in Poperie and al false religion there is nothing els but a meere prophaning of the day by abominable idolatrie and superstition and so many daies as we were vnder that intolerable bondage we were set free from Gods seruice and so long liued wee in a continuall breach of this Commandement And not onely so but wheresoeuer the preaching of the word is not or where men haue it and come not to it there can they not sanctifie the day in that manner that they should because they want the principall part of Gods seruice and that which should direct them in all others and make them most profitable vnto them Which if it be so as wee cannot with the least shew of reason deny it then what cause haue wee to be sorrie for our selues and others Which haue so many times broken this law by wilfull absenting
doe stand in neede to sanctifie the Sabbath againe and againe in all the meanes of Gods worship and especially then in the most principall that thereby happily we might be recouered into our former estate Nay what a blockish presumption were it for a man to thinke that Adam was bound to sanctifie the Sabbath according to the Commandement that being holie and righteous still he might haue been preserued in the fauour of God for euer and that we our selues being through sinne fallen away from his loue might make lesse account of these meanes whereby he doth first of all offer himselfe to be recōciled vnto vs and then neuer to fall away from that estate as though it were not so needfull for vs to sanctifie the day by them Therefore let vs confesse that these are though not all yet the most especiall parts of Gods seruice wherein wee are to bee occupied vpon the Sabbath and without which we are nothing neere that manner of keeping holie the day which the Lord requireth at our hands And so I conclude this poynt with the saying of Master Gualter Dei bonitatem exosculemur Gualt in Mark 1. Homil 11. Let vs thankefully acknowledge the goodnes of God who hath consecrated vnto his seruice that rest which wee stand in neede of for the refreshing of our bodies least that it should degenerate into filthie and hurtfull idlenes And here because wee speake of the Lords seruice which onely sanctifieth the day wee must consider All these parts of Gods seruice must be performed with our whole hearts and not onely outwardly of a custome Ioh. 4 24. that he is a spirit and therefore will be worshipped of vs in spirit and in trueth and therefore in all the aboue named parts of his worship we must performe a spirituall obedience if we will serue him so that whensoeuer the word is read preached or heard the Sacraments ministred and receiued and prayers made vpon the Sabbath of custome and not for conscience sake because we would doe as others doe and would not be noted to be singular and so in doing of these things we as it were doe them not For hearing we vnderstand not reading we conceiue not praying we desire not and all is done in the letter and not in the spirit wee serue our selues rather then God and so though the day bee holie wee make it not holie to him and for his sake Thus many when they haue seemed most of all to haue kept holy the day haue done nothing lesse thē that Therefore as wee must repent vs of all our hypocrisie in Gods seruice so wee must at all times endeuour that the holie exercises bee not vnhallowed of vs least the Lords seruice being neglected which is spirituall in al things we be found breakers of the Commaundement in that very thing wherein we did most of all presume that wee had kept it and if the best things that wee doe bee thus iustly refused what shall become of those which in our owne eyes carrie not that credite with them much more in the eyes of the Lord who examineth all things more narrowly Furthermore And so as by them we may be furthered in our saluation because the Lord in commanding vs to serue him hath not so much respect to himselfe who hath no neede of vs as to our owne good which may by this meanes be procured we must so behaue our selues in all the parts of Gods worship as may bring greatest profite to our soules health 1. Cor. 14.26 For in the Church of God all things must be done to edifying that al may learne and haue comfort as it is in the 31. verse of the same chapter And therfore in the 11. chapter finding fault iustly with the abuses that were in their meetings generally he chargeth thē with this 1. Cor. 11.17 that they came not together with profite Therefore both minister people must so behaue themselues in Gods house that they may depart with profit to themselues others Which that they might attain vnto they must vse all such good meanes priuatly both before and after the publike exercises as might make thē most profitable which what they be we shall hereafter see more particularly and in the very worship it selfe behaue our selues so reuerently and attentiuely as whereby greatest commoditie might redound to vs. And indeed as Master Caluin sayth Caluin in Exod. 20.8 in this Commandement is included a promise For God promiseth that as he hath sanctified the seuenth day for his seruice so he will thereby sanctifie them that rightly keepe it and therefore the promise of this blessing should be a principall motiue to our obedience And if in all other things we are carefull not so much to vse them as to vse them to the best aduantage why should we not put that out to the greatest gayne which in it owne nature is most gainfull indeede For seeing that there is nothing in the world that hath so great a promise made vnto it as the publike seruice of GOD should we not so behaue our selues in it that wee might be made partakers of it And whereas it is blessed for our sakes with the full treasure of all Gods graces in this life and eternall happines in the ende can it bee but a most grieuous sinne by our negligence to spoyle it of that honour and to make it vnprofitable to our selues Wherefore though I am not ignorant that the proper place to speake of the manner of Gods worship is in another Commaundement where also it hath been handled at large yet because all things comprehended in the other Commandements must bee practised vpon the Sabbath we must vnderstand that it is not impertinent to this treatise and that the Sabbath is then onely truely sanctified when of Gods worship there commeth some fruite and commoditie vnto vs. For this cause the Prophet Esay telleth the Iewes that then they shall haue truely sanctified the Sabbath and made it holie to the Lord when thereby they are made more able to rest from vanitie and sinne both in word deede and be made more fit to serue the Lord in all dueties afterwards Esay 58.13 If thou turne away thy foote from the Sabbath from doing thy will vpon my holie day and call the Sabbath a delight to consecrate it as glorious to the Lord and shall honour him not doing thine owne wayes nor seeking thine owne will nor speaking a vaine word Where his meaning is not that the whole sanctifying of the Sabbath consisteth onely in these as though he would exclude all the Sacrifices the reading and the preaching of the lawe prayer and the whole ministerie of that time established by the Lord whereof he speaketh not a word but he rather aimeth at this to correct their hypocrisie in these things and to shewe them that all was to no purpose vnlesse this fruite followed of it for which cause the whole worship of God and
the Sabbath was first of al ordained For as when Dauid sayth Psal 40.6 Sacrifice and burnt offering thou diddest not desire but mine eares hast thou prepared burnt offering and sinne offering hast thou not required then sayd I loe I come to doe thy will O my God as it is written of me in the roule of thy booke for thy law is within my heart He doth not say that the Lord required no sacrifice and burnt offering at all for he had commaunded them in his word but he testifieth that all sacrifice and all the outward worship is nothing accepted when it is seuered from obedience and when wee thereby are not made more fit to obey God in all other dueties euen as it is expounded in another place 1. Sam. 15.22 Hath the Lord as great pleasure in burnt offerings and sacrifices as when the voyce of the Lord is obeyed Behold to obey is better then sacrifice and to hearken is better then the fat of rammes So the Prophet Esay in the place aboue mentioned expounding the lawe as it was the chiefest office of a Prophet preacheth vnto them the true interpretation of it that though all Gods seruice bee obserued in euery outward poynt vpon the Sabbath yet all is ceremoniall without these fruites appearing in vs afterwards neither is it done in that manner that GOD alloweth or that they thereby could looke to inherite that promise which in the same place hee maketh to them that shall truely keepe holie the Sabbath And thus are all other places to bee vnderstood which are of the like nature in this Prophet and others neither doe they proue that to rest from sinne is a proper duetie of this Commandement more then any other to which purpose they are alleadged of some that I may speake it with their fauour but onely shewe what should bee the fruite of these exercises both vpon that day and all other besides And therefore in like manner the same Prophet exhorting the Iewes to vnfained repentantance for their sinne and a diligent care to please God framing their liues according to his word in all dueties to his maiestie and to their brethren and then promiseth all manner of blessings vnto them so doing in the midst of this exhortation once or twise speaketh of sanctifying the Sabbath day as a chiefe meanes to bring them to this saying He that keepeth the Sabbath and polluteth it not and keepeth his hand from doing any ill And verse Esay 56.2 4. He that keepeth my sabbaths and chooseth the thing that pleaseth me and taketh hold of my couenant Wherein as he declareth vnto them that this is the way to come to this faith and repentance which hath those promises annexed vnto them euen to serue God in all parts of his worship vpon the Sabbath so he there requireth this at their hands that they would in such wise sanctifie the day that they may be thus altered and chaunged thereby Whereunto agreeth that which is in the Prophet Ezekiell where he telleth the Iewes how many meanes the Lord had bestowed vpon them to doe them good and yet how vnprofitable they were vnder them and therefore that their sinne was so much the greater and their punishment so much the more due speaking of their forefathers I gaue them my statutes Ezek. 20.11.12 and declared my iudgements vnto them which if a man doe hee shall liue in them Moreouer also I gaue them my sabbaths to bee a signe betweene mee and them that they might knowe that I am the Lord that sanctifie them Which mercie of his he continued with their posteritie for he said vnto their children in the wildernes verse 19. Walke in my statutes and keepe my iudgements and doe them 20. And sanctifie my Sabbaths and they shall be a signe betweene me and you that yee may knowe that I am the Lord your God c. His meaning is that hee offered vnto them life euerlasting in his holy worde hee gaue them also the Sabbaths wherein they being wholly and profitably occupyed in all the exercises of religion might thereby knowe that the Lorde their God would by his holy spirite worke in them all that faith and obedience which he required of them that they might come to life euerlasting So then he required of them so to behaue themselues on the Sabbaths as that thereby they might attaine vnto that for which he especially gaue them vnto them But this may bee sufficient to let vs see into so playne and easie a matter as this namely that though we come to the Churche all our life euery Sabbath and remaine there from the beginning to the ending yet onely so many dayes no more haue we kept holy as we ought by how many wee haue been bettered and furthered I meane in the waies of our saluation and made more fit to serue God and our brethren thereby Here we haue cause to repent vs of our vnprofitable cō ming to the Church what shall wee say then to all our vnprofitable wandrings to the Church and home againe And how shall we giue an account to the Lord for them And if the case stand so betwixt the Lord vs that many times when we thought our selues best occupied euen that is turned into sin vnto vs what great cause haue we to be truely humbled before him by repentance for our sinnes that so wee might bee exalted of him in due time And in deede this is so great an euill that wee cannot tell where to make an ende of it For letting passe all the dayes of our vanitie and ignorance spent either in poperie or in the light of the Gospell wherein wee were alwaies vnprofitable in the seruice of God wee may with heauie hearts remember how many times since our calling we haue met in the Church with the least profit that may be or rather none at all in respect of the meanes that did offer vnto vs so great profite in so much that though our profiting in worldly things haue been so great that it may be seene a farre off yet our increase in heauenly things is so small or rather none at all that it cannot bee descryed come as nere as you will And when as in all other things we doe reioyce at the greatnes of our gayne whether wee looke within the doores or without in the house or the fieldes to our cattell or to our goods onely in spirituall matters I will not say our gayne is so small but our decaye and losse is so great that wee haue great cause to be ashamed of it And though from the markets and fayres we come not without some prouision yet vpon the Sabbath which is the market day for our soules we come home many times and carrie nothing whereby we might liue the better the whole weeke following To be short though from a common person we haue not many times departed without some profit yet from the minister of Gods word euen
in that place where he hath the greatest blessing of being profitable to others that any can haue in the world and none so great as hee wee haue departed and that vpon the Sabbath without any profite at all wherein our sinne is so much the greater that for the most parte men doe not see it and so cannot be grieued for it And what is the cause of all this S. Augustine in his time complaineth of many great abuses in the Churche which hinder men from profiting all which and many more are true in our time when hauing spoken before of them that are ranging in the fieldes when they should be at Church addeth Adhuc quod detestabilius est August de tēp serm 251. Besides which is worste some comming to the Church doores enter not in or tarrie not there with silence to the ende but when there is diuine reading within then they abroade are talking either of other matters or quarelling one with another or playing To whom he saith afterwardes Do not giue your selues to playing abroade but to praying and singing within And afterwardes in the same place he speaketh to them that are in the Church saying Doe not talke one with another while you are at Church but bee quiet for there are many especially certaine women Quae ita in ecclesia garriunt who so chat in the Church and are so full of words that neither themselues heare that which is read nor suffer others to heare and then hee concludeth Should there bee such meetings in the house of God in such an order or should they so behaue themselues in the sight of God and of his holy Angels It is prouided by publike authoritie That no man woman Q. Iniunct articl 38. or childe should be otherwise occupyed in the time of seruice then in quiet attendance to heare marke and vnderstand that that is read preached and ministred but how pitifully the execution of this is neglected in many places it is too lamentable to consider And if this were all wee might holde our peace The Ministers in many places are the cause why the people doe not profit but this mischiefe stretcheth it selfe out further for alas many of Gods people liue vnder such vnprofitable Ministers that it is not so much as to be hope for ordinarily that any profit should come from them at all for besides that that many cannot so much as distinctly read so that they may profitably be vnderstood I would to God it were not so there are many that can but reade and what is the profit of that though I confesse it is great in it selfe vnto the endlesse profit that commeth by preaching And let them but one shew vs the spirit of God who must be the onely iudge in this matter euer speaking so magnificenlty of the one as of the other Others that doe preach had as good almost holde their peace for they cannot deuide the word of God aright 2. Tim. 2.5 neither are they the mise dispensers of Gods mysteries Matth. 24.45 and stewardes of his house who should giue to euery one of his people their owne meate in due season Zach. 11.15 but haue taken vnto themselues the instruments of a foolish shepheard whose right armes is dryed vp and their right eye is cleane put out that they haue no skill to discharge their dueties in any profitable measure neither doe they make it part of their care and studie to speake most profitably to their people but either care not what they saye or else seeke their credit and estimation in that which they doe say What shall wee saye then to these vnprofitable men which cause so many of Gods people to bee vnprofitable and euen in those things from whence greatest profite should redound vnto them and vpon that very day which is especially appoynted for their profit How will they wash their hands of so many vnprofitable assembles whereof they haue been the very cause themselues nay they haue brought vp a vile slander vpon the house of God which is the most beautifull and fruitfull place in the world because they haue shut out the profitable preaching of the word which maketh all other things more profitable In so much that many say what good shall I get by going to the Church what can I heare there which I may not heare or read at home Haue I not the Bible and booke of common preyer at home which saying of theirs though I doe not allow of yet you see whence it ensueth and woe bee to them by whom such offences come but this one thing will require a seuerall treatise and I must remember my purpose though I haue well remembred it all this time I meane I must bee as briefe in euery thing as the time doth require the waightines of the matter wit permit There are yet other holy dueties publikely to bee performed vpon the Sabbath day whereby it is sanctified but I haue stood the longer vpon these because they are most principall most common vnto all least regarded of all I will bee shorter in them which followe Vpon the Lords day the poore ought publikely to prouided for To make common prouision for such poore as be in euery congregation or if they bee able to haue a care of others adioyning vnto them is a worke most acceptable vnto God profitable to our brethren commanded to be done and practised of the Church most of all vpon the Sabbath For this is that order which the Apostle established in the Churches of Galatia and at Corinth for the relieuing of the poore saintes at Ierusalem much more then did they it for those that were amongst themselues Euerie first day of the weeke let euery one of you put aside and lay vp as God hath prospered him 1. Cor. 16.2 that then there bee no gatherring when I come When men haue beene prospered the whole weeke before and they come vpon the Lords day to acknowledge it and to giue tha thanks vnto God for the same the lord would haue thē declare their faith namely that they haue receiued all from him by bestowing vpon them who are in great neede the which that they might doe the rather they haue the worde that might prouoke them vnto it wherein are many goodly promises concerning the fatherly prouidence of God watching ouer them for good in this life that serue him and that he hath prouided for them a kingdome in heauen that he will requite it them double whatsoeuer they giue vnto the poore in his name and for his sake in so much that the giuing of a cup of cold water shall not be lost Math. 10.42 for he that hath pitie vpon the poore Prou. 19.17 lendeth vnto the Lord and looke whatsoeuer he layeth out it shall be repayed For the Lorde Iesus Christ will account Math. 25.40 whatsoeuer wee haue done vnto the least of his brethren as though we had done it vnto
vnacquainted with feare thē with this or that iudgement executed vpon such a people comfort them with such a mercie shewed vnto such a man it moues thē not they know no such thing they are altogether strāgers in those matters nay some cānot tell in what part of the Bible any such book as is alleaged stands Therfore wheras we may obserue it in the new Testamēt that our Sauiour Christ and his Apostles in alleaging the places of the olde Testament doe generally say thus it is written Matth. 21.13 Luke 20. 42. Act. 1.23 cap. 2 16. Matth. 15.7 or as it is written in the book of the Psalmes or this is that which was spoken by the Prophet Ioel or well prophesied Esaias of you c. Now men are driuen to name the book the chapter the verse and all too little to helpe men to finde it out so vnacquainted are they with searching the Scriptures by priuat reading no not vpon the Lords daie which is one of the peculiar workes of it Moreouer though wee bee something skilfull in the Scripture we cannot well presently in the Church stand reading euery place that shall bee alleaged least in the meane season some other most necessarie doctrine ouerslip vs and we not marking what went before followed after cannot tel to what ende the place was alleaged and so we lose the profit of it therefore dooing our endeauours to marke the Scriptures alleaged it shall bee profitable for vs afterwards at home to reade them ouer when wee shall bee more free from distraction and haue more leasure to doe it conueniently which is that that is commended vnto vs by the practise of the church in Berea that when Paul had preached vnto them Christ Iesus and had proued him to be that Sauiour of the world that was promised Act. 17.11 they reade ouer those Scriptures to see whether it were so or no according to the commaundement of our Sauiour Christ Iohn 5.39 searche the Scriptures for they are they which testifie of me Therfore so many as can read let them doe it vpon the Lordes daye and they that cannot let them see the want of it to be so great in themselues that they bring vp their children vnto it and in the meane season repayre to those places where they may haue the Scriptures read vnto thē let them get the bible into their houses that when any come that can read they may haue it in a readines lose not the oportunitie that is offered euen as they are contented to haue many other things in their houses which though they knowe not how to occupie themselues yet some of their friends may when they come especially when the benefite of it shall redound not onely to him that occupieth it but to himselfe and all his household Vnto the forenamed exercises wee must ioyne meditation as a most notable part of Gods seruice We must vse priuate meditation vpon that which we haue heard and read which is the very life and strength of the former and without the which they are made weake and vnprofitable vnto vs. For meditation is that exercise of the minde whereby we calling into our remembrance that which we know doe further debate of it as it were with our selues reasoning about it so and applying it to our selues that we might haue some vse of it in our practise and therefore it frameth the affections of our harts accordingly so that it is an occupying of the whole minde both of the reasonable part whereby we doe remember some thing and furthermore we being reasonable creatures do gather some other things vpon it by finding out the causes of it espying the fruite of it or considering the properties of it and so doe make some profitable vse of it to our selues whereby also our affections must needs be framed some one way or other to loue ioy desire hatred feare c. according to the diuersitie of our meditations and all those affections in their seuerall kindes shall be so much the more vehement by howe much the meditation is more serious and earnest As for example What meditation is how vntoward naturally we are thereunto to meditate vpon the word is diligently to call into our remembrance that which wee haue learned by hearing or reading before and to muse vpon it so that we be able to goe from point to point then to apply the generall thing to our selues and be persuaded that we must make our vse of it and therefore wisely to examine howe the case standes betweene the Lord and ourselues in that very thing and then what is like to follow vpon it whereby our hearts being stirred they might driue vs to put some thing in practise And here I would gladly speake as plainely as possibly I might euen to the capacity of the most rude and ignorāt because I know that it is so little practised of men that they are not so much as acquainted with it to know what it meanes I confesse it is an hard thing indeed but most profitable and therefore we are almost vnfit vnto it and the diuell laboureth most of all to hinder vs in it in so much that if he cannot keepe vs from hearing and reading the word and receiuing the sacraments at the time appointed yet hee will endeuour as much as may be to hinder vs from meditating vpon these that wee might lose the profit of them And if we marke our selues narrowly we shall finde our vntowardnes this way most of al for when we haue gone cheerfully vnto the church and there with the rest of Gods people behaued our selues orderly because these are outwarde things and in them it might seeme vnto vs that we haue had to deale but with men it is that which is not so yrksome vnto vs and wherunto the wickedest man may very easily come but afterwards to take some fit time to our selues wherin wee will seuer our selues from men and call ourselues to an account before Gods iudgement seate for that which we haue heard and to deale with our owne harts in good earnest for the doing or not doing of that which we haue learned and casting off al the cloakes of hypocrisie to lay our hearts naked before God accusing our selues where we come short of any thing praying vnto him for his grace therein confessing our sinnes that we haue beene rebuked of crauing the forgiuenes of them acknowledging his mercy where we haue receiued any thing intreating him for the continuance of it and so to depart away either more humbled in our selues to auoide sinne more carefully or comforted in the Lord to goe on forward in well doing more couragiously this I say as it doth especially builde vs vp in godlines so by due proofe we shall find that without the especiall assisstance of Gods holy spirit there is nothing more lothsome in the world and more tedious vnto vs. And I am assured that it is a thing so
altogether abhorred of the greatest part of the worlde that they will not so much as haue a purpose once to meddle with it yea and many that doe make a profession to serue God in the other parts of his worship and that as wee are to presume of them in a good measure of trueth yet haue an euill opinion of this and so bereaue themselues of much profit For they purposing to passe away their time in as much mirth as may bee and hauing determined to abandon all sorrowe 2. Cor. 7.9.10 yea though some be godly and necessarie as far from them as they can will not thus straightly deale with themselues least it should make them melancholie as they say and driue them into their dumps And left happily at any time they might through Gods mercy towards them vnwittingly fall as it were into this meditation they wil cut off al the meanes that might procure it and therefore be in merry company as they call it continually that they might not so much as be alone at any time and if perhaps they be and so this ouercreepe them the Lord seeking by all meanes possible to doe them good then fearefully they hasten out of it as fast as may be and for that purpose some that are of great calling are contented to maintaine at their charges one or other in their houses that can best feed their humor to be merrie companions or rather iesters vnto them to pull them away from this good though they will not be at halfe the cost yearely in making prouision for some godly bookes and learned preachers when they haue none of their owne that might bring them to the best mirth and might shewe them wherein the greatest ioye and soundest comfort doth consist euen that that would endure with them when all other shall forsake them and most of all accuse them But that we might be persuaded of the excellēcy of it The great good that may redound vnto vs by godly meditation let vs heare what the spirit of wisdom iudgment speaks of it First of all the Lord commandeth Ioshua that vnto the reading of the lawe he would ioyne meditation as an especiall meanes to keepe him in the continuall practise of it Iosh 1.8 saying Let not this booke of the law depart out of thy mouth but meditate therein day and night that thou maist obserue and doe according to all that is written therein Then the Prophet Dauid in the first Psalme maketh it an especiall token of a godly man and also commendeth it as a most singular meanes of his godlines vnto euerlasting life Psalm 1.2.3 when he sayth Blessed is hee whose delight is in the lawe of the Lorde and in his law doth meditate day and night for he shall be like a tree planted by the riuers of waters that shall bring foorth her fruite in due season whose leafe shall not fade for whatsoeuer hee shall doe shall prosper More ouer is wee looke but vnto the 119. Psalme and so content our selues with that wee shall see howe many times the man of God commendeth this vnto vs when first of all in the 15. verse he speaketh thus I will meditate in thy precepts and consider thy wayes and 23. Princes did sit and speake against mee but thy seruant did meditate in thy statutes and 78. Let the proud bee ashamed for they haue dealt wickedly and falsly with me but I meditate in thy precepts But aboue all that is most notable which is in the 13. part of that Psalme where with I will end Oh how loue I thy law it is my meditation continually where wee may plainly see what is the iudgement of the scriptures concerning this thing which doe so often and so highly cōmend the continuall meditation of the word And it is to bee obserued that this may and ought to be continuall that is vey often for when wee lacke oportunitie to reade and heare the word yet then may we meditate vpō some thing profitablie which that we might doe let vs remember what great things the Prophet speaketh of it in the verse following which he found true by his owne experience Psal 119. part 15. I haue had more vnderstanding sayth hee then all my teachers for thy testimonies are my meditation Wherein he doth assure vs that if we will meditate vpon those generall rules which wee haue heard out of Gods worde wee shall many times see more cleerely into the trueth of it then he that preacheth it at least wise more then he expressed vnto vs for by the spirite of God we shal be taught to apply it mote particularly to our selues then he did or could because wee are most priuie vnto our owne estates For as in all liberall Arts and Sciences nothing can be taught so plainly vnto which the scholler by meditation reasoning about it shall not be able to adde something and without the which the easiest teaching shall seeme somewhat hard so is it in Diuinitie that by Gods holie spirit vsing earnest and diligent meditation in the scripture wee shall most easily perceiue how to applie that to our own practise which hath been publikely taught and none can teach vs to haue so many sundrie vses of it in our lives and conuersation as our selues when wee giue our selues to the profitable meditation of it Without the which all that we reade and heare is but in a generall and confused knowledge How vnprofitable men are to themselues and others for want of meditation wee haue little comfort or edification thereby especially seeing Gods blessing is vpon his owne ordinance and his curse is vpon the neglect of the same This maketh great hearers and great readers to bee vnprofitable to themselues and others because for want of meditation they knowe not how to vse their knowledge thereupon it commeth to passe that many preachers can say no more then they finde in their bookes and therefore they tosse ouer so many Commentaries as they doe that they might haue matter enough and so can go no further because without meditation all reading is vaine whereas it would minister aboundant matter vnto their former readings Besides that they bring themselues into a bondage to beleeue that whatsoeuer their writer sayes because they do not meditate vpon it and they hinder their memories because they trust all to their bookes so that if they haue time sufficient and store of bookes they are able to speake with great admiration to the profite of the hearers and yet of the same matters can scarsely speake to a priuat man vpon the sudden tolerably to his ecdification and comfort because he hath but spoken it of the booke as it were and not laboured to make it his owne by meditation and thereby to finde out how he might apply it to his owne vse and the benefit of others And this thing is so much the more daungerous because it hath infected also many of the best students in
way and when thou liest downe and when thou risest vp In both which places although he doth lay this onely vpon the fathers and children by name yet his purpose is not so to restraine it vnto thē as though others might think themselues free from it especially seeing it is made generall in other places of the scripture but because they are vsually together in one familie he sheweth in their persons what should bee the talke of men in their common meetings as also because by this meanes the feare and seruice of God might bee planted in their ofspring being conueyned as it were by hand from father to son he declareth in them what should be the exercises of all sortes of men that religion might not dye with themselues but might bee established with their posteritie The Prophet speaketh more generally of it in the Psalm With my lippes haue I declared all the iudgements of thy mouth confessing thus much of himselfe Psal 119. part 2. that he vsed to speake of the word of God to others not thereby commending himself vnto men but as the Prophet of God shewing in his owne person what should be the exercise of all the faithfull For when as he had sayd in the former verse that he diligētly sought the Lord in his word wherein especially he is to be found and therefore gaue himselfe to the reading and hearing of it and in both he prayed to him for the direction of his holie spirit that he might not wander from the true meaning and practise of it and that which had thus learned by the blessing of Gods spirit he layd vp in his heart then he sayth He talked of it with others for their benefite and his owne further good And indeede the Prophet Malachie noteth out the godly in his time by this marke that they conferred one with another of the scripture which they had heard whō he thus writeth Malac. 3.16 Then spake they that feared the Lord euery one to his neighbour c. where though it be not precisely named of what they conferred yet in the context and words of the Prophet it is easily gathered For wheras hee prophecieth of the preaching of the Gospell by Iohn the Baptist and our Sauiour Christ wherein saluation is offered to the obedient and destruction threatned to the rebellious the Prophet setteth downe what was the fruite of this preaching namely that the vngodly made a mocke of it whose words are first of al set down and reproued vers 13. Your words haue been stout against me sayth the Lord of hosts c. Afterwards hee declareth what was wrought in the godly namely that they conferred of those things diligently among themselues both of the iudgements denounced that fearing they might auoyd them and of the promises that beleeuing them they might comforted ouer them incourage themselues to waite vpon God for the accomplishment of them Which we know to be so not only by the opposition of them and the wicked whose words must needs bee contrarie but especially for that which followeth where it is sayd that the Lord listened to their conference that is allowed of it and promised to blesse them for it vers 16 And the Lord hearkened and heard it and a booke of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord and that thought vpon his name 17. And they shal be to me sayth the Lord of hosts in that day that I shall doe this for a flocke and I will spare them as a man spareth his owne sonne that serueth him Thus we may easily perceiue that it is the duetie of all the true worshippers of God to conferre of his worde which as they ought to doe at other times so most of all Especially vpon the Lords day when they haue lately heard it and so thereby haue some greater occasion to doe it and are thereby as it were the rather prouoked vnto it if they will not doe it then it is to be feared that at other times they will more neglect it and if whensoeuer we heare the word wee ought to talke of it vnlesse we will lose a great part of the fruite of it thē most of all vpon the Sabbath when we haue the word after an especiall manner and besides haue ceased to talke of other worldly matters that wee might attend vpon this the better And this is the chiefe cause why we should leaue talking of worldly maters that neither our mouthes nor eares being filled with them wee might haue all the partes of soule and body taken vp with the seruice of God euen our mouths with speaking of it our eares with listning vnto the worde of God Which as it is a thing of rare profit so it is smally practised of men for how fewe shall you finde that will vpon the Sabbath prouoke themselues Which yet in greatly neglected and stirre vp others to speake of that which they haue heard or that will either offer any occasion of such speech vnto others or take it when it is offered by them Nay wee shall finde that our nature is so wholly corrupt in this thing that wee had rather speake of and listen vnto the things of the world many houres then vnto heauenly things the least moment of time yea euen vpon the Lordes day in so much that some haue tounge at will and words enough till their mouth runne ouer and you shall neuer finde them but they will haue something to say so long as you talke not onely of the lawfull commodities and pleasures of this life but of vaine and friuolous matters yea let any begin to speake of any part of Gods worship then they will either interrupt it by returning to their old matters vnlesse some be as constant in pursuing of it as they will be obstinate in crossing it or else they are sodainely striken into their dumpes and haue not a word to say Psal 19. part 2. The Prophet in the forenamed place first sayth I haue hid thy promise in my heart What is the cause that there is no more talke and conferēce about the word of God that I might not sinne against thee and then addeth with my lips haue I declared all the iudgment of thy mouth By ioyning of which two together in this order he telleth vs that if we wil speak profitably vnto others we must first haue the word within vs that not lightly sloating in our braine but deeply setled and hidden in our hearts Whereunto agreeth that exhortation which the Apostle maketh vnto the whole Church of God at Colossa Colos 30.16 Let the worde of Christ dwell in you plentuously in all wisedome teaching and admonishing your selues mutuallie in Psalmes and hymnes and spirituall songes In which as hee willeth them to conferre of the scriptures to the profit one another so be sheweth them how they shall come vnto it euen that they are filled with it before hand without which a
man either can say do thing at all or that which hee doth shall bee very colde and vnprofitable and it may easily bee perceiued that it commeth but from the teeth outward as we say neither hath it that power of the spirite which ought to bee and no doubt is in the communication of many of Gods children And here is that common prouerbe verified that our Sauiour Christ alledgeth in the Gospell Math. 12 34. Out of the aboundance of the heart the mouth speaketh men are not most vsually speaking of that which they know best but vpon which their heart is most set and they take greatest pleasure in or are most afraid of c. Then if wee will by this most certaine rule of truth measure what is in the hearts of men and how they are there mooued at the hearing and reading of the worde either one way or other we shall find that the most part of men if they bee not voyde of the knowledge of it altogether yet they haue no sence or feeling of it in their hearts neither doth it affect them one whit but are benummed as it were that waye seeing that they are no more often in speaking of it And let vs cease maruailing why they are so prodigall of their tongue in all other matters and in these are more niggardly and sparing of it then they should seeing that they are so stuffed with the one but they like vnto vessels filled with new wine which will breake if they haue no vent and of the other they haue so little or rather nothing in them at all that you can scarsely wring out any thing from them Which as it is a great sinne in men an especial neglecting of a notable part of Gods worship vpon this holy day What fruit we might get by such conferences and what we lose by neglecting thē so it is most assuredly a cause why all that which they haue receiued in the publike ministerie is either so soone lost or remayneth so vprofitably with them For what if men heare and read neuer so diligently if he neuer speak of it afterwardes is it possible that he should remember it so fruitefully in time to come as otherwise he might Doth not experience teach all men that those schollers are like to proue best learned which will conferre one with another about that which the master hath read vnto them before And they that doe studie hard thēselues if they doe not conferre with others besides that they shal stick fast many times can goe no further whereas they might be holpen out by others euē that also which they haue gotten cannot bee so deepelie setled in them as otherwise it might So it must needes bee that if wee talke not of the Scriptures wee shall forget much of that which we haue learned neither shall we be so profitable vnto others as the Lord would haue vs. There bee many that complaine they haue ill memories and when they bee iustly founde faulte with for not profiting as they should say they cannot remember it and it is true but in the meane season they marke not how the fault is in themselues that they might amend it for they are not carefull to speak of that which they haue heard and so to remember it to themselues and others but as soone as they are out of the Church doores they fall into other matters and so put the other cleane out especiallie when they continue in the former the rest of the daye and will not giue that time vnto these that they should For presuppose they haue the best memories in the world yet hearing a strange thing if they will neuer tell it vnto others or make reporte of it any more how can they long remember it Nay must they not needes soone forget it On the contrarie we shall finde it to be most true by sufficient trial that they which haue but weake naturall giftes yet through age all are now more weakened and decayed shall notwithstanding be able to tell you along tale with all the circumstances of time place persons c. which they neuer heard but once in their liues and that it may be twentie or fortie yeares since but of the stories of the Bible which they haue that very day read and besides haue heard them twentie times before they shall bee able to say very little or nothing to the purpose And what can we iudge to be the cause of this but that they haue told the one so many times to their neighbours and haue gone it ouer and ouer againe which maketh them so cunning in it and of the other they haue scarce once opened their mouthes to speake and therfore all is so cleane forgotten Thus men may complaine as long as they wil make excuses to blinde the eyes of others and to deceiue their owne hearts but God is not deceiued who seeth the fruitelesse talking vnnecessarie iangling about al other matters euen vpon his own holy day when they haue said little or nothing of those which did most of all concerne them Therefore let vs vnfainedly sorrowfull that wee haue not heretofore so carefullie sanctified the Lords day in this part of his worship as he required of vs and let vs confesse that we haue been iustly punished therein that we haue lost a great part of that fruite which otherwise we might haue reaped our selues from Gods worship and bestowed vpon others let vs hereafter be more carefull to spend some part of the daye in such holy conferences as maybe profitable both to our selues and we discharged of our dueties to God thereby And whereas wee haue a thousand things within vs and without vs to hinder vs from it let vs cast them away and seeing the duetie is so necessarie the commoditie thereof so great also let vs endeauour our selues and call vpon others most earnestly to performe it Some are ashamed to talke of the Scriptures For why should wee bee ashamed of it And seeing that the shame of the worlde hath not kept vs heretofore from vngodly communications vnto which shame iustly belongth why should it hold vs back from all christian conferences of which we shal neuer haue cause to be ashamed Nay why should wee not haue our mouthes filled full of all good words out eares open to heare them from others that it might appeare wee are now ashamed that wee haue spent so much heretofore in speaking and hearing those things whereof there came nothing but hurt to our selues and others And that wee may not bee so ignorant as to imagine Others thinke that it belongs onely to the Minister and not to the common people that to conferre of the Scriptures is proper to the ministers and not belonging to the common people which once to dreame of is a thing more meete for the darke night of poperie wherein it was defended them of the midday of the Gospel which doth so manifestlie gainesay
it For besides all the forenamed places which doe shew that this duetie is generally layd vpon al men we may see that the Apostle writing to the whole Church of God at Ephesus dooth require this of them al alike speaking of it first of all chap. 4. Ephes 4.29 Let no corrupt communication proceede out of your mouthes but that which is good to the vse of edyfying that it may minister grace to the hearers And in the next chapter Chap 5.18 ver 18. Would haue them filled with the spirit speaking one of them to another in Psalmes and hymnes and spirituall songs Coloss 4.6 And then vnto all the Colossians Let your speech bee gratious alwaies and powdered with salte that ye may know how to answer euery man And therefore when we be in the companie of others we must not onlie not leaue it vndone but we may not put it off and as it were straine curtesie to begin I doe not deny but that we must haue wisdome in speaking and that we must be swift to heare Iam. 1.19 and slow to speake especially in the presence of them that haue more knowledge then our selues but we must not lay it so whollie vpon the minister as that if hee neglect it vpon any occasion wee should thinke our selues free from it Iob. 32.4.5 But rather follow the example of the godly man Elihu in the like case Who after hee had waited till Iob had spoken and saw that there was none answer in the mouth of the three men began his speech rather then the truth should not be maintained Vers 6.7 c. First making that preface which is set down of him in the same place Our ignorance ought not to keepe vs from conferring with other Moreouer let vs not bee kept backe from performing this duetie by the guiltines of our ignorance for though it be a sinne in vs in deed that the worde of Christ doth not dwell in vs more plenteouslie and that we bee no more filled with the spirit and so cannot speake so profitablie as we should yet none that is desirous to learne can bee so ignorant but hee may aske a question concerning some thing that hath been taught say what is the meaning of this Or how doe you vnderstand that or how was such a thing proued and so begin the conference and giue occasion to other to prosecute it which if he doe in the feare of God he shal finde his blessing to be such that though he conferre with others that haue as little knowledge as himselfe he shall not depart from them altogether vnprofitable The great benefit of mutuall conference For that which euery man seuerallie cannot doe al of them together as it were ioyning their strengths shall be able to bring to passe and as in a commō gathering though euery one giue but a little yet the summe amounteth to a great deale so the knowledge of many being put together shall increase that which was in euery man before For the meetings of the godlie is like a great many of firebrands layde together in which though there be some heate when they are apart by themselues yet being laid together it is doubled and otherwise euery one would dye of it selfe so though euery man hath some grace of Gods spirit in himselfe yet it is greatly increased by conference as it were by borrowing of the heate of others without the which euen those that they haue would by little little decrease come to nothing Nay it is most true that the blessing of God is so great and so certaine vpon his owne ordinance that all men might bee moued to submit themselues vnto it as that men conferring about things whereof they are altogether ignorant keeping themselues within the compasse of Gods word shall come to that knowledge in them which not onely none of them had before but not any one of them could haue by himselfe alone attained vnto For euen as though there be no fire in the flint stones yet one of them striking vpon another do bring forth fire betweene them which commeth not from any one of them but from both and both of them striken together so by the conference of many that is found out as a totall summe in the end which the seuerall monie as it were of euery one of them was in no wise able to reach vnto Whereunto agreeth that Prouerbe of Salomon Euen as iron sharpeneth iron Pro. 27.17 so doth the face of a man sharpen his friend That is euen as the knife that is blunt being rubbed vpon the whetstone though it be more blunt then it selfe receiueth thereby a sharpnes which it had not before so one man by the presence and conference of another receiueth instruction getteth that which he had not before Which if the children of this world doe finde true by experience in all worldly matters that by debating vpon them they see further into them then at the first why should wee thinke that our conference about heauenly thinges would bee barren which besides the helpes of all naturall guiftes common with other the Lord hath promised to water with the especiall blessing of his holy spirite that it might not be vnfruitfull vnto vs which that we might doe to our greatest aduantage the Lord would haue not onely the people thus to conferre amongst themselues The people ought to conferre with the Minister and he with them and they one with another Malac. 2.7 but all of them with the minister and him with them And that this was the practise of the one and of the other as it appeareth by sundry places of the old and new Testament so by that which the Prophet Malachie speaketh of both 2. 7. The Priests lips should keepe knowledge and they should seeke the law at his mouth wherunto agreeth thar of the Prophet Haggai Aske now of the Priests concerning the lawe Haggai 2.12 and say 13. If one beare holy flesh in the skirt of his garment and with his skirt doe touch the bread or the pottage or the wine or oyle or any meate shall it be holy and the Priests answered and sayd No. In both which places it is manifest that in those daies it was the mnnner of the people and Priests to conferre together about the law of God vnto which if all in our time were compelled as the word of God bindeth them vnto it I knowe very well that the conferences of a great many would be as fruitlesse as might bee For whereas the people should seeke the lawe at their mouthes you may seeke and finde any thing at them rather then that and you may conferre with them rather of the plough and of the flayle then of the worde of God seeing their hands are more fit to hold either of them then their lips to keepe the other Beside others in a stately pride of themselues and a contempt of their brethren will
his fauor more assured of his promises and made more fit to serue him Euen as in the scriptures The seruants of God haue greatly profited in faith obedience by the consideratiō of his creatures we may see many times how the spirit of God sendeth vs to the creatures to bee confirmed by them in the things that are spoken of God in the word and the seruants of God haue by them strengthened their faith in the promises which they had learned out of Gods word before The Prophet Esay chap. 40. propoūding vnto the people most excellent promises whereof they should bee made partakers in the time of the Gospell which hee doth in the former part of the chapter frō the 12. verse he beginneth to confirme them in the certaine trueth of the same by the consideration of Gods omnipotent power whereby hee made all things at the first in such a wonderfull order that thereby they might bee assured that nothing should bee able to hinder him from bringing that to passe which he haid promised to his Church but that they should looke most certainly for it saying Who hath measured the waters in his fist and counted heauen with a span and comprehended the dust of the earth in a measure and waighed the mountaines in a waight and the hils in a ballance So likewise the Prophet Ieremie in his 33. chapter promising mising vnto the church deliuerance out of their trouble doth perswade them of the infallible truth of Gods word herein by setting before their eyes the immutable course of nature in the continuall interchange of the day and night Thus sayth the Lord Iere. 33.20 if you can breake tny couenant of the day and my couenant of the night that there should not be day and night in their season 21. then may my couenant bee broken with Dauid my seruant that he should not haue a sonne to raigne vpon his throne and with the Leuits and Priests my ministers 22. As the armie of heauen cannot be numbred neither the sand of the sea measured so will I multiplie the seede of Dauid my seruant and the Leuits that minister vnto me The Psalmes most of all are full of this matter and as it is a booke of practise especially so it is plentifull in these meditations and the treatise would be long if I should but in order reckon vp the principall places there tending to this purpose yet the waightines of the matter will not suffer me to passe ouer them all It is most apparant how Dauid in the 8. Psalme stirreth vp himselfe and all mankinde to praise the Lord for his great liberalitie towards them appearing in this that as he made him at the first Lord and ruler ouer all his creatures in heauen and earth so he hath restored him into the same dignitie by Christ when he had iustly lost it before because of his sinne when he thus beginneth and endeth the Psalme O Lord our gouernour Psal 8.19 how excellent is thy name in all the world And in another Psalme the Prophet complaineth of the greatnes of his affliction and being almost discouraged because the Lord deferred his helpe so long that he might not vtterly sink down vnder the heauie waight of his grieuous tentation Psal 77.10 strengtheneth his faith by remembring Gods former works that he might haue hope of his mercie towards himselfe I remembred the yeares of the rtght hande of the most high 11. I remembred the workes of the Lord certainly I remembred thy wonders of old 12. I did also meditate of all thy workes and did deuise of thine acts So likewise in the 22. Psalme the man of God being in such extremitie that he was almost past all hope beginneth with this heauie complaint Et. 21.1 My God my God why hast thou forsaken me and art so farre from my health and from the voyce of my roring But afterwards commeth to this verse 4. Our father 's trusted in thee they trusted and thou didst deliuer them 5. They called vpon thee and were deliuered they trusted in thee and were not confounded And then he sayth vers 10. I was cast vpon thee euen from the wombe thou art my God from my mothers bellie Where we see he getteth hope at the last of being heard and deliuered by the consideration of Gods workes both generally done to his seruants in times past and particularly shewed to himselfe heretofore And there is great reason of this for the Lord is alwaies like himselfe and Iesus Christ is yesterday and to day and the same for euer and therefore will doe as he hath done for there is no respect either of persons Psal 25.10 or times with him but all the wayes of God are mercie and trueth not only mercie in the beginning but trueth in the midst and ending For this cause the seruant of God thus praieth in the Psalme 119. Et. 119.132 Looke vpon me and be mercifull vnto me as thou vsest to doe vnto those that loue thy name And vers 149. Heare my voyce according to thy louing kindnes O Lord quicken me according to thy custome In both which places we see how he prayeth to God that he would shewe him that mercie which he was wont to shew to him himselfe others in the like case heretofore so by the former works of God strengtheneth himselfe in prayer Thus wee may easilie vnderstand what profit we might get by the earnest meditation and wise conference about the works of God which are done in great wisedome thereby to confirme vs in the trueth of those things that are written in the word and to draw vs to those dueties that are required of vs in the same and so generally to further vs in all godlinesse and therefore a thing not to bee neglected at any time but most of all to bee practised vpon the Lords day that we might leaue nothing vndone which might make all Gods worship most profitable vnto vs and make vs fitter vnto all other dueties which is the end why the Sabbath was ordained In the 104. Psalme the Prophet speaking of the wonderfull workes of God and the marueilous gouerning preseruing of them beginneth thus Et 104.1 My soule praise thou the Lord and towards the midst breaketh forth into this speech O Lord how manifold are thy workes vers 24. in wisedome hast thou made them all And in the end concludeth with Glorie be to the Lord for euer And 33. I will sing vnto the Lord all my life I will praise my God while I liue Hereby declaring what ought to bee wrought in all men by the reuerent cōsidering of Gods works and that we should not muse or speake of them vnprofitably but with that glorie vnto God and comfort to our selues which he requireth of vs and no doubt many of his children doe But that I might drawe to an ende one word of that which as it is most plaine so it is most comfortable
Psal 147. Sing vnto the Lord with praise Et. 147.7 sing vpon the harpe vnto our God which couereth the heauen with clowdes and prepareth raine for the earth and maketh the grasse to grow vpon the mountaines which giueth to beasts their food and to the young rauens that cry The whole Psalme is a Psalm of praise vnto God for that he watcheth ouer his Church by his especiall prouidence to doe it good and declareth the same to if and to none other by his word And therefore sayth that the Lord will helpe it by his infinit wisedome when it is confounded in it selfe and knowes not what to doe and by his omnipotent power will deliuer it when it is most weake in it selfe which he proueth in these verses that wee haue seene by the wise and mercifull prouidence of God ouer his creatures as if hee had sayd God dealeth well with the creatures made for men much more will be doe good to his Church whereof he hath the greatest care He dooth good to the insensible creatures for when the earth is dried vp in the heate of Summer and gapeth as it were for extreame thirst and the toppes of the mountaines are parched and euery thing seemes withered by the rootes the Lord heareth as it were the cry of the earth prepareth raine and watereth the hilles and so changeth their hewe and maketh them greene and fresh againe then much more will he renewe the face of his Church and make it beautifull though it was deformed and fullied with extreame miserie and calamitie before Nay the Lord feedeth the beasts when they are pinched with hunger and crye for meate euen the young rauens that cry in their nests and must needes famish there if the Lord did not moue the heart of the olde one to finde out meate and bring it to them If he doe so much for them how much more shal his eares bee open to the prayers of men calling vpon him in the name of Christ Iesus according to his promise Ioh. 14.13 that whatsoeuer we aske of him in the name of his son according to his will he will grant it vnto vs. And this is part of that heauenly sermon which our Sauiour Christ maketh vnto the people in the mountaine as it is recorded by the Euangelist S. Matthew where he dehorteth them from too much carefull seeking after the things of this life by the serious meditation vpon Gods prouidence ouer them which that he might perswade them of he sheweth it them by experience in those creatures of God that were common before their eyes Matth. 6.25 Therefore I say vnto you be not carefull for your life what ye shall eate or what ye shall drinke nor for your bodie what you shall put on Is not the life more worth thē meate and the bodie then rayment 26. Behold the fowles of the heauen for they sowe not neither reape nor carrie into the barnes yet your heauenly father feedeth them Are you not much better then they 28. And why care ye for rayment Learne how the lillies of the field doe grow they labour not neither spinne 29. Yet I say vnto you that euen Salomon in all his glorie was not arayed like one of these 30. Wherefore if God so clothe the grasse of the field which is to day and to morrowe cast into the ouen shall he not doe much more vnto you O ye of little faith 31. Therefore take no thought saying what shall wee eate or what shall we drinke or wherewith shall we be clothed 32. For your heauenly father knoweth that ye haue neede of all these things 33. But seeke ye first the kingdome of God and his righteousnes and all these things shall be ministred vnto you In all which words we see how he draweth his exhortation from the creatures to teach vs that we should not bee idle and vnprofitable beholders of them but as the Lord doth most cleerely manifest himselfe vnto vs in them so wee besides the present vse of them shall open our eyes to behold that which the Lord dooth offer vnto vs by them For this cause the Lord himself after he had made the whole world in sixe dayes and rested the seuenth that by his owne example he might stirre vp mankinde to meditate vpon that wonderfull great frame and euery thing in it that he might giue the glorie vnto God that was due to him for it and serue him carefully that had so wonderfully prouided euery thing for him But I knowe not how it hath come to passe through the great corruption and blindnes that is within vs that in these things wee doe not seeke after God Act. 17.27 though by them we might haue groped after him and found him Nay a great many are like vnto the oxe and the asse who haue the vse of Gods creatures and are filled with them eating and drinking and taking their case yet neuer lift vp their mindes vnto him that sends them to that end that thereby they might inquire after him who is the author of them But contenting themselues with thar profit and pleasure they haue in them are so drowned and ouerwhelmed therewith that whereas they should be guides to direct them more surely to the Lord and glasses to them to see him more cleerely they thereby are either turned out of the way and go further from him or make them vailes before their eyes looking onely vnto them and not vnto the Lord that is in them For wee shall see men that are musing vpon their cattell and vpon their ground the whole day to be so earthly minded that they will altogether sticke fast in them and be as it were fettered vnto them so that they are not able to lift vp their mindes to any heauenly meditation from them but like beasts are still groueling vpon the earth and haue their mindes either wicked and prophane or vaine and foolish And such shall be their communication of them either finding fault at the workes of the Lord or scoffing at them or fondly iangling about them or after a meere worldly manner speaking of them which plainly sheweth how barren they are within of any profit they reape by them And if it be not so what is the meaning of these and such like speeches that are so rife in the mouthes of men Here is a deare yeare it is an hard winter this is a sore frost here is a great drought this raine is like to make a floud c. because I will not so much as name the irreligious speeches of the Atheists which when they haue vnaduisedly cast forth then they can say no more Whereas they should in these things see the iudgements of God against sinne that they might bee drawne to repentance euen as in the rest of his dealings they should behold his mercies that they might bee encouraged to serue him and so speake of them that they might make these things knowne vnto others The meditation of
Gods workes will teach vs to profit by al things and in all estates Therefore if men will needes ouerlooke their grounds vpon the Lords daye as sometimes they must and bee dealing with their cattell talking about them let their cogitation and speeches tend to this ende and then in so dooing they may sanctifie a part of the daye otherwise they shall be as merely worldly vpon that daye as in any other of the sixe And in deed if we would thus bend our mindes and pray to God for his spirite and vse to doe it we should neuer want matter of profit to our selues and others in what estate and condition soeuer wee were about whatsoeuer wee had to deale either in the day or in the night at home or abroade alone by our selues or with others for thus in a meane estate of life whereas the wicked doe complaine and are not satisfied but enuie them that are aboue thē we might behold the goodnes of God towards vs prouiding so wel for vs according to the desire of the wise man Prou. 30.8 Giue me not pouertie or riches feed me with foode conuenient for mee 9. Least I bee full and denye thee and say who is the Lord Or least I bee poore and steale and take the name of my God in vaine If wee bee vnder the crosse either pouertie sicknes or any other distresse whereas the men of this world doe repine and grudge let vs vnderstand the wise dealing of our father towards vs Who by this meanes Rom. 8.29.17 maketh vs like vnto the image of his sonne that wee suffering with him might also be glorified with him If the Lord hath blessed vs with the aboundance of all things though the greater sort be puffed vp thereby and by abusing of them doe forget God let vs thereby bee humbled and vsing them well not haue our mindes set too much vpon them and know whiles we are here in the body we are absent from the Lorde and that this is but an earthly tabernacle which must be destroyed looking for an house not made with hands eternall in the heauens If then there bee so many good things here below what is the happines prepared aboue If so great contentation vpon earth what is the fulnes of ioye in heauen And not onely thus but whither soeuer we doe turne our eyes we shal haue matter not onelie to keepe vs from idlenes but to prouoke vs to all profitablenes For when the sunne ariseth how might it tell vs of the comforte of the sunne of righteousnes arising in our hearts How might the spring of the yeare put vs in minde of our regeneration and new birth What would the darkenes of the night teach vs but the horror and feare of ignorance where there is not Gods worde Would not our meate leade vs to the spirituall foode of our soules And our apparell to the righteousnes of Christ Iesus that being clothed therewith wee might bee comely before God and men and not ashamed And to be short if we were not beastes and no men might not our sleepe forewarne vs of death our bedde of the graue our rising againe in the morning of the day of our resurrection Thus al the creatures should lift vs vp to the creator and thus to be occupyed about them are the very works of the Sabbath indeede Thus if we did see or heare any of the iudgements of God vpon our selues or others wee should thinke and speake of them with humilitie and feare of any of his benefites with great ioy and comfort whereas now men for the most part doe neither the one nor the other And though I know very wel that the proper place to speak of these things is in the third cōmandement where the Lord willeth vs in al our thoughtes wordes deeds to seeke and set forth his glorie and therefore so alwaies to deale with his creatures that his most glorious name might appeare thereby For he is the creator of all things and this is his name yet to doe them vpon the Sabbath is the very worke of that day in which we should vse all the meanes that might make the publike ministery most profitable vnto vs and either drawe vs nearer vnto God or make vs more fitte to doe dueties to our brethren Therefore let vs set our hand to this trueth confessing that it is our bounden dutie to serue God in this right vse of his creatures and workes let vs be sorrowfull that wee haue ouerslipped this duetie so carelesly heretofore and let vs bee assured that it hath bereaued vs of much godlines that otherwise might haue been in vs and made vs so much the lesse profitable vnto others and therefore in the feare of God and in the care of our own Saluation let vs purpose performe this duetie most carefully hereafter that the blessing of God might be more vpon vs and we haue the testimonie of a good conscience of Gods creatures witnessing for vs and not against vs. And let vs be so much the more carefull of it in good earnest But all sortes doe greatlie fayle in it by how much we knowe too well that the common practise of most men is so farre from it In so much that euen they of the vniuersitie that make it their profession to search out the nature of Gods workes and to see furthest into them and therefore must needs haue many and deepe meditations besides often and long disputations about them doe not so much as propounde this vnto themselues and therefore no maruell if they neuer attaine vnto it namelie to beholde in them the inuisible things of God Gods wonderfull work in them thereby either to be confirmed in any part of his word or stirred vp to any duetie vnto God or men but they haue in stead of these many both vaine and too curious and also false and vntrue discourses about these with themselues and others euen vpon the Sabbath And I am sure that in the countrey men are not free from this sinne for it falleth out in them euen of the better sorte either of ignorance or negligence that when they haue sanctified the Sabbath in some other part of Gods worship this hath not been so much as once thought of Nay euen then when they endeuoured themselues to meditate conferre about Gods worde which is the chiefe they haue not done the like about his workes and so haue lost some further commoditie of the worde that they might haue reaped when thus they might haue been taught as it were by a double schoolemaster especially when the Lord punisheth vs for neglecting some parte of his seruice and we doe not vse al the meanes that God hath appoynted to serue his prouidence by Therefore let vs remember among all other things that wee haue heard of before to make this one parte of our priuat seruice of God vpon his holy day and so I shal grow to an end For as it
whereof there are so many kinds as appeareth by the diuers words hee vseth in this place Whereunto agreeth that which hee write●h vnto the Ephesians Bee not drunke with wine Ephe. 5.18 wherein is excesse but bee filled with the spirite 19. Speaking vnto your selues in Psalmes and hymnes and spirituall songs singing and making melody to the Lorde in your hearts 20. Giuing thanks alwaies for all things vnto God euen the Father in the name of our Lorde Iesus Christ Where in like manner hee sheweth them howe they should behaue themselues in the aboundance of al Gods blessings that whereas the wicked are ready to abuse them and by ouercharging themselues with them doe fall into an immoderate profusion and laughter they should in the middes of these thinges being guided by Gods spirite burst forth into the prayses of God through Iesus Christ and testifie their holy mirth not of the flesh but of the spirite by singing Psalmes whereof there are so many sundry kinds that for euery time wee shall bee fitted with some one or other Let vs not therefore deny so manifest a trueth but acknowledge as the word doth teach vs that the Lorde requireth of vs in our priuate meetings vpon the Lordes day and when we are alone by our selues to sing Psalmes as well as in the Church And though I doe not binde men vnto this for bee it farre from me that I should lay any heauier burden vpon any then the worde of God it self doth bind them I say vnto this that in all their mirth they should sing Psalmes as it might seeme the places alledged doe import Yet this the Lorde requireth of vs that in all our lawfull pleasures we should looke vp vnto him and so reioyce in them that wee especially reioyce in him and so from them to be led to him and by them to be made fitter to serue him And whereas it falleth out thus with the wicked that all pleasures draw them away from God take away from them the remembrance of him and driue them into sinne we contrariwise should by all of them come neerer vnto God set him before our eyes and make our selues fitter to serue him praise him For as that is a godly sorrow that driueth vs to prayer a blessed heauinesse that maketh vs seeke vnto the Lord so that is a godly mirth that endeth with singing with Psalmes and an heauenly ioy that at least wise maketh vs more fit to serue God And otherwise as we may suspect our sorow to be but worldly so our ioy to bee but fleshly and carnall And this is that whereunto the Apostle Saint Iames hath respect saying Is any amōg you afflicted let him pray Is any merry Iam. 5.13 let him sing Where he telleth the dispersed Iewes how they should behaue themselues priuately in all estates namely that though the vngodly in their affliction doe murmure impatiently and breake out into blasphemous othes they should not onely abstaine from those things but in all humilitie should go to prayer that they might obtaine mercy at Gods hande and then being deliuered of him that they should auoyd the prophane carelessenes of the wicked and stirre vp themselues to sing prayses vnto God and so both commendeth this duetie vnto vs and sheweth whereunto all our mirth should leade vs. In which place though he doth not tye the singing of the Psalmes to the time of prosperity for there are songs of mourning no more then he doth prayer vnto the time of affliction 2. Chro. 35.25 yet he sheweth which are the fittest times for both and besides that as no man can truely pray without the feeling of his wants so no man can sing from his heart vnlesse hee haue some perswasion of Gods fauour and so as affliction driueth him to pray so mirth mooueth him to sing Therefore when the Lorde dealeth so fatherly with his children that hee tempereth their afflictions with the ioy of the spirit then he giueth vnto thē iust occasion both to pray sing vnto him Thus we reade that Paul and Sylas being in prison ioyned them together Acts 15.25 At midnight Paul and Sylas prayed and sang a Psalme vnto God Being first of all beaten very sore and then cast into a dungeon with their feete in the stocks it was then time to pray but considering the goodnes of their cause for which they suffered all these things and finding the Lord present with them by his fauour assuring them of his defence there was iust cause of ioy and in ioy to sing as they did So then seeing to sing Psalmes is a part of Gods seruice as we haue seene it in so many places of the word commended vnto vs it must needes be put in practise vpon that day which is dedicated to his seruice and especially when we consider that the fittest time for it is the time of ioy and there is no ioy comparable to that which we haue in Christ Iesus and we neuer inioy that so fully as by the meanes whereby he conueyeth it vnto vs and we neuer haue all the meanes so plentifully and so continually as vpon the Sabbath Therefore as the Lord then offereth himself wholly vnto vs and his sonne Christ Iesus to be made ours with all his merits in the worde the Sacraments and prayer and so thereby doth fill our hearts with the ioye of the holy Ghost euen that ioy that is vnspeakable and most glorious so then especially we ought to sing for ioye of the Lord if euer wee will doe it And not onely in the Church which we ought to doe especially where the greatest ioy is bestowed vpon vs but also because by the forenamed priuate exercises this ioye is renued and sometimes increased wee must priuately renue our thanksgiuing Singing of Psalmes testifieth and increaseth spirituall songs and sing vnto God againe especially when wee haue seene that these places of scripture doe commend vnto vs the priuat exercise of singing Psalmes And that we might doe it the more cheerefully let vs knowe for a suretie that though wee cannot sing at all where there is no whit of ioy so let this ioy bee neuer so little by singing we shal increase it For euen as al knowledge is increased especially by hearing reading and conferring about the scripture so all affections are most of all stirred vp by meditation prayer and singing of Psalmes And because vpon the Lords day we must labour to build vp our selues in both wee must neglect no meanes whereby we might attaine vnto our full growth in either Therefore euen then are wee iustly punished with deadnes and dulnes vpon the Sabbath because we neglect al those meanes or els doe not ioyne them together So then we haue great cause to be sorrie that wee haue so many times neglected this seruice of God vpon the Sabbath day and though wee had not spent away the time in a prophane mirth as many times wee haue done yet there is
great cause of humiliation for not stirring vp our selues by singing Psalmes vnto that spirituall mirth whereby we might haue been more cheerefully occupied in Gods seruice and comfortably to our owne soules And let vs not hereafter continue to prouoke the Lord and bereaue our selues of much comfort by neglecting to sing But when I so earnestly request this vpon the Sabbath my meaning is not to exclude it from other dayes no more then priuat prayer reading c. and the former places of scripture haue proued the contrarie but my purpose is to shew that if at any other time it is to bee practised then especially vpon the Lords day And truelie I am so much the longer in this thing would faine be as importunate in it as I might because as I knowe it to bee a thing of great moment The singing of Psalmes is greatly decaied in all places and amongst al sorts of men so I haue obserued it to be greatly neglected in our time aboue that which had wont to bee at the first restoring of the Gospell and is like to bee lesse regarded in time to come For besides that there bee too many which are of great yeares that neuer sung Psalme in their liues neither can do nor haue any care to learne though they can sing some other vain songs very perfectly and though they cannot reade themselues nor any of theirs yet will haue many Ballades set vp in their houses that so they might learne them as they shall haue occasion but as for the booke of Psalmes it commeth not once into their thought to make prouision for it Besides these men I say of whom it is a lamentable thing to thinke we may finde that the neglect of this duetie hath ouer spread it selfe farre and neere for euen amongst them which are giuen most to sing this is the least thing that they doe and indeed many of the common Singing men are so vngodly that it were better for them to haue their mouthes stopped then once to open them to pollute such holy and sacred songs And as for others though they haue al varietie of Musick both vpon Instruments and with the voyce and that euery day yet many of them very seldome or scarsely once a yeare doe heare a Psalme sauing in the Church I doe not finde fault with this kinde of Musicke but doe esteeme of it as I ought euen of the most exquisite that may be I confesse it to be the especiall gift of God in any I knowe it very well to bee commended in the scripture and that it hath had wonderfull effects in time past as in Saul and Elizeus 1. Sam. 16.23 2. King 3.15 and that men might stil haue great commoditie by it if it were rightly vsed only this I complaine of with griefe that the best Musicke is not cared for and that the singing of other things hath cleane shut out in a great many of places the singing of Psalmes And that you might vnderstand the complaint to be iust you must not onely looke into the houses of great personages where this musick hath ioystled out the singing of Psalmes or rather kept it from euer entring in but also in the shops of Artificers and cottages of poore husbandmen where you shall sooner see one of these newe Ballades which are made only to keepe them occupied that otherwise knowe not what to doe then any of the Psalmes and may perceiue them to bee cunninger in singing the one then the other And indeed I know not how it commeth to passe but you may obserue it that the singing of ballades is very lately renewed and commeth on a fresh againe so that in euery Faire and Market almost you shall haue one or two singing and selling of ballades they are brought vp a pace which though it may seeme to bee a small thing at the first yet I am greatly afrayd of it For as when the light of the Gospell came first in the singing of ballades that was rife in Poperie began to cease and in time was cleane banished away in many places so now the sudden renewing of them and hastie receiuing of them euery where maketh me to suspect least they should driue away the singing of Psalmes againe seeing they can so hardly stand together of which I am so much the more iealous because I see that in other places also where these be not receiued in What is the cause why singing of Psalmes is so decayed yet the singing of Psalmes is greatly left ouer that it had wont to be But if we would search out the cause of this euil disease in our selues and others that so it might bee cured wee shall easily finde it in those places of scripture where this duetie hath been commended vnto vs before For the Apostle sayth to the Ephesians Ephes 5.18 Be not drunke with wine wherein is excesse but be filled with the spirit 19. Speaking one vnto another in Psalmes and hymnes and spirituall songs singing and making melodie to the Lord in your hearts Coloss 3.16 And to the Colossians Let the worde of Christ dwell in you plentiously in all wisedome teaching and admonishing one another in Psalmes and hymnes and spirituall songs singing with a grace vnto the Lord in your hearts In which places he first of all forewarneth vs vnder one kinde that we bee not ouerfilled with the pleasures of this world but vse them as though wee were readie to leaue them otherwise wee being wholly giuen to our bellies and to our backes shall haue pleasure in nothing but such as will serue them al heauenly mirth shal be sorrow vnto vs as to be called to the word and prayer it shall be a vexation vnto vs and then shall we bee most merrie when we are furthest off from God and then he sayth our mirth shall be excessiue and beastly Secondly he would haue the word of Christ dwel in them plentiously that being perswaded of Gods fauour their harts might not bee vainly merrie but thereby moued to sing vnto him Lastly that they should bee filled with the spirit that should prepare them to spirituall songs for in our flesh dwelleth no good for as the flesh hath no taste of spirituall things so the spirit hath no taste of carnall things and therefore being filled with the spirit it will stirre vs vp to all spirituall exercises Therefore it is no maruell that men are so barren in this thing seeing that they are so drowned with the pleasures of this life that they haue no pleasure but in them and being too ful of them there is no roome in their hearts for the word of God and for his spirit of which they are emptie and therefore can take no delight in the exercises of the word and of the spirit So then howsoeuer the neglect of this duetie may seeme small in our eyes yet it must needs be great when it bewrayeth that we are voyd of Gods word and
againe that if the beholding of our bretheren their need doth not moue vs to pitie them then are we too hard harted in deed there is no hope that euer we should pitie thē sufficiently This is that which our Sauiour Iesus Christ noteth in the gospell after S. Luke of a certaine man that went down from Ierusalem to Iericho and fell among theeues Luk. 10.30 who robbed him of his rayment and wounded him and departed leauing him halfe dead by chance there came downe a certaine pri●st that same waie and when hee saw him he passed by on the other side and likewise a Leuit when he was come nere to the place went and looked on him and passed by on the other side In which they are both cōdemned of the want of al humanitie that cōming neere to him and seeing him in this miserie yet hardened their hearts against so woful a sight and were not moued with so dol●full a crie But of the third it is sayd which was a Samaritane that as hee iourneyed he came neere vnto him and when he saw him he had compassion on him and went to him bound vp his wounds and powred in wine and oyle and put him on his owne beast and brought him to an Inne made prouision for him c. By which practise of his as it is most manifest how truelie it is sayd of him that hee had compassion on him in deed so the occasion of it is noted that hee came neere to him and saw him in this miserie which no doubt did a great deale more affect him then if it had been most liuely described vnto him by others Hereupon the liberalitie of men many times is so colde as it is for that they beholding nothing but plentie in themselues and abundance in their friends know not the hungry meales that their brethren make with bread and water and not enough of that heare not the pitifull cries of the poore children pinched with colde and hunger vpon whome their fathers and mothers cannot looke many times with drye cheekes which if they would endeuour to finde out by going from house to house and so acquainte themselues with their estate vpon the Lords daye and doe it as one of his workes then their owne eyes might moue them to bestowe some of that which hath not seene light many yeares before the iust and cancer of which shall witnesse against them or to bring out that corne which they haue kept till it be past mans meate or to spare but the ouerplus of that which might bee from their hawkes and dogs for the relieuing of the distressed mēbers of Christ Iesus Matth. 25.40 who would account that whatsoeuer they did to one of the least of his brethren they did it to himselfe For this is that which I haue heard some men say when they haue come from such houses that they would not haue thought that they had beene in halfe that pouertie vnlesse they had seene it with their eyes Therefore euen as it is said of the wisdome of Solomon which was so great as it was and the fame was iustly spread farre and neere So that the Queene of Saba came among others 2. Chron. 10.5 to make triall of it which when she had done and had seene heard all things she was greatly astonyed and said vnto the King it was a true word which I heard in mine owne land of thy sayings and of thy wisdome howbeit I beleeued not this report till I came had seene it with my eyes but loe the one halfe was not tolde for thou hast more wisdome and prosperitie then I haue heard by reporte c. Euen so may it be said of the cōdition of our brethrē that though we heare much yet we shall not know the tenth part of their pouertie except wee will goe and see it and therefore cannot bee so moued to pittie them as the Lord would haue vs. Therefore whereas we vse to make many idle walkes and vnnecessarie wandrings we cannot tell whither vpon the Lords daye let vs hereafter goe and see the thing which might moue vs to doe that which otherwise wee should forget to see I meane the wants of such as wee may and ought to supply according to our hability And let vs do it so much the rather because otherwise though we do helpe them yet we cannot do it so cherefully from our hearts with that feeling of their miserie which the Lord will accept Gen. 23.2.3 For euen as Abraham when he would prouoke himselfe to so great an humiliation as such a chastisement did require hee wept in the sight of the dead corpes that the beholding of it might moue him the rather so if we would looke into the necessitie of our brethren and set it before our eyes wee should bee more plentifull in well doing then we are and bee more readie to weepe with them that weepe Rom. 12 15.16 and to be like minded one towards another And if the Lords day bee a daye of receiuing mercy from God and shewing it againe to all his creatures We ought especially to do the spirituall works of mercie to mens soules euen to the oxe and to the asse much more then vnto man who is most like vnto GOD and neerest to our selues and if in all outward things we ought to minister vnto him then much more in spirituall and heauenly wherein is shewed so much the more mercy by howe much the soule is more excellent then the bodie the wants of the one more generall then the other and more dangerous yet lesse felt and lesse sought to be supplyed For many that haue great aboūdance of outward things yet their soules are in great miserie and their bodies are well fed but their soules are almost famished wanting both knoweledge and comfort and yet they doe not pitie themselues Now then if it bee pitie as it is to raise vp the asse that is fallen vnder his burden to lift out the oxe that is fallen into the ditch then much more to raise vp men that are fallen into sinne and to pull them out of the mire of despaire in which they sticke by the sweete promises of the Gospell as it were reaching out vnto them our hands if to pul a man out of the fire then much more to pull him out of hell fire if to feede the hungrie to cloth the naked then most of all to feede their soules with the liuely knowledge of Gods word and to couer their nakednes with the righteousnes of Christ Iesus by faith If to make peace betweene men and men then much more to reconcile them vnto God Then we must needs confesse that it is the Lords work which he requireth of euery one vpon his holy daye namely that besides the helping of them in their outwarde estate they minister vnto them that want of their heauenly riches as God hath blessed them aboue others euen to teach
the ignorant to admonish the vnruly to bring home them that goe astray to bind vp the broken hearted to strengthen the feeble to encourage thē that be occupied in well doing and in one worde so to helpe them in the lesse that the chiefe and principall bee not neglected wherein true loue especially doth consist and wherein the Lord is serued of vs most of all And this is that which is spoken of our Sauiour Christ in the place aboue mentioned that hee not onely healed the woman vpon the Sabbath of her bodily disease Luk. 13.16 but deliuered her from the chaynes of the diuell with which she had beene long held For it is euident in the Gospell that besides the infirmitie of her body there was an extraordinary worke of Sathan wherby as she was strangely possessed so it wrought in her many strong passions from all which she being deliuered by Christ Iesus receiued euen in that especialy the most mercy at his hands Therefore among al the works of God we must be persuaded that this is none of the least to shewe mercie vnto the distressed soules of our brethren for this is the mercy of the most mercifull euen Christ Iesus himselfe from whom as we haue receiued many great mercies so none to this that he hath redeemed our soules from eternall destruction and when we were sunke downe into the bottomlesse pit of all misery hee came thither in vnspeakable loue to fetch vs out and reconciled vs to his Father and hath made vs heires of euerlasting life And let vs be so much more mindfull of this duetie by how much the fewest in the worlde doe thinke of it no not they that otherwise are mindfull to shewe mercy in all outward things And thus wee see that none can bee exempted from these dueties for though euery one cannot goe into the houses of the poore neither is it meete that some should because of their personages and calling yet they may make enquirie of them and send vnto them and exhort others to do the like and pray for them and may with their equals haue such profitable conferences that they may shewe great mercy to their soules by drawing them neerer to the kingdome of heauen and drawing them further off from the pit of hell And they that be poore and therfore it may be imagined they can shew no mercy at all for they haue not wherewith must first of all consider Mark 12.43 the poore widowe that gaue but two mytes how it was accepted and that the Lord accepteth of euery one not according to his deedes but according to his good will and secondarily that if they will instruct admonish comfort their brethren and pray for them they shall shewe the greatest mercy vnto them that may bee and doe that worke which is most acceptable vnto God and therefore most peculiar to the Sabbath So then that we might be persuaded of the excellency of this duty aboue all others let vs co●sider of that which the spirite of God speaketh of it Iam. 5.19 Brethren if any of you haue erred from the trueth and some man hath conuerted him let him knowe that he which hath conuerted the sinner from going out of his way shall saue a soule from death and shall hide a multitude of sinnes And indeede all our profession is nothing and the shew of religion that we make is vaine except it bring forth these fruites in vs as the same Apostle witnesseth Chap. 1 27. Pure religion and vndefiled before God euen the Father is this to visite the fatherlesse and widowe in their aduersitie and to keepe himselfe vnspotted of the world Not that there is no religion but this but that by these fruits it shall appeare whether our religion be good or no and whether we be profitably occupied therein or no euen when all the publike and priuate exercises of the same doe prepare vs to shew mercy vnto our brethren and make vs more fitte thereunto Therefore whereas wee haue seene in the former part of this treatise that notwithstanding the precise commandement of resting such dueties were permitted as the prese●t necessitie of any creature did require now wee doe fur●her vnderstand that they be by the commandement of God necessarily laid vpon vs that they are in the number of those works of God which that we might wholly doe we are commanded to rest from our owne All superiours ought to be carefull that their inferiours do keepe holy the day as well as themselues Now the Lord would not onely haue vs to keepe holy the Sabbath our selues in all the partes of his worshippe publike and priuate which wee haue seene heretofore but also that euery one shoud in his seueral place and roome carefully take order that so many as bee committed to his charge should sanctifie the daye as well as himselfe which though it be true in all other commandements namely that whatsoeuer we are bound to do our selues we must bee meanes to further other in doing the same because the loue of God and of our neighbours spreadeth it selfe ouer all the commaundements and therefore though it be not expressed it is necessarily vnderstood yet in this commaundement it is so much the more required because besides the analogie and proportion betweene it and the other commandements doth inforce it the very words themselues doe bind vs thereunto For when it is said Thou and thy sonne thy daughter thy manseruant and thy maide though he speaketh by name onely of resting vpon the Sabbath yet because the ende of that is that the day might be sanctified looke howe many reasons we haue seene before binding the inferiours to rest and the superiours to prouide that they doe so indeed so many are there compelling them to sanctifie the day in their own persons and in so manie as belong vnto them Therefore when first of all it is generally sayde in the commandement Remember the Sabbath daye to keepe it holy and afterwards The seuenth day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God that is which must bee dedicated vnto his seruice and in the end you must therefore rest that you might serue him in it as hee requireth and then nameth the seuerall parties that should rest his meaning is to declare vnto them the right ende of their resting and so speaking by name to the gouernours saying Thou and thy sonne and thy daughter thy manseruant and thy maid the stranger that is within thy gates to shewe vnto them that it is not sufficient for them to looke that they vnder their gouernement should rest vnlesse they sanctifie the day of rest also which they must be so much carefull of by how much the sanctification of the day is greater thē the ceasing to worke vpon it as the end whereunto this is but referred and therefore if it bee a sinne in them at any time not to haue a sufficient regard vnto them that they do not worke then
the promises of this life and the life to come So then by all this it may most euidently appeare both by the words of the commandement and by the practise of the best men in the old and new Testament that this duetie is layd vpon all householders diligently to ouersee the wayes of their familie that they serue God as in all other dueties so especially in sanctifying the Sabbath as they will answere to the contrarie at their perill to him that hath put them in authoritie and as they will giue an account for their soules which otherwise might perish through their default Which though it bee so seuerely inioyned in all men But in our time it is for the most part wholly neglected and vnder so great a paine layd vpon them yet it is so generally neglected of the greatest part that we may rather complaine of it iustly with griefe then haue any hope of the speedie reforming of it For besides that a great many haue no care to sanctifie the day themselues and therefore cannot with any conscience require it of their seruants and children but either set them to worke or to play and to do any thing vpon that day sauing that which they should and doe encourage them thereunto by their owne ill example and words there be others also who though they seeme to haue some care to keepe holie the day themselues and haue indeede yet either through ignorance or negligence do not once looke to their housholde whether they come to Church or no and sit there attentiuely and continue there with profit to the ending nor how they spend the rest of the day but being demaunded where their seruants were how chance they came not to Church c. they answere securely and as they thinke sufficiently as though it were a thing meerely impertinēt vnto them that they cannot tell they do not hinder them from the Church they may come if they will and they are of age to looke to themselues and they are past boyes now and I cannot tell what But they must consider besides that which hath been alreadie spoken concerning this matter that they do too foolishly and grosly imagine to stoppe as it were the mouth of the Lord with that simple answere in his busines which they will not receiue at their seruants hands in their owne For in the sixe dayes when their seruants are in their owne busines they will not let them come and goe at their owne pleasure and content themselues with a bare imagination that they be at their workes but will be sure of it and therfore set them to it looke vpon them in the doing of it call them to an account for it which if it bee well done in themselues because they knowe otherwise they will be negligent how must it not needes then bee a great vnthankfulnes in them vnto God that vpon his day which is but one among seuen his seruice should be so slenderly looked vnto that there is no such diligence vsed towards their seruants that they might performe it And how must it not needes be a great iniurie to their seruants who are naturally for the most part more negligent and carelesse in Gods seruice by reason of their corruption then they can be in the seruice of men to bee depriued of that benefit of their gouernours which is the chiefest and for which cause especially they are committed to their gouernment namely to be furthered by thē in the seruice of God but vse them more like beasts then men euen that they might be seruiceable vnto them and then care not whether they serue God or the diuell We know that seruants looke to be preferred by their masters and so there is good reason when they haue serued them faithfully but what kinde of rewarde is this that when they haue bestowed some earthly benefit vpon them by hauing no care to make them serue the Lord and sanctifie his Sabbaths doe in the ende not onely make them lose the euerlasting reward but preserue them to eternall destruction Moreouer there are a companie of idle seruing men who being brought vp idly all the sixe dayes and in thē hauing nothing at all to doe and are neuer almost looked after vpon the seuenth day are as idle Especially in great households where there are many seruants and as little regarded as vpon the other and as they neuer almost doe any good dayes worke to their masters for they haue nothing to doe so much lesse doe they spend any Sabbath in the Lords seruice but they especially are left to goe and come at their will Others that haue any office of great charge and attendance as the Cookes and Butlers such like in great houses seldome or neuer come to the Church and that but by peeces either when halfe is done or els they are readie to depart before halfe bee ended and so both hinder the Lord from that seruice which he should haue by them and them from that blessing which they should inherit this way and both cause the name of God to be ill spoken of and pul vpon themselues and them that curse which belongeth to the continual polluting of the Sabbath And how can they looke that that seruice and that meate and drinke should doe them good which is thus prepared and bought as it were with the continuall daunger of the soules of their seruants besides the dishonour of the name of God When Dauid had inconsideratly desired to drinke of the water of Bethleem three mightie men brake into the hoste of the Philistines and drew water and brought it to him but he would not drinke thereof but powred it for an offring to the Lord and sayd 2. Sam. 23.15.16 O Lord be it farre from me that I should doe thus is not this the bloud of the men that went in ieopardie of their liues How much lesse then ought men to eate and drinke that for which their seruants doe venture the liues of their soules And besides if we doe iustly finde fault with them who doe neuer or seldome preach to the people committed to their charge and so cause their soules to starue and dye eternally how can they be blameles who seldome or neuer bring their seruants to the preaching of the word And must they not needes be culpable of the same iudgement before God seeing it is all one with the seruants whether they liue in the places where the word of God is not preached at al or if it be yet they come not vnto it Obiection But where as men are readie to obiect that in a great familie many must needs be absent Answer I grant it to be true in some part that is at some time and vpon some occasion but so ordinarily and so continually as they themselues in their owne consciences are priuie of who make this obiection I know no necessitie that can excuse that Nay I am sure that the Lord hath layd no
such calling vpon any man that should keepe him in a continuall breach of the Sabbath and therefore both master and seruant may suspect that he is in such a calling as is not agreeable to Gods word or that he vseth it not aright when it maketh him if not wholly yet for the most part to neglect the seruice of God vpon the Sabbath day And I know where there is a great care to serue please God by prayer the Lord will giue to them such wisedome that they shal be able to redeeme if not the whole yet at least a great parte of the daye which otherwise will be mispent namely by letting passe many needlesse things preparing so much before as conueniently may be rising so much the more early in the morning and by the interchangeable helpe of other seruants especiallie when they will for these causes bee contented with so much the lesse though not in quantitie for the reliefe of others yet lesse exquisite and curious dressing which especially taketh vp the time and so I am sure and they that will trie it in the feare of God and in a care to serue him and in a loue to the soules of their brethren shall find it to be true by experience that many might keepe holy the Sabbath which do not now at all others might keepe it more then they doe Which if yet it be thought vnpossible because we goe not about to practise it let vs but obserue that which we shall see done in the house when the seruant is very desirous to goe to a faire and the maister is as willing to let him goe you would wonder to see how things shall be dispatcht vp sodainely and in good order they shall be absent many houres and yet not greatly missed if any thing be otherwise then is vsuall it is borne with because it is a day of making prouisios for themselues and that day is not euery day So then if the maisters were perswaded of the Lords day as they ought to be euen that it is the time of making prouision for the soule and were as carefull for the soules of their seruants as they are for their bodies and did esteeme it more for their worship and credite that their seruantes were religious then that they were costly and well set out in apparell they would be better contented to spare them during the time of that market where they may buy without money all the graces of Gods spirite and the riches of the kingdome of heauen whereby they should not onely saue their owne soules but bee made more fit to doe dueties to their maisters of conscience The gouernours of families should take order that they and their whole houshold might come to church together Therfore to make an end of this matter it is the duty of al houshold gouernors to cause the whole family to be in a readines to attend vpon them to and fro the Church and that it bee not left at euery mans discretion to come when hee will but that they should goe together And indeed this hath beene the orderly comming of Gods people in times past to the place of his worship that they haue not come scattered and alone but many together and by companies whereof the Prophet speaketh Psalm 42.4 When I remembred these things I poured out my very heart because I had gone with the multitude and led them into the house of God with the voyce of singing and praise as a multitude that keepeth a feast In which place the man of God complaining that he was banished from the holy assemblies sayth that h●s griefe was increased by remembring his former estate when he vsed to goe with a great many to the Temple euen as to a feast whereby hee declareth what was the manner of their going euen as men go to a market or to a feast not onely with ioye but also by companies and so many of one house as goe will goe together so they did not onely goe to the house of God cheerefully but many of them together euen as to the market feast of their soules By which practise of theirs as the doings of many are condemned so it appeareth that the men of our time are led by another spirite then they were and are otherwise perswaded of the worship and place they goe vnto For all the people nay the seuerall housholds come not together but scattered and one dropping after another in a confused manner First comes the man then a quarter of an houre after his wife and after her I cannot tell how long especially the maid-seruants who must needes bee as long after her as the menseruants are after him Wherby it commeth to passe that either halfe the seruice of God is done before all be met or else if the minister tarrie till there be a sufficient congregation the first commers may bee wearie and sometimes cold with tarrying before the other shall bee warme in their seates Nowe if it bee demaunded of the maisters why they alone make such hast and leaue all the rest behind them and they answer truely because the time is come wherin vsually publike prayer beginneth can they bee perswaded that it is time for themselues to come as it is indeed and yet no time for the rest to come with him Hath he no longer time to tarrie and haue they time to tarry so long after him as though there were one lawe for him and another for them or rather that the same law of the Sabbath which mooueth him of conscience to doe that which he doth did not as forcibly bind them all as himselfe nay did not binde him to looke to them that they should keepe holy the day as well as himselfe which if he grant to be true and yet is not able to bring it to passe where the Lord hath giuen him so great authoritie for his owne sake partly through the frowardnes of his wife and partly through the of obstinacy of the rest in the familie his case is to be pitied and he is rather to bee gouerned then to gouerne 1. Cor. 6.4 and he might doe well to set vp one of them in his steed seeing hee doth suffer himselfe wilfully so be abused and is contented to be ouer ruled by them in the chiefest thing Therefore that he might bring this matter happily to passe as he must goe before them by his owne example and be ready betimes euen first of all so he must earnestly call vpon them for this duetie and exhort them vnto it and the slower that they are and the more they drawe backe the more forward must he be and by his practise and words draw them forwards also For this is that readines which Dauid obserued in the people of his time I reioyced when they sayd vnto me Psalm 122.1 we will goe into the house of the Lord or let vs goe into the house of the Lorde for they are words of
way to heauen vnto hell if the Lord bee not more mercifull vnto him and why should we be loath to depart from the seruice of them that haue no care to serue God Or can we looke that they should do any faithful seruice vnto vs that are so vnfaithfull in the seruice of God But as concerning the rest if any bee religious this is the best meane to retaine them if they bee but indifferent this may winne them if they bee falling away To haue such good orders in our houses is not the next way to driue away our seruants from vs. this may recouer them for what shall wee thinke of all the godly fathers in times past That when they vowed diligently to looke to their households that they should serue God with them and did constantly performe it that then they had no seruants at al Was so great a man as Iehoshua without seruants when he promised before so many witnesses that he and his house would serue the Lord Was Dauid left alone and constrained to doe all himselfe when as being a mightie King he bound himself vnto it by that song which he made for the same purpose wherein he sayth Psal 101.6.7 Mine eyes shall be vnto the faithfull of the land that they may dwel with me he that walketh in a perfect way he shall serue me there shall no deceitfull person dwell in mine house he that telleth lyes shall not remaine in my sight Had not Abraham a great houshold when he was able of the sudden to carrie foorth with him of them that were borne and brought vp in his house three hundred and eighteene men in armour Gen. 14.14 to rescue his brother Lot of whom notwithstanding it is sayd Chap. 18.19 that he would teach his household the way of the Lord as it appeareth he did indeede when by his onely perswasion at the word of God Chap. 17.23 all the males were contented to be circumcised and to receiue that sacrament vnknowne before and painfull and also ignominious to the flesh if they had looked onely to the outward signe And must not that worthie Captaine of an hundred Italian souldiers needs haue a greater familie then many of these that cauill at this doctrine of whom the spirit of trueth reporteth Acts. 10.2 that he feared God and all his houshold Obiection What shall we thinke of all these men Shall we ignorantly presume to the further deceiuing of our selues hardning of vs in this sinne that the times were then better good seruants were more plentifull Answer Or must we not needes confesse as the trueth is indeede that these men vsed more meanes to make their seruants the seruants of God then men doe now adayes and that so the blessing of God was greater vpon them And is it not set downe in writing for our learning to shew vs what is that which we might looke for at Gods hands if wee would walke in the same way that they did seeing there is no respect of persons times or places with him But this much concerning this matter may be sufficient in which I haue been vnwillingly carried further then I was purposed at the first though now I do not repent me of it because the waightines of the matter is such that I doe not what might haue been well spared and with silence passed ouer Now that all households might be thus prepared vnto and furthered in the true sanctifying of the Sabbath it behoueth all Kings Princes ought to make lawes for the sanctifying of the Sabbath and all inferiour M●gistrates see the same diligently put in execution Princes and Rulers that professe the true religion to inact such lawes and to see them diligently executed whereby the honour of God in hallowing these dayes might bee maintained And looke how straightly euery householder is bound to keepe all his familie in the obedience of this Commandement so seuerely will it be required at their hands if al their people and subiects throughout the whole land or any of them doe faile in it through any default of theirs And the Lord will require it of them so much the more seuerely by how much they haue more power to bring euery thing to passe within their dominion then a priuat man hath in his household and the offence that is publike is greater then that which is priuat And that this is their very duetie indeede appeareth first by the words of the Commaundement where he speaketh generally of them that be within the gates namely either of the house or of the citie which because it is the furthest part of those places therefore by them as vnder one kinde hee comprehendeth all the parts of any their iurisdiction euen the furthest and though it bee spoken by name but of one part of this commandement and that of the least which is to rest from labour yet it must needes be vnderstoode of the other parte which is the greatest and whereunto the other is but referred as it hath been oftentimes alreadie sayd in this treatise For if to abstaine from worke be a thing of such moment before the Lord vpon his Sabbath and day of rest that he will haue gouernours restraine their subiects from it then to sanctifie his holie day and to bestowe it vpon his seruice must needes much more bee a thing of that importance with him that he would haue all rulers compell their subiects vnto it Therfore looke how many reasons and examples haue been before alleadged to proue that they ought to stay men from working vpon that day so many are there to induce them to inioyne all to keepe holie the day for which end especially they command the rest and without which it is meerely ciuill and not religious And for this cause did the Lord command his people Israel Deut. 27.3 to write his lawe vpon the pillars in the borders of their land both that the people might bee kept in the knowledge and obedience of it Ecclesiast hist Cent. 1. lib. 2. cap 4. and that the Magistrates might euery where see the execution of it and knowe that it is their duetie to see it practised in all parts of their dominion euen to the very borders of them And if the Magistrate be truely called as he is indeede the keeper of the tables of Gods law that is one set vp in his roome furnished with his authoritie and power to that end that he might see the whole law of God euen the first and second table and euery Commandement in them put in execution then it must needes appertaine vnto him to prouide that the Sabbath bee hallowed wherein consisteth the obseruation of all the other Commandements in the first table A practise whereof we haue in the daies of Ioash King of Iudah in the very first entrance of his raigne whom when Iehoiadah the hye Priest had by the consent of the Rulers annoynted King 2. King 11.17 he made a