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

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in the creatione neither is the law of it written in mans heart in the the creation it was the fall of man and his corruption which caused his to stand in need of a weekly rest and of holy Sabbath exercises to worke good in him and to bring him neerer to God And being made for mans use he may in case of necessity dispence with outward obseruations of the Sabbath the same must giue place to works of necessity which cannot be omitted either without losse of life or some certaine losse or mischiefe The third clause Therefore is the sonne of man Lord also of the sabbath doth giue us to understand that the use of the Sabbath was founded on Christ promised to be Lord of the sabbath and was in under him made man and necessary for the profit of man corrupted not for man in innocency Therfore C●rist the son of man is Lord of the Sabbath that is he hath th● true proper right and propriety in it for to make it serve for his use being the Lord possessor of it and he hath authority and power ouer it so that it is at his command either to be or not to be in vse either the seventh day or upon some other day of the weeke Now we never read that Christ exercised any Lordship ouer the Sabbath as hee is the son of man either to command it or to chaunge it but only in thes● two respects First that he brought it first into the world by undertaking to be the seed of the woman the sonne of man so it was setled on the seventh day in which he was promised during the time of the old Testament while he was a redeemer pr●mised Secondly that he by his resurrection in which he perfected redemption did consecrate the first day and made it the most honourable day fit to be the Sabbath of the new Testament and also gaue commandement to his Apostles so to ordaine in all Churches Besides this Lordship and power of Christ as sonne of man ouer the Sabbath we cannot conceiue or imagine any other Therefore undoubtedly he hath chaunged it to the first day of the weeke and as Lord of it hath given commandement for this chaunge and alteration The sixth Arg. is drawne from Gods sanctifying of the Lords daie by his sonne Christ more fully and excellently then he did the seventh day in the first institution of the Sabbath For seeing the making of the seventh day to be the Holie Sabbath is the sanctifying of it as the words of my text shew and also the words of the law Exod. 20.13 It must needes hereupon be granted that what day God by his Son Christ hath in all respects more fullie and excellentlie sanctified then the seventh day was sanctified when God made it the Sabbath That daie God by Christ hath made his Holie Sabbath and so it is worthie to bee esteemed and soe is to be observed in the new Testament But now it is most certaine and manifest That the Lord God by his son Christ hath in all respects more fullie and excellentlie sanctified the first daie of the weeke in which Christ arose from death as appeares by diuers things which I haue formerlie touched First he in that daie more abundantlie revealed his holines to the world in that he declared Christ our Redeemer and the head of the whole bodie the Church To be the Sonne of God with power according to the spirit of Holinesse by the resurrection from the dead Rom. 1.3 Secondlie he then opened as it were the flood-gates of Heaven that Holinesse might be more abundantly with his spirit powred out upon all flesh when Christ was raised up and exalted by Gods right hand that he might shed his spirit on all sorts of people of all nations as wee read Act. 2.33 Yea in that in the feast of Pentecost which was the first day of the weeke and the 49. day after Christs resurrection the Holie Ghost was sent downe vpon the Apostles to sanctifie them and to lead them into all truth and to giue them the guifts of tongues to preach the Gospell unto all nations which they presently did and the same day converted 3000. soules herein he both shewed his Holinesse more abundantly then before Thirdly It is piously held by manie Divines that among other things which after his resurrection Christ spake to his Disciples concerning the Kingdome of God that is the Church under the Gospell this was one namely of the keeping of the Holy Sabbath and holie assemblies or gathering of the saints togither vpon the first day of the weeke For immediatly after the Apostles observed that day and all churches in all ages since haue followed their example Therefore it is God who by his Sonne Christ hath made this first day that is the Lords day the weekly Sabbath of Christians J might here adde for further proofe of this truth an observation of diuers godly and learned writers to weet that our Saviour sanctified the first day of the weeke more then any other day by his promise and example in that he did most commonly appeare to the Disciples after his resurrection and came amongst them when they were assembled together on that day and taught and instructed them and breathed on them so we reade Luk. 24.13.36 Ioh. 20.19.26 Seventhly That which the Apostle taught by word and writing and ordained in all Churches of Christian Gentiles and confirmed by their constant practise is undoubtedly a Commandement which they received from the Lord Christ so it appeares Act. 15.28 where they professe that what they prescribed to the Chirstiā Churches was the dictate and sentence first of the holy Ghost and then of them joyntlie And our Saviour tells us that the Holie Ghost leads men into all trueth by speaking his word onely to them and calling it to their remembrance Ioh. 16.13.14 therefore it was Christ his word and ordinance St. Paul also professeth that he deliuered unto them such traditions as be received from the Lord 1 Cor. 11.23 And againe he saith 1 Cor. 14.37 Jf any man thinke himselfe to be a Prophet or spirituall let him know that the things which J write unto you are the Commandements of the Lord. Now it is manifest in the Gospel and in the writings of the new Testament that it was a constant practise of the Apostles to keep their assemblies with one accord on the first day of the weeke so we read Ioh. 20.19.29 Act. 2.1.2 and in those their assemblies the Lord Christ presented himselfe to them bodily and by the visible appearance and powerfull operation of his spirit Also Act. 20.8 St Paul on that day kept an holie assembly at Troas and there he preached and administered the sacrament of the Lords supper and performed Holie exercises of the Christian Sabbath And the same Apostle gaue a precept and commandement to the Corinthians even the same which he there saith hee had ordained in the
Churches of Galatia 1 Cor. 16.1.2 to weet that they should observe the first day of the week and in their Holy assemblies on that day offer up pleasing Sabbath sacrifices that is do good distribute to the necessities of the saints with which sacrifices God is well pleased Heb. 13.16 Therefore vndoubtedly it is the ordinance and commandement of Christ which the Apostle receiued from him That the first day of the weeke should be the Holy Sabbath and the day of weekly Holy assemblies to all Christians The 8. argument is drawn from the blessing of stability wherwith God hath blessed the Sabbath of the first day the joy and comfort great benefit which most godly religious christians finde in it and the tediousnes of it to carnall people the loathsomnesse of it to all such as are opposites to Christ and from his grace This is most true which graue and learned Gamaliell gaue in the counsell of the high priests and elders of the Iewes That which is of men and not an ordinance of God if it concerne religion it will come to nought it cannot continue in force nor prosper any long time Act. 5.38 And surely if the Christian Sabbath keeping holy of the first day of the weeke were an invention of men and not the ordinance of the the Lord Christ it could not prevaile and stand in force in all Christian Churches and in all ages by an uniforme consent without interruption The most godly zealous and religious Christians would find no solid joy and comfort in it nor any blessing from God in their religious obseruation of it And the world of carnall men who hate Christ his ordinances would not be so opposite to it as to hate and loath it For the world loveth her own But all carnall worldlings and profane persons do so hate it as they hate Christ and it is loathsome and tedious to them notwithstanding many and great oppositions of profane persons Yet we see it stands firme in all ages since the Apostles and in all Christian Churches None but Heretiques haue rejected it all godly Christians finde solid joy abudance of blessings in the strictest observation of it Therefore it is most certainly no humane invention but Christs ordinance It is he who hath made the first day of the weeke his owne Holy day and our weekly Sabbath The Ninth Arg. is drawn from the manifestatiō of Gods wrath against the open profaners of the Lords day and from the great fearefull judgments which God hath in former ages doth still execute on the dispicers polluters of the christiā Sabbath It is certain that the Lord doth not cut of or consum mē in wrath but for some notable scandalous sinnes transgressions against some expresse law commandement hee makes no men examples of vengance by sudden and fearfull d●struction and notable plagues but for some notable sinne all notable sinnes are transgressions of Gods law comitted against his revealed will word Now as the Histories of all ages do afford many examples of fearefull judgments suddenly executed inflicted on wilfull profaners of the Lords day in former times So I could rehearse and relate aboue 30. examples of Gods vengance which he hath shewed openly in this land within the space of two yeares upon such as haue shewed open contempt of this Christian sabbath some of whith hee hath sticken with sudden death by his mediate hand others he hath devoured with waters and some he hath cut of by surfets which they got in dauncing drinking on the Lords day and sōe he hath fired out of their houses in the middest of their drinking jollity consumed al their substance And these judgments haue suddenly unexpectedly befallen them in the very act of their transgression while they were in the midst of their actions very busie about their owne workes sports pleasure And these things are as cleare as the light and manifest to our eyes outward sences that God is most severe against the profanation of this day and that it is apparent that his sonne Christ made this day his Holy Sabbath and commands all men to keep it Lastly we haue clear testimonies both from the Apostles them selves that the day wherin Christians keepe their Sabbath even the first day of the week is the Lords peculiar day Revel 1.10 And also from all the most auncient fathers and learned Christian writers which succeeded the Apostles in the next ensuing ages that the Lord Christ changed the Holy Sabbath to this day consecrated it by his resurrection that all Christian Churches from the time of the Apostles kept their holy rest in it devoted it to publick exercises of religion and of Gods worship counted it the Queene of daies the supreme Lady princesse worthy to be observed sanctified with Sababaticall solemnities Ignatius cals it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Epist ad magnesios Justin Martyr 2. Apol. pag. 77. discribes the observation of it in his times and tels us that Christians spent it in reading preaching prayer administration of the Sacraments offering of almes other publick worship of God in their publick assemblies besides priuate exercises of religion Tertullian also acknowledgeth this first daies sabbath none other lib. adversus Gent. p. 41. 155. Eusebius lib. 4. Eccles. Histor. cap. 22. brings in the profession of Dionysius Corinthius who saith thus This day we kept holy the Lords day St. Austen in his 119. Epistle and in the 22. booke De Civit Dei Cap. 30 serm de verbis Apostoli 15. And many other which it would be a tedious thing here to reherse especially seeing J haue before mentioned diuers of their testimonies which tend to this purpose and shall produce some also hereafter Now upon all these arguments laid togither J hope wee may boldly and confidently conclude against all both Iewish Sabbatarians who retaine the old abolished Sabbath of the seventh day and also vnchristian Antisabbatarians who deny the Lords day to bee the Sabbath vnder the Gospell which Gods people by Gods law and Christs appointment are enjoyned to keepe Holy to the Lord. And that this Sabbath of the Lords day cannot bee chaunged but must stand firme and be still in force among all Gods people vntill the end of the world and the last resurrection I will briefly demonstrate shew by two plaine reasons which I hope none will deny and thus I frame them The first is grounded on Christs wordes Mark 2. vers 28. thus I frame it That which hath Christ as hee is become the Sonne of man Lord of it must needs exist and haue a being under him as he is the sonne of man that is in the time of the Gospell The Sabbath hath Christ the sonne of man Lord of it Mark 2.28 Therefore it continues in being under Christ. Whatsoever ordinance of God is given to his People to bee unto
exercises as tend to make men meet to be partakers thereof Now the first day of the weeke the Lords day is the day wherein God first created the light of the visible world even the fiery heavens which shine forth ever since and give light to the inferiour world soe it is testified Gen. 1.3 And on this day Christ the Lord the sun of righteousnesse did rise up and did bring to light immortallity eternall life and became the great and glorious light of the world Therefore this day is the fittest and most worthy to bee the holie weeklie Sabbath and to be spent in meditation upon seeking for the inheritance of the Saints in light Fourthly that day which hath not only the same grounds and reasons in it upon which God first founded the Sabbath and sanctified the seventh day but also divers additions of the same kinde which make the grounds and reasons more forcible and excellent This is most fit and worhy to be the holy weekly Sabbath and such is the first day of the weeke and hath beene ever since it became the Lords day by the Lord Christ his resurrection For proofe whereof consider the grounds and reasons upon which God sanctified the seventh day 1. Gods ending or perfecting his created worke 2. Gods resting from that worke 3. Gods blessing of the seventh day by revealing on it the greatest blessing farre aboue any given in the creation These are the groundes here laid downe in my text which are rehearsed againe by God in the fourth commandement of the law And another reason drawne from the end and use of the Sabbath is also added Exod. 31.13 Ezech 20.12 to weet that the Sabbath might be a signe and token from God that hee is their God who doth sanctifie them that is by giving his Holy spirit with all saving graces in this life vnto them in Christ doth fit them for the fruition sight of his glory in the eternall rest in Heaven so makes the weekly Sabbath a pledge of the eternall Sabbath in the world to come also Now the godly learned heretofore who had no thought of founding the Sabbath on Christ promised on the seventh day of the world they do understand Gods ending of his worke to be either the finishing of the creation on the seventh day by adding some perfection or natural blessing to the creatures more then he had given on the sixt daies Or else that God had already ended perfected his worke before the seuenth day for this cause blessed sanctified the seventh day for a memoriall of the creation of the world and all things therein made perfect and compleat so appearing on that day And by Gods resting on the seventh day from all his worke which he created made they understand nothing else but Gods rest of mere cessation because this was the day wherein God hauing finished his worke made all things good had no occasion to worke any more by way of creation but rested from making more kindes of creatures Therefore God commanded man to rest after his example every seventh day and to keep it for a weekly Sabbath And by Gods blessing of the seventh day they doe understand Gods sanctifying of it to be a signe pledge of the eternall rest These being the grounds reasons in the opinion of the learned vpon which God sanctified the seuenth daie are in a more excellent measure to be found in the first day of the week on which day the Lord Christ rose from death· For first the Lord Christ on that day who is the Lord of the sabbath ended a greater worke then the creation even the great worke of redemption which on that daie he did perfect and finish by the last highest act of it even his resurrection in which he got the victorie triumphed ouer death the last enimie ouer him who had the power of death that is the Devill and did shew to the world that he had fully paid the ransome price of mans redemption satisfied justice wrought fulfilled all righteousnesse sufficient to justifie all that beleeve in him to settle them in Gods favour for ever So that here is a better ending finishing of a better work then that of the creation was which did perfect the mutable worke of creation so here is a b●tter ground of sanctifying the day in which it came to passe as dive●s learned writers haue rightly observed Secondly on this day the Lord Christ entered into a better rest then any from the creation can be he rested from all his laboures paines sufferings all workes which Gods infinite justice required for mans redemption by way of satisfaction Heb. 4.10 And he tooke possession of eternall rest for himselfe as the head and for his body the whole Church for every elect member thereof So that this resting is a more farre excellent ground reason of the sanctifying of this day to be the weekely Sabbath Yea though I do by Gods perfecting of his worke vnderstand his perfecting of the worke which was marred defaced by mans fal even the worke of creation his making of it more perfect and compleat by his promising of Christ and by Christs undertaking beginning his actuall Mediation first bringing in of supernaturall perfection And by Gods resting I vnderstand his resting so fully wholy in Christs mediation in his satisfaction undertaken for the repairing perfecting of the world which man by his fall had brought under vanity corruption that he put from him all thoughts purposes of going about any new worke of creation for the repairing therof and so is said to rest as I haue befor fully proved Yet I must confesse that on the Lords day which is the first of the weeke in which Christ did rise from death God did more fully excellently perfect all his worke brought in a rest which doth so farre excell that perfecting of his worke resting from creation on the first seventh day as the actuall performance of a promise giuing and fulfilling of a good thing promised vndertaken begun doth excell the promise the undertaking beginning of it And therefore J will bee bold vpon these grounds premises to conclude with the best learned both of the Auncient fathers and moderne Divines That there is more conveniency and fitnesse in the Lords day the first day of the week to be the Lords holy weekly Sabbath now under the Gospell And there are more excellent grounds and sure reasons for the sanctifying of it then any which are named or can be found in the seventh daie which was the Sabbath of the old Testament yea this day by meanes of Christs resurrection to glory in it is the surest pledge and token which outwardly can be given to Gods Church and people that God who raised him up is by him fully appeased satisfied and reconciled to his
of the blessed hope and eternall rest reserved in Heaven for vs. And therfore the first maine duty with all the partes thereof and the speciall endes and uses of it are more fully performed and obtained in the observation of the Lords day for the Holy weekly Sabbath then they possibly can be now by vs or could be of old on the sabbath of the seventh day by the fathers in the old Testament The second maine duty of the Sabbath is sanctifying and keeping of it holy to the Lord which comprehends in it many speciall and particular duties 1. Setting of their affections even their joy and delight wholy vpon God and heavenly things 2. Honouring worshipping of God in their hearts with holy thoughts and meditations by their lipps with holy prayers praises and thanksgiuing in their outward actiōs by preaching hearing reading repeating of Gods word and solemne commemoration of his promises mercies and blessings in the word and sacraments 3. Teaching and learning all holy duties which tend to bring vs nearer to God in Christ. 4. Offering spirituall sacrifices to God of sweet sauour such as are almesdeedes works of mercy and charity wherby others may be made to tast of Gods goodnesse and stirred up to laud and praise his name All these are comprehended vnder the maine duty of sanctifying the holy Sabbath which the Lord commands expresly in the law and they are commended to vs by the Prophet Isa. 56.4 58.13 And the proper end and use of this duty and all the partes thereof is First to make vs set our affections on things which are aboue and not on things below and to stirre us up to seeke eternall life and heavenly happinesse in Christ onely and in him crucified and raised up Secondly to continue and increase in fraile men the knowledge and memory of Christ and of the way to eternall life and blessednesse in him which without keeping holy of a weekly Sabbath would faile cease among the sonnes of men Thirdly to begit and increase true grace and holinesse in men by exercising holy duties of religion and so to bring them by justification adoption to the right of inheritance in Heaven and by sanctification to fit them for the possession of it Now the observation of the Lords day in which Christ arose is such as may far more powerfully effectually moue men to the performance of these duties lead men more directly to the proper end and use of them then the old Sabbath of the the seventh day either now can or of old could do when it was most in force For it had no other light or life in it but onely from obscure promises and darke shaddowes through which Christ was seene as things farre off are seene and in the starre light nights But the Lords day the first day of the weeke hath light and life from the sun of righteousnesse Christ who in it rose up and to be the light of life to all nations hath brought life immortallity to light by the Gospell and discovered to us the kindnesse and loue of God the riches of his goodnesse in giving grace and shedding his spirit on us abundantly here and so fit us for glorie hereafter And therefore this day must needes be of great force and power farre ab●ve the seventh day to make men set their affections on God and heavenly things especially upon the inheritance incorruptible and undefiled which fadeth not away reserved in heaven for us unto which God hath begotten us by the resurrection of Christ from the dead 1. Pet. 1.3 It is also powerfull and excellent to incite and stirr us up to honour God in our hearts by the due consideration of his goodnesse and mercie Also it much furthereth us to proclaime the high praises of our God and kinge and to make prayers and supplications to him Besides to make us helpfull unto others in seeking after their salvation And thus we may see what are Sabbath duties even the workes of piety mercy charitie c. pleasing to God and by which others may be brought to joyne with us in lauding and praising God and we our selves fitted for glorie Vpon ●hese points so fullie proved The conclusion followes necessarilie that the law by which God first instituted the Sabbath on the first s●venth day of the world doth binde us under the Gospel to keepe the Lords day for our weeklie Sabbath Fourthly that day which God hath made most Honourable and hath given it a most Honourable name and title aboue all the daies of the week to that he hath given the prerogatiue to be the weekly Sabbath hath made it his day of Holie rest For it is a property of the sabbath to be the Lords Holy and Honourable day as the Evangellicall Prophet Isaiah shews Jsa 58.13 making of it Hono●able is making of it the Sabbath Now the first day of the weeke is the day which God hath Honoured aboue all daies by the glorious victorie of Christ ouer death and over all enemies and powers of darknesse and to it he hath given the most Honourable name and title For the holy evangelist and divine Apostle S. Iohn who was the intimate beloved and bosome Disciple of the Lord and did best know his minde cals it the Lords day Revel 1.10 that is the day which the Lord hath made the day of great joy gladnes to his people as David foretold Psa. 118. which day the Lord Christ hath appropriated to himselfe his honour Honoured with his own name as he is the Lord God one Iehovah with the father For the Greeke word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lord is in respect of the roote from whence it is deriued the same in signification with Gods proper name Iehovah and most commonly in the new Testament is used to expresse that sacred name Therefore it is now under the Gospell made by God himselfe the weekly Sabbath The Fifth argument is grounded upon the wordes of our Saviour Math. 12.8 Mark 2 27·28 Where he saith that the Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath Therefore he even as he is the sonne of man or God made man is the Lord of the sabbath The first clause to weet the sabbath was made for man notes out vnto us two things 1. That the Sabbath was first instituted for man even by reason of the sonne of God promised to become man and so he is the foundation of it 2. That it was made for man that is for the man Christ and for the benefit of all mankinde in him for his honour and the advancement of his kingdome among men and for the good of men both naturall and civill in respect of weekly rest and refreshing also spirituall as knowledge instruction growth in grace holinesse The second clause not man for the Sabbath shews that the Sabbath is not one of those things which man was made to obserue
haue a law giuen to Adam when all mankinde were in his loynes commanding a duty even the sanctifying of a weekely Sabbath which hath beene and is of as great use after Christ as before For as the Isralites were bound unto this duty by God Exod. 16.23.28 20.8 euen in al their generations as appeares Jer. 17.21 so also Gods people are bound to it under the Gospell whether they be strangers which joyn themselves to the Lord and lay hold on his Covenant Isa. 56.6.7 that is Churches of the beleeving Gentiles or naturall Isralites after their long hardnesse in the last daies converted to Christ the repairer of the breach and builder up of the old wast places after many generations Isa. 58.12.13.14 And J do not thinke there is any man professing Christianity dare be so impudent as to affirme that any of Gods people in any age are exempted frō the Holy duties by which the Sabbath is sanctified and a seventh day in every weeke kept Holy to the Lord or that we in these evill and perillous times haue not as much neede of them for the upholding of true religion for the increasing of grace godlinesse in our hearts Therefore undoubtedly all mankinde in all generations and ages are bound to keepe a weekly Sabbath My second argument is drawne from the duty it selfe of keeping Holy a seventh day weekly to the Lord and thus I frame it Everie duty imposed on Adam and his posterity by Gods commandement which is in it selfe perpetually Holy and just and of as great use to all men in all ages as necessarily in all respects as it was in Adam when God first enjoyned it by his law That belongs to all mankinde and all the posterity of Adam are bound thereunto in all ages to the end of the world The keeping of an Holy weekly Sabbath and sanctifying of a seventh day in every weeke is such a duty Therefore it belongs to all mankinde and all Adams posterity are bound to it in all ages to the end of the world The proposition is so manifestly true th●t there can be no acception against it to deny it is to deny that greatest of Gods commandements which saith that Gods people ought to feare the Lord and walke in his wayes to loue and serve them with all their heart and with all their soule and with all their might Deut. 6.5 10.12 For whosoever exempts himselfe or others from a duty which is perpetually holy just usefull necessary for all men he in so doing refuseth to serue God with all his heart soul might and teacheth others to transgresse that great commandement The assumption also is an undoubted truth For first there can be no time nor age named since mans fall corruption which brought all mankind vnder the bondage of hand toylsome labour eating his bred with the sweat of his face wherin the rest of one day in every weeke is not usefull profi●table needfull for mens bodies most just equall to be granted to their labouring servants toyling cattell the verie light of naturall reason reqiures it for the cōmon good welbeing of all men He who denies this to himselfe and to his children servants cattell he is an unjust unmercifull man not to be numbred among the righteous who are good mercifull to the life of their beasts Prov. 12.10 Secondly justice equity require that seing the life of man is a pilgrimage on earth here on earth there is no abiding place for him nor any felicity true rest or perfection to be found but in heaven mā should not spend all his time all his thoughts studies in about the things of this world but that he should haue a set time at lest one day in every week wherin he resting ceasing from worldly cares laboures delights should wholy devote himself to heavenly meditations and to holy exercises which may fit him prepare him for the place of rest teach direct him in the right ready way thereunto enable him to walke wisely therin Who thinks it to much to consecrate one whole day in seven unto religious exercises which may fit him for eternal life he is undoubtedly most vnequall in his judgment a judge of unjust things Thirdly it is a thing not only good holy in it selfe that man of his owne accord much more being commanded by God should devote one whole day in every weeke to the mediate worship of God in thankfulnes for his creation redemption the vse of Gods creatures restored to him in Christ with some advantage But also very vsefull necessary for the seasoning of mans weekly laboures with justice piety for the cōtinuance increase of holines religiō in his heart and for the enlightening of his mind rectifying of his will sanctifying of his affections and fitting him to undertake and begin all his weekly laboures in the feare of God to direct them to the right end and to perfect and finish them happily by Gods favour and blessing Jf any man shall dare to deny this we may justly feare that he is rude ignorant of those heavenly and spirituall things whereof all Gods people haue continually experience in themselves And the constant practice of Gods people who in all ages haue observed and kept a weekly Sabbath holy to the Lord and therby haue profitted in all piety and holinesse will convince them of grosse blindnesse stupidity Adam no doubt did every seventh day devote himselfe to Gods worship and taught his first sonnes Caine Abell to bring their offerings to God at the end of daies that is every last day of the weeke for that is the most proper sence of the words in the Hebrew text Gen. 4.3.4 And so soone as the posterity of Seth began to multiply and increase they gathered themselves into a Church were called the children of God or Gods people and hereby they were distinguished from the carnall and profane progeny of Caine then they began to invocate and call upon the name of the Lord that is to worship God in publick assemblies Gen 4.26 Whereas Adam Abell and Seth had invocated and worshipped God in their own private families onely now the faithfull being multiplied did frequent publick assemblies which could not be but in set places and at set times surely euery weeke on the seventh day which God had blessed and sanctified Also after that generall Apostacy which came in by vnequall mariages of the sonnes of the faithfull with the daughters of the profane the destruction of the the old world with the flood Righteous Noah who was saved in the Arke with his familie immediatlie after began to observe the holy rest of the seventh day for it is said that the Burnt offering which he offered on the Altar of every cleane beasts and cleane foule vnto the Lord was a sweet smelling
seuenth day Yet the Apostle calls it a shaddow onlie in respect of the particular day of the promise of Christ which day is a bolished giues place to the first day in which the promise was fullie performed and Christ became a perfect Redeemer actuallie in his resurrection The Anti-Sabbatarians haue onely two objections which haue some shew and coulour of reason at the first hearing The first is that if it had beene the minde and will of Christ that the weekly Sabbath should be continued and remoued to the Lords day vnder the Gospell then would he either by himselfe or by his Apostles haue giuen some expresse commandement to that purpose which they say he did not To this I answere First that our Saviour spake fully to this point when he said that he came not to destroy but to fulfill the law It remaines therefore on their part to shew that the Commandement of the Sabbath is no part of the morall law or else they do but beate the aire and labour in vaine Secondlie the Apostles themselves kept their holy assembles ordained in all Churches of the beleeving Gentiles that publick assemblies should be kept and exercises of the holy Sabbath perfomed ordinarily on the first day of the weeke as I haue before proved from Act 20. 1 Cor. 16.1 2. And whatsoever they ordained was the comma●dement of che Lord 1 Cor. 14. vers 27. Thirdlie while the first temple was yet standing in the daies of the Apostles and Moses was not yet buried and quite taken out of the way Jt was not convenient that the Apostles should chaunge the day of the Sabbath among the beleeving Iewes Yea they themselves in Iudea and all places among the Iewes kept the seventh daie among the Gentiles the Lords daie We never read that the Lords day was called a Sabbath in the Primitiue times next after the Apostles nor since by any but onely by Iewish Sabbatarians Howsoever these adversaries put on a bold impudent face to colour and countenance this objection Yet herein publish a manifest untruth For Igna●ius immediatly after the Apostles saith That the Christians must keep their holy sabbath not after the man̄er of the profane Iews of those times with excessiue feasting dauncing and such carnall sports and pleasures nor on their seventh day But on the Lords day the day of Christs resurrection which he calls the Queene and supeeme Lady of daies as I haue formerlie shewed Saint Hilary saith Nos in prima die perfecti Sabbathi festiuitate latae mur. i.e. We Christians rejoyce in the festiuity of our perfect Sabbath on the first day of the weeke St. Augustine in the 25. sermon de tempore Hauing rehearsed diuers notable blessings and prero●atiues which God of old honoured the first day of the weeke the Lords day doth there affirme that upon those grounds the holy Doctors of the C●urch to weet the Apostles Who were taught by Christ and inspired by the holy Ghost in all things which they decreed and ordained haue by their decree remoued or rather transferred all the glory of the Iewish sabbathisme vnto the Lords day And immediatly he adds this exhortation Let us Christians therefore obserue the Lord day and let us sanctifie it so as of old the Law giver commanded the fathers concerning the Sabbath saying From evening to evening shall ye celebrate the Sabbath And further he saith that if wee from the evening of the Iewes sabbath the satturday to the evening of the Lords day sequester our selves from all Rurall workes and all seculiar busines and devote our selves onely to Gods worship then we rightly sanctifie the Lords sabbath according ●he wordes of the law Yee shall not doe any worke in it Also Psalm 32. He affirmes that keeping of the Sabbath is one of the things which belong to the loue of God and thus he exhorts every true Christian. Observa diem sabbati non Carnaliter non Judaicis delicijs c. that is observe the day of the sabbath not carnally with Iudiciall delicacies for they abuse their rest and rest to naughtinesse for indeede it is better that men should digge all the day then daunce as they doe But doe thou meditate on the rest in God and doing all things for obtaining that rest abstaine from servile worke And in his 3. Tract at vpon Iohn He saith We are more strictly commanded to keepe the Sabbath then the Iewes For we are injoyned to keepe it spiritually Jewes keepe it carnally in luxury and drunkennes and it were far better that their women should be busied in working all the day in woll then dance The true Christian keepes the Sabbath spiritually by refraining from servile worke These and diuers other testimonies of the Auncients shew ●ufficiently the falshode and vanity of this Objection And that in the judgment of the most godly and learned fathers the law of God bindeth us to keepe the Sabbath holy on the Lords day weekly It is true that some part of the sevēth day was by reason of great multitudes of Iewes abounding in all countries soe frequent and soe commonly known called by the name of the Sabbath that name was so proper to the Saturday in those times that if any had called the Lords day by that name his wordes would bee understood by the hearers of the Iewes Sabbath except ●e had expounded his meaning as those fathers before named do in their speeches b●f●re mentioned And againe the Iewes were soe superstitious in observing their Sabbath ●o contrarie to the Christian sanctifying of the Lords day even with feasting dauncing and profane pomp that the name of Sabbath through their abuse of it grew distastfull to godly Christians even as in our time the old name Catholike by reason of the Antichristian Papists falsly vsurping and approbria●ing it to their Apostaticall Church and false religion is growne to haue an ill sound in the eares of reformed Christians And therefore t●e Auncients were very sparing in calling the name of the Sabbath and seldome did they call the holy weeklie rest of Christians by that name except onlie in case when they opposed it to the Jewish sabbath and preferred it farre before their carnall observation But wheras in this Objection the aspersion and reproachfull name of Iewish Sabbatarians is laid on all them who call the Lords day the Cbristian Sabbath and urge the sanctification of it by the law of God This is a point of such notable impudency and intemperancie that it deserues the scourge whip of Ecclesiasticall censure punishment to chastise and correct rather then any arguments of reason or divinity to convince such Raylors For in the Homilies which are comprehended and commanded in the Articles of our Religion by law established the Lords day is frequently stiled by the name of Sabbath even no lesse then eight times in one Homily which treateth of the time place of praier And both there and in the
weeke an holie Sabbath to the Lord. But that indeed it came in after mans fall together with the promise of Christ and therefore is more fitly called a law of grace and a Positiue Evangellicall law requiring duties of obedience to God which chiefly and especiallie tend to begit grace and increase holinesse in men Yet it is not simply Positiue nor soe Evangellicallie morall but that it may in some sence and respect bee called naturall also For first it requires some duties of obedience which in their owne nature are Good and profittable though the law giuer had not by expresse commandement revealed his will that they should be done such is the giuing no wof rest int●rmission of bodilie labour and toile to our bodies and to the bodies of our servants and labouring cattell one whole day in everie weeke ouer and besides that which they haue in the time of sleepe in the darknesse dead of the night This is according to naturall reason and common equitie Secondly it commands some duties of Gods Worship and service which man by the law of nature was bound to performe in his innocency and which are naturally morall as lauding and praising God and giuing to him all honour and reverence in the most solemne and pu●lick manner Thirdly it commands such holy spirituall works of grace such duties of sanctification as in thei● own nature worke to the sanctifying of men more more to make them capable of eternall rest in heaven of the full fruition of God As for example Meeting upon a set daie in everie week in holy assemblies for to heare read Gods word publick instructions exhortations mutuall provocations to piety sanctity Christian charity Fourthly the patticular day of the week which the law commands to be kept for an holy Sabbath is separated upon such a just ground reason in the first institution of the Sabbath and blessed by God with such a blessing aboue other daies of the week that whosoever knows the law true intent meaning of it rightlie unde●stands the ground of the Sabbath mentioned in the law he must by the light both of nature grace he forced to confesse acknowledge the particular day which the law commands to bee kept an holie Sabbath both in the old new testament For the law doth not command one day in seven to be an holy rest simply merely for the pleasure of the lawgiuer because he would haue it soe for no other reason but for very good reason upon a ground because he dignified the day of the Sabbath blessed it aboue all other daies with a singular blessing our owne reason doth tell us that the particular day of the weeke which hath in it the true reasons the honour blessing of the sabbath it ought by the law to be obserued for the holy sabbath none other while it retaines that honour blessing hath the true reasons properly annexed to it Now it it most manifest to all who read the Scriptures are well exercised in Gods word law That as the seventh last day of the weeke was blessed honoured adorned by God with the greatest blessing which God gaue to the world in the old Testament to weet the promise of Christ the Redeemer of the world Gods entring into the Couenant of grace of eternall life salvavation with man also Gods perfecting of the whole worke of creation by revealing giving in promise the worke of Redemption his resting in Christs mediation on that day vndertaken begun And therefor every reasonable man must by his own reason be induced lead to acknowledg that day the fittest most worthy of all daies in the week to be the holy Sabbath to be spent in thankfull commemoration of Gods free loue bountie to mankinde During the whole time of the old Testament before the comming of Christ. So likewise God hauing now under the Gospel transferred this honour to the first day of the week that is become a blessed day aboue all other daies being blessed of God with a blessing farr more excellent then that of the seventh day to weet the actuall performance of the promise by giving exhibiting Christ a perfect actuall redeemer in his resurrection without which resurrection all our preaching of Christ all our faith in Gods promises would prove vaine as the Apostle proueth 1 Cor. 15. Therfore every man must out of common reason equity conclude that together with the ground reason of the Sabbath which God hath now removed from the seventh to the first day he hath also remoued the honour festiuall solemnity of the Sabbath Also his first law which enjoyneth man to keep that day for the holy Sabbath which God hath blessed with the grea●est blessing doth bind all Christians to obserue the Lords day for their weekly Sabb●th under the Gospel And in a word that it were a thing most vnequall unjust if a man or any Church should goe about to set up for the weekely Sabbath any other day which God hath not dignified honoured with so great a blessing Now upon these pr●missed reasons I hope it appeares manifestly First that though the Commandement of the weekly Sabbath is no dict●te of nature but a positiue Evangellicall law yet it doth by common naturall reason as well as by the light of grace direct every reasonable man to the partilar day of the weekly Sabbath as to the seventh day in the old Testament so to the first in the new Testament And no resonable man can deny it to be the most equall which this law binds men unto but vpon the true grounds of the Sab well weighed considered must be forced to confesse that as the seventh day was most worthy of the honour of the Sabbath had it before Christs full exhibition in his resurrection so ever since the Lords day the first of the week is become the true Sab of Christians none hath power to giue that honour to any other day Secondly it is here manifest that though Christ the sonne of God made also the son of man mans redeemer is the Lord of the Sab the determination of the particular day of the week depends on him and none other haue the honour pror●g●tiue to appoint the particular day but he only Yet we must not conceiue that Christ by his bare will sets downe the particular day that the day is to be obserued only because of his bare will commandement that any other is as fit worthy as the seventh the first if he would be pleased at any time to comm●nd the same But we are to hold th●● Christ is the Lord of the Sabbath hath the determinatiō of the particular day depends on him the Redeemer onely because the ho●y Sabbath is founded and builded upon him and in him alone
are to be found all the meane and essentiall grounds and reasons both of the Sabbath and alsoe ●f the particular day wherein hee requires that it should be obserued If he had not undertaken mans redemption from death and hell and mans exaltation to eternall rest and glory there had beene neither any place for mans keeping of a Sabbath nor anie use of it to fit him for heaven or to be a pledg of eternall rest in heaven Jf God had not on the seventh day promised Christ the blessed seed to redeeme man from death to purchase life for him and to continue to him the benefit of the creatures and to perfect his creation Surely it had not been the most blessed day of the weeke neither would God haue instituted it to be a weekly Sabbath at the first and soe to continue untill the comming of Christ. And if God had not raised up Christ on the first day of the weeke and so exhibited him aperfect redeemer and fully performed his promise Then the first day had not beene made a more blessed day then the seventh and all other daies of the weeke And the Lord Christ would never haue made that day of the weeke his Sabbath alwaies after neither would his holy Apostles by inspiration of his spirit being moued to call it the Lords day and to obserue it and teach others to obserue it for their day of holy assemblies for the performing of all holy Sabbath duties And thus we see Christ is the Lord of the Sabbath and so determines the particular day of the weeke not by his bare will word but by bringing in such blessings on the sevēth or first day of the week as made the one of them most worthy under the new testament to bee the holy Sabbath to be kept and obserued of all Gods people vnto the observation whereof they are justly lead by the light both of grace and nature And it is not either in the power of man or any other creature or in the just will of God or agreeable to the will of the Lord Christ and the wisedome of his spirit to appoint any other day for the weekly Sabbath but onely the day of the Lord Christ that is the day of him promised in the old and the day of him fully exhibited in the new Testament The first of which and no other the fathers were bound to keepe for their holy rest of old And the later and no other is our weekly Sabbath and the due obseruation of that particular is the first speciall Sabbath duty of all Christians under the time of the Gospell untill the last resurrection The second sort of speciall duties vnto which all true Christians are bound unto in their obseruation of the Lords day which is the christian Sabbath are the duties of rest cessation from all worldly affaires which now follow to be handled in the n●x● place Concerning which J finde much diuersity both of opinion and practise not only betweene true Christians of the reformed Churches and Antichristian Papists other hereticks but also in the reformed Churches among themselves First for the Church of Rome and all that are of her faction devoted to her superstition and Idolatry and marked with the marke of the beast which beares up the Romish Babylon though diuers of their learned Scoole-men haue heretofore maintained a very strict obseruation of rest on the Lords day Yet now in later times both in Doctrine practise they are growne uery desolate especially the Romish Catholicks which liue among us turning the Lords day into a day of liberty and spending a great part of it in sports plaies revelling other bodily exercises which are carnall fleshly prophane and impious As if so be their irreligious prophanenesse were at strife with their Idolatrous religion and at great emulation contending which should out go ouer runne the other in carrying them with greater speede to hell Yea to shew and make it manifest to the world that the Romish man of sinne is that great Antichrist which exalts himselfe aboue al that is called God euen aboue the true God the Lord Iesus Christ whose vicar he in hipocrisie makes himself The Church of Rome doth teach and urge her Uassals to ke●p yearelie holie daies most strictly which are of her owne devising which the pope hath commanded to be observed in honour of his Cananized Saints in the mean time opposeth with many great profanations the Lords day which the Lord hath consecrated by his resurrection Which day being blessed by God with the greatest blessing aboue all other daies of the weeke is by the law vvhich God gaue from the beginning commanded to bee kept for the Lords holy Sabbath vveeklie Secondly there are of the hereticall faction of the Anabaptists Antimonians families other such prophane Sectaries which make little so● any lavv of God or man saving onlie the dictate of their faniticall ●pirit And left the commandemēt of the vveekly Sab least they should seeme to be subject to Gods lavv and to be be his servants vvhich they account slauerie and not absolute Libertines and sonnes of Beliall vvhich haue cast of the Lords yoke These esteem and obserue no daie at all but according to their own fancie make the Lords day so far as they dare for feare of men a market day of buying and selling wa●es a daie of labour and of bearing and carrying our burdens as they well know who haue beene at Amsterdam where such heretickes and sectaries are tolerated Thirdlie among Christians of the reformed Churches there is a difference both in Doctrine and practise Some of the reformed Churches who out of their extreme hatred to Popish superstition and to all Popish rites and Ceremonies being unwilling to retaine any thing which was used in poperie except there bee some expresse Commandement or example for it in the Scriptures especiallie of the new Testament and labouring to overthrow the whole Hierachie and gouernment of the Church by Bishops all bodily rites they do in the heat of their zeale so violently set themselues against Popish superstious holie dayes that they goe about to take away all observations of daies and they haue proceeded so farre as to deny that any either weekely Sabbath or yearelie set feast ought to be kept holy by any speciall law or commandement of God They teach that the Sabbath as it was commanded to be kept of old was a mere ceremoniall shaddow of things which are accomplished in Christ and that is now a bolished But because it is a thing necessary for the hauing of holy assemblies and for good order in the Churches that there should be a set day either a seseventh or sixth day of eight dayes And because the law of nature requires that Christian people should haue some daies of rest from hard labour for the refreshing of themselves and their seruants and cattell therefore the Church of God m●y appoint any day of
the weeke And in honour of the resurrection of Christ on that day hath from the time of the Apostles agreed to keepe that day for the Lords day not out of any opinion that God hath blessed sanctified it aboue all other daies of the weeke but onely for good orders sake and that it is lawfull for Gods people after publick exercises of religion and some needfull rest and refreshing to use necessarie laboures and bodily recreations which in themselves are not sinfull and unlawfull neither do hinder publick duties of religion and of Gods worship But on the contrarie it is the common doctrine of the most godly and learned in the Church of England ever since the reform●●ion of religion held maintained taught that although Christians are by Christ freed from the observation of the seventh day which was the Sabbath of the old Testament and from that servile bondage and rigorous rest which the law litterally and carnally vnderstood did impose on them or rather they by their carnal exposition wresting of the law did impose on themselves as not kindling of a fire nor liberty to heal the sick nor to do any worke of charitie and necessity on the S●bbath day which could not without danger be deferred Yet they are bound by the law which was first giuen here in my text and after by Moses and the Prophets to keepe in everie weeke an holy rest and that on the first day which is the Lords day because God hath blessed it with a blessing aboue all other daies even by exhibiting Christ a perfect redeemer in his resurrection and hath thereby consecrated that day to be his holie sabbath And that all bodilie laboures sports and recreations and all worldly negociation are by Gods law strictly prohibited now under the Gospell as they were in the daies of the Patriarches and Prophets and under the law Because indeed and in truth they crosse the holie purpose of God which he hath manifested in his law and are impediments of those holy exercises which are required in the sanctification of his holie day This doctrine and practise I hold to be the best and this we are all bound to receiue and imbrace and to cleaue vnto it not onely because it is the Doctrine of our Mother Church commended to us in the book of homilies established by divets lawes statutes and constitutions still in force but also because it is most consonant to the sacred Scriptures the precepts and practise of the Apostles and to the common Doctrine of the purest and most holy Orthoxe of the auncient fathers in the Primitiue times and ages next succeeding after the Apostles as by Gods assistance as J shall make cleare and manifest In the justifying proving of this Doctrine and in laying open the speciall duties of Christians which concerne rest and cessation from all worldly negociation and bodilie laboures on the Lords daie which is the Christian Sabbath I will shew First of all That rest and c●ssation from all bodilie laboures about the worldlie businesse and from all servile and and earthlie workes which concerne this fraile life is a necessarie dutie which God requires by his law of all Christians on the Lords daie which is their Holie weeklie Sabbath vnder the Gospell 2. That Gods law rightlie understood doth in respect of rest from worldly cares and all bodily workes and pleasures as strictly binde us vnder the Gospell on the Lords day as it bound the fathers upon their seventh day in the old Testament 3. I will shew how far Gods word law doth allow of bodily exercises which concerne this life and how farre in such exercises we may goe with good warrant upon the Lords holy Sabbath and what exercises are condemned in the word of God CHAP. 19. FOR the full proofe of the first point there are many strong and invincible arguments grounded vpon the word and law of God upon the generall consent of Orthodox divines both auncient and moderne even upon the confession of them who in this point much differ and seeme to deny that the Lords day either is or ought to be called a Sab. The first Argument is drawn from the words of the law which forbids all workes to be done on the Sabbath day either by man himselfe or his children servants or cattell as Exod. 20 10. Deut. 5.14 where it is said In it thou sh●lt not do any worke thou nor thy son nor thy servant nor thy cattell Exod. 35.2 Leuit. 23.7 Yee shall do no servile work● therein whosoeve● doth any work therin shall be put to death The reasons why the Lord requires rest from all servile worke on the Sabbath day are two First because he who is the Lord our God and our Redeemer hath on that day rested from his worke and him we ought to imitate if we will enter into his rest Secondly because he hath blessed the day which is his Sabbath aboue all daies of the weeke and wheresoever the causes and reasons stand firme there the law is still in force Now this law of the Sabbath doth reach to the Lords day As J haue proved before the reasō vpon which it requirs rest frō se●vile works are much more to be found in the Lords day which is the Christian Sab then in the Old Sabbath of the seventh day For in it Christ who is God ouer all blessed for ever and who is our Redeemer from a greater then Egyptian bondage even the slauery of sinne death and hell and the Divell hath rested from the great worke of redemption as God the Creatour did one the seventh day from the worke of creation And this day is now by Christs resurrection in which Christ perfected mans redemption blessed with a blessing farre more excellent then any wherewith God blessed the seventh day Therfore this is the Sabbath now under the Gospell in it God requirs of us by his law a rest total cessatiō frō al servile works Secondly whatsoever day is the Lords holy day a day of holy convocations assemblies that is a Sab of rest frō al servile works worldly busines this is manifest Exod. 12.16 31.15 35.2 Leuit. 32.3 7 which places do plainly shew that every day which is holy to the Lord and a day of holy assemblies is a Sab of rest no worke may be done therin And so likewise in all the law the Prophets every day which is a day of holy convocation an holy day is called a Sab day of rest from our own works pleasures every Sab is called the Lords holy day for these two are termini convertibiles termes which may be naturally affi●med one of another as apeares Neh. 9 14 Isa 58 13 Now the Lords day in the time of the Gospell is the chiefe of all holy dayes among Christians It was sanctified observed by the Apostles for their day of holy assemblies from the first publishing
from home about worldly affaires on the sabbath Exod. 16.29 bringing in and carrying out loads and burdens Ier. 17.27 exercising themeselves in the workes of their ordinary calling trade as buying selling keeping market and faires on that day So also the Homily condemnes them as transgressours profaners of the Lords sabbath who on the sunday which is the Lords day and Christian sabbath do not spare to ride and journey bring and carry row and ferry buy and sell keepe markets and faires and so use the Lords holy dayes and worke dayes both a like Thirdly as the law and the Prophets commanded Gods people in the old testament to rest in holynesse Exod. 31.14 35.2 and not pollute the sabbath by doing their owne pleasure but to honour the Lord not doing their own wayes nor finding their own pleasure nor speaking their owne words Isa. 58.13 So also the Homily requires of all Gods people the same Holy rest on the Lords day in that it condemnes them who follow vain and carnall sportes and fleshly pleasures and all such exercises as cause brawling and railing and tending to wantonnesse as a worse sort of people then they that breake the sabbath by working and doing all their businesse in it For these are the words of the Homily The other sort is yet worse for though they will not travell and labour on the sunday as on the weeke day Yet they will not rest in holinesse as God commandeth but they rest in vngodlinesse and filthynesse praunsing in their pride pranking and pricking pointing and painting themselues to be Gorgeous and Gay they rest in excesse and superfluity in Gluttony and drunkennesse like Rats and swine they rest in brawling and rayling in quarrelling and fighting They rest in wantonnesse ●oyish ●alking and filthy fleshlynesse So that it doth evidently appeare that God is more dishonoured and the Divell better served upon Sunday then all other dayes of the week besides And I assure you the beasts which are commanded to rest one the sunday honour God better then this kinde of people Now by these expresse words of the Homily we se most clearly that both this and the former position are not any new Doctrines or factious opinions of my owne devising as some malicious catchers false traducers haue slaunderously reported both of them mee But the true Orthodox Doctrine of the Scriptures in the law the Prophets new Testament the divine doctrin pubklickly receiued in the Church of England by law established For the further confirmation whereof J could say much besides the strong Arguments which I haue brought to proue the former position which doe ouer and aboue most strongly proue this also For 1. Jf the Lords day be a more blessed day then the seventh daie was in the old Testament 2. Jf it bee a more holie day a daie of more holy convocations assemblies 3. Jf we haue as much as manifold use of rest cessation as they had more 4. Jf we be bound by Gods law by the Gospel to be more spirituall more sequestred from the world because we haue more abundant gifts of the spirit more cleare sight knowledg of heavenly eternall rest more hope of eternall life glory Then it must needs follow that we by Gods law are as strictly bound to rest cease from all worldlie cares bodily workes sports and pleasures as the Fathers were in the old testament But because slaunderous traducers shal haue nothing here to object against me in this point except they can desperately harden their hear●s and faces to accuse blaspheme wound thr●ugh my sides the holie Scriptures and the publick doctrine of the Church of England by the law established and royall authoritie maintained I will content my selfe desire you my hearers to be satisfied with this which I haue said you haue heard alreadie And so I passe to the third point befor propounded concerning the dutie of rest even the manner measur● of it in what cases Gods law permits bodily exercises on the L day CHAP. 21. HOwsoeu●r all worldlie workes and labours are forbidden and rest From them all is commanded in the law yet the equitie of the law permits some labours and exercises and in some cases allowes such bodilie workes as are ordinarilie vnlawfull to be done on the Lordes holie Sabbath daie First of all it is lawfull for Ministers and preachers of Gods word to doe some painfull and laborious workes upon the Lords daie even all such as are necessarie for the better sanctification of the daie and for the edification of the people and flock in publick Though they are not allowed to neglect their studies on the six daies but are bound to read study meditate for help of their memories to write downe the heads points and proofes of their Doctrine before the day of assembly Yet because few or none are so perfect as to preach publick with good order Method and readinesse of speach and memorie that which they haue studied without searching and reading ouer the testimonies of Scripture which they haue collected and studied noting down writing some which come new fresh to their mind serious meditating upon that which they are to speak for better imprinting of it in their mem●ries Therefore their is a necessity laid on them to labour in this kinde on the Lords Sabbath A●d though it be a great labour of the body to stand up preach in the congregation with intention of the voyce earnestnes of affection doth more spend the spirits strength of the body makes drops of sweat run downe the face more abundantly then the tilling of the ground Yet the matter in which they deale is holy all their worke is religious their labour tends to an holy supernatural end is necessary for a ful sanctification of the day therf●re it is not only allowed but also required commandement by the law of God If any doth make a doubt or question of this truth we haue very strong proofe thereof in the holy Scriptures Th● first Argument is drawne from the hard bodily labours artificiall practises of the Preists which they vver● by the law bound to performe in their double sacrifices offerings on the Sab day in the old Testament they were bound to flealambs to dresse wash the flesh the intrals to offer them up in sacrifices on the Altar thy were bound to lay them upon wood on the Altar to kindle the fire burne the fat some part of the flesh also they were to take a tenth deale of flower to mingle it with oyle to make the drinke offering thereof also to offer all to God as we read Num. 28.9 Now if God by his law allowed commanded such bodily works on the Sab day because they were needfull for sacrifices Circumcision which were but a ceremoniall
tipicall seruice of the Lord which he in his temple required by a ceremoniall law for the sanctification of the Sab. Then much more doth Gods law allow cōmand his publike ministers to labour sweat spend their bodily strength spirits in preaching his word in the holy Christian assemblies where Christ who is greater then the temple is present by his spirit in many of his members who are so many temples of the Holy Ghost and of God The second argument is drawne from the practise and example of Christ and his Apostles For as the Priests and learned scribes did of old read and expound the law and the Prophets in all their sinagogues every sabbath day And our Saviour approued this by joyning with them in some practise preaching teaching in their sinagogues in great throngs assemblies of people which thronged after him undoubtedly made him sweate as appeares Mat. 4.13 Iohn 5.10 So also the holy Apostles did on the first day of the week the Lords day labour in the word as we see by the example of St. Paul who at Troas continued his Preaching till midnight because he was to depart the next daye Act. 20.7 Now what they did performe as a duty taught by the law and moued by the spirit of God Jn that all their faithfull successoures are bound to immitate them Therefore the laboures and paines of Ministers and preachers are allowed on the Lords day being holy and religious workes and fittest of all for the holy day and holy place A second sort of workes alowed to be done on the Lords day are bodily workes and laboures which are soe necessary for the fitting and enabling of Christians to sanctifie that day and for bringing them vnto holy and publick assemblies and places of prayer and of Gods worship and holy service that wit●out such working and labouring even on that day they neither can be so fit and able to serue God joyfully and to worshippe him with cheerefull hearts neither can they as the present case stands come unto holy Sabbath assemblies to heare the word to pray and to worship in publick As for example in places of restreant and of trouble and persecution where publicke Sabbath assemblies of true Christians are not tollerated but in Churches which are remote diuers miles and in barren countries where the Churches are foure or fiue miles distant from some houses and vilages in the parrish men may lawfully ●rauell on foote and ride one horses or make their horses labour in drawing them to the Church in Coaches And because men cannot be soe Cheerfull in the seruice of God nor soe hartily rejoyce before him not with strength and delight spend the whole day in Sabbath duties wit●out warme and wholesome food and plentifull refreshing of their weake bodies therefore the dressing boyling baking and rosting of meate is lawfull on the Lords day soe farre as it more helps then hinders holy duties and the service of God This is manifest by the words of the law Exod. 12.16 where the Lord forbidding all manner of worke on his holy Sabbaths excepts labour and worke about that which people were to eate and which was necessary for the upholding of an holy moderate feasting on those daies This was practised by the Ph●rises and by our Saviour and his Apostles who on the Sabbath day came to a feast to the house of a chiefe Pharise Luk. 14.1.2 Also the speech of the Shanamite to his wife 2 King 4.23 doth import that for the solemn observation of the Sabbath they were wont to ride and travell to the Prophets and to places where they might worship God and be instructed in the knowledge of his will and worship For when shee desi●d an asse to ride on and a young man to attend her unto Carmell where Elisha ●he man of God was Wherefore wilt thou saith he got to him to day seeing it is neither New Moon nor sabbath But here let me giue a caution That Christian people bee not too heedlesse setting their inhabitations in places Remote from the Church for some worldly commodities when they may with a litle lesse conveniency dwell neere And that they do not by vnnecessary feasting and superstitious dressing of meate hinder or wholy disable some of their fam●ly from keeping holy the Lords day a fault to common in our daies Thirdly all works actions of bodily labour which are works of mercy and of Charity which cannot without convenience or danger be deferred or which may be done without hindering of our soules in Gods publick worship and to the great comfort of our brethren are lawfull and may be done on the Lords day As for example visiting of the si●k and of them that are in prison or in any great distresse and applying and ministering comfort and healing medicines to them offering and gathering of collections for the Reliefe of poore Saints labouring to set men at ●nity and to Reconcile jarring neighbours These are holy pious workes as our Saviour shewes and hee accounts such deeds when they come from a sincere heart as if they were don to himselfe Mat 25.40 Yea he himselfe did commonly on the Sabbath day practise such deeds soe often as he found occasion as we read Mat. 12. Luk. 6 Paul by inspiration of the spirit and by Commandement from the Lord Christ doth ordaine and appoint such vvorks to be done on the Lords day 2 Cor. 16.1 2. And from the daies of the Apostles all true Churches of Christ did practise such vvorkes of mercy pietie and Charity as Justine Martyr vvitnesseth and divers others in alter ages And such works the Ecclesiasticall constitutions of our English Church commanded and commend on the Sundayes holy daies of the Lord. Fourthly all bodily workes of great and extreame necessity which concerne the life and safety of men and of their cattell the preseruation of necessary creatures other good things of good use value and moment serving for mans being and welbeing may lawfully be done on the Lords day As for example 1. Fighting for our liues and for the safety of our country or city against enimies which invade us and set upon us and taking advantage if God doth offer it to us on the Lords day as Ioshua did at Jerico in compassing the City by Gods appointm●nt and by circumstances it is probable taking it on the seventh day and offering a bloudy sacrifice in fire to God as a Cherem or Anathema devoted and seperated to God for the first fruites of the land of Canaan after they came to Jordan from which no man might without sacrilege detract any thing as Achan did and was cut off for it Josh. 6. If Ioshua did compasse the Citty seven daies together as the text saith then one of the seventh must needs be the Sabbath most likely the last of the seventh wherein the Citty was taken and offered up in fire as a devote thing to God God offering the occasion
and giving the advantage by the ruine of all the walles about the Citty did impose a necessity vpon them to take and destroy the Cittie on that day and this worke was dispensed with and approved by God and so are all of the like kinde For necessity hath no law Secondly by the same rule other works of necessity as labour in quēching fire when mens houses are on fire or the towne in danger or in stopping of a breach when the sea or some overflowing river breakes through the banks and is readie to draw some part of the countrie and to destroy men and beasts and there is a necessi●y of Removing men beasts corn other good creaturs that they be not be drowned swallowed vp And in a word wheresoever God brings men into that necessity that they cannot be kept in welbeing without present help by some worke done on the Sabbath day such workes are not forbidden on that day Neither killing of sheep and oxen nor dressing of them nor grinding corne nor baking bread to refresh an armye returned from battell and ready to faint without present sustenance by dressing and preparing some part of the praey which they haue taken Our Saviour in the Gospell proues this clearlie Mat. 12. Where by Davids example who did take and eate the shew bread in his necessity he defends his Disciples their act of plucking ●ares of corn rubbing and eating them on the Sab also alloweth leading of cattell to drink the drawing thē out of pits such like But because occasion is here offered to speak of all kinds of actions which are allowed to be don from which men are not bound to r●st wholy on the Lords day It will be expected of some that I should speak of actions and exercises of sport and recreation whether men be altogether restrained from them or whether any of them be lawfull to bee vsed on the Lords day Now because I will not provoke nor exasperate any who seem of contrary judgment especially men of great place authority I will propound my judgment which I conceiue to be agreable to Gods word onely ingenerall rules gathered out of the holy Scriptures which all understanding Christians may easily apply to the particulars 1. Jt is acknowledged by all godly learned divines That nor creations or sports which feed and cherish mens corrupt carnall affections are at any time lawfull as Idle Uaine jefting wanton gestures and daliance which increase lust and occasion wantonnesse and therefore least of all to be tollerated on the Lords day For this is seeking of our own pleasures polluting the Lords holy day which the Prophet Jsaiah condemnes Isa 58. 2. Honest and lawfull sports and recreations such as shoo●ing wrastling and other games of actiuity hunting hawking angling and the like though they be lawfull at other times yet they are not to be tollerated on the Lords day in any measure if they be found to hinder men from publick worship seruice of God and publicke set duties of piety fit for the day or to withdraw them from private duties requisit in Christian families as prayer reading meditation repetition and examining of Doctrines by the Scripture which haue beene publickly preached and heard private instructions exhortations and mutuall provocations to piety and to praising of God by singing Psalmes and the like Whatsoever sports and recreations do hinder these and withdraw people from them they are on the Lords day impious and prophane how lawfull soever on other daies In this point all Godly grave and learned Divines do agree And how sinfull prophane and hatefull to God such sports are on the Lords day The Lord himselfe doth continually shew and declare by the many examples of dreadfull judgments and tokens of his wrath which hee hath shewed and doth still shew in this and in all ages for such doings dorwning some in their swimming breaking the backs armes legges and necks of other in their wrastling stricking with horrible lamenesse and with dreadly surfers and sudden death leapers dauncers hunters hawkers riders bowlers and such like And let every man take heed that his own heart do not deceiue him and that he doe not flatter himselfe in his follie when it is manifest that such sports are a mans owne pleasures condemned by the Prophet Isa. 58. And are seen and known daily to steale away mens hearts from holy duties and to turne their affections from heavenly and spirituall things wherein they ought chiefly to delight Thirdly as men may not do the lawfull works of their calling neither in providing meat drinke cloathes or other necessaries on the Lords day with a bare respect of naturall good and worldly profitt because this is doing of his owne waies and workes and not the worke of God Unto which Gods holy day is wholy consecrated and set apart Except onely in case of necessity when men and beasts cannot otherwise bee preserued in life health and being or when Gods people without such workes cannot be made fit able to serue God cheerfully as they ought on that day So also no bodily sports Recreations and pleasures are to be tolerated or used merely to cherish the flesh to refresh the body and to procure bodily strength but onely such as are in verie deed needfull in themselves and used and intended by Gods people with this purpose and ●o this end that they may with more abilitie alacrity and cheerefulnesse do the holy workes and performe the holie duties of Gods worship and service which are proper to the Lords holy day First this is manifest by the words of the Lord Isa. 58.13 Where he requires of his people that they turne away their feete from doing their owne pleasure on his holy day and call the sabbath a delight the holy of the Lord Honourable and honour him not doing their owne wayes nor finding their owne pleasure By their owne waies and pleasures we are to understand not onely their corrupt sinfull workes filthy words and vaine carnall pleasures which proceed from nature corrupted and naturally tend to increase transgression for they are to be abhorred every daie and at all times but here by their owne waies words and pleasure we are to understand such as proceed from nature created good and are onely intended to that end and haue none other effect For such though at other times lawfull and honest Yet on Gods holy daie are prophane common and inordinate as these words imply Secondly as it is not lawfull to use Gods holy word in jeasting nor with it to mingle our owne vaine talke nor to play with holy things because this is taking of Gods name in vaine Soe undoubtedly to use worldly delights and to sport our selues with uanishing earthly naturall and ciuill pleasures which are neither usefull to helpe and further us in holy devotion nor intended by us to that end is a prophanation of Gods holy day and an intermingling of our owne prophannesse
mear and drinke offerings of fine flower mingled with oyle and such like and incense and gummes and spices they where but tipes and shaddowes of Christ his substanciall sacrifice and in that respect holy by Consecration And though divers of them were indifferent and tollerable while the bodily Temple was yet standing Yet when God hath cast them out by the destruction of the materiall temple the chaunge of the weekly Sabbath they are growne unlawfull to be practised and the reviuing of the practise of them is called abomination Dan. 12. And apostacy from Christ Gala. 4 5. turning againe to weak and beggarly elements and rudiments and becoming slaues to them Gal. 4.9 Wherfor we are now onely to observe in our sanctification of our holie weekly Sabbath such holie duties and exercises as are holie at al● times and in all ages both before and under the law and now also under the Gospell which in their owne nature are either trulie holie or t●nde to beg it increase and cherish holie graces in men And because God hath by the Gospell shined into our hearts to giue us the light of the knowledge of his glorie the face of Iesus Christ 2 Cor. 4.6 And hath shed his spirit on us aboundantly through him Tit. 3.6 And soe made us more spirituall because also our Saviour himselfe hath taught vs in the Gospell that God is a spirit they are true worshippers who worship him in spirit Iohn 4.23.24 Therefore the chiefest duties by which the Sabbath is sanctifi●d are the most speciall duties of Gods worshippe and the more spirituall the more pleasing to God more beseeming Christ●ans Soe that the first rule which is here to be giuen and to be observed is this That all Gods people doe chiefely labour to stirre up and quicken the grace of God in their hearts and holy heavenly and supernaturall aff●ctions in their soules that with pure mind● and spirits they may performe all duties and actions of Gods worship and seruice both publick and priuate It is true that all times and on all daies we ought to keepe our whole spirit and soule as well as our body pure and blameles to serue God as well with inward affection of heart and purity of spirit as ou●ward visible sencible actions and gestures of body But because the Lords day is the most blessed daie of the w●eke sanct●fied set apart for the holy worshippe and immediate service of God and for publick and priuate service devotion and Religious duties onelie therefore we all ought to haue as great care to furnish our soules with spiritual beauties of holinesse more abundan●ly in greater measure as we haue to make cleane and neate our houses and to decke and adorne our bodies with our best and cleanest holy daie apparell on the Lords day For though outward bodily actions gestures are required as r●quisit and necessary in the publick worship of God and without them it is as impossible to do that publick duty and service to God which belongs to mutuall edification of Christians in this life to the solemne lauding and praising of him in publick assemblies as it is to performe visible senceable actions of this life by the soule only without the body Yet bodily service worship of God as coming duly diligently to the house of God to publick assemblies hearing the word withall attentions and speaking it with great vehemency Praying worshipping and giving thankes in the best forme of wordes which can be devised and with most humble and reverent gestures of devotion as bowing down the body to the ground knocking of the breasts sighing groaning lifting up the hands and eyes to heaven and the like they all without spirituall affection and devotion of the heart are no better then a dead karcast without a soule yea they are filthy hyp●crisie and mockerie of God and lothsome abomination in his sight as the Lord by the Prophet testifieth Isa. 1 c 10 to the 16 verse 29 13 And therefore let our first and chiefest care bee about the fitting and preparing of our hearts and filling and replenishing our soules with spiriruall affections and quickening and stirring up inward and spirituall grace within us for these are the life and soule of all religious duties of all holy worship of God without them we can̄ot in the least measure sanctifie Gods holy day nor performe any least duty of sanctificatiō acceptable to God Now the speciall means which serve for the quickning of spirituall grace kindling of spirituall devotion in our hearts are diuers The First is that which J haue spoken of befor in the duties which concerne Rest to weet a totall sequestring of our selues from all worldly businesse puting away all earthly thoughts cares delights that our whole heart and soule all our affections being purged from all such drosse may haue roome for holinesse only and for spirituall devotion and motions of the spirit For no man can serve two Masters at once God and the world Cast out earthlie carnall thoughts and spiritual and heavenlie affections will easilie enter and beare sway And because this sequestring of our selves from cares of the world must go befor true sanctification in order time therfor undoubtedlie the beginning of the Lords Sab daie is there where the old Iewish Sab ended that is in the evening of the Saturdaie And certainlie when men taking their Rest from labour the whole night befor the Lords daie for sequestring themselves from worldlie businesse fitting of their soules with spirituall devotion and stirring vp of grace in their hearts then do they most profittablie begin their Sabbath for by the meanes the time of preparation and quitting of the minde from worldlie troublesome thoughts shall go before the time of practise and publick assemblies Wherein they are to appeare before God and to performe the maine duties of Sanctification and of his holy worship And her● J cannot passe by without some reproofe that evill carnall custome most worthy to be condemned which is to common among our Cittizens who defer their reckoni●g with their worke-men untill the evening and night which beginns the Lords day Let me here admonish you all to forsake this practise if you loue the Lord and will honour his holy Sab. The second meanes is to meditate on those things which may stirre up our dull spirits and quicken grace in our hearts as first upon the greatnesse holinesse and gl●rie ●f the Lord and more specially to present our selves when the light of the day commeth both to speak to him in praier and praises to heare him speake to us in his word read and preached This must needs moue and stirre up spirituall devotion and affection as we see by experience in worldly things how carefull we are to trimme and fit our selves when we are to go before an earthly King or some great Nobles Secondly to consider what holinesse and purity especially of
2 Cor 2 6 7 and as divers of the auncients haue held and shewed in their practise Seventhly ordaining and calling of Bishops Pastors and Elders being of old performed in the face of the whole Church with publick prayers and laying on of hands Act. 1.15 14.23 2 Cor. 8.19 As it was of old soe at this day is a verie fitt dutye of the Lord holy weekly Sabbath Besides these publick duties there are diuers priuate duties which are necessary both to make the publick duties effectuall and frutefull and to testifie to the Praise and glory of God the power of his holy ordinances and the worke of the spirit by them upon our hearts and soules The first of these is private prayer either by our selves alone or in our families with our Children servants and others of the houshold for if we must pray continually when just occasion and oppertunity is offered as the Apostle teacheth 1 Thes. 5. then most especially before we go vnto and after we returne from the publicke assemblies for a blessing upon Gods Publick ordinances both to our selves and others Our Saviour bids us pray in secret and David exhorts vs to commune with God on our beds and to pray after his example morning evening and at noone day The second is meditation of such as are alone on things heard in the Church and repetition in the family for the printing of the the word in their mindes and memories and mutuall instruction and exhortation one of another without which the word will take small effect afterwards and quicklie beforgotten Saint Paul doth intimate the necessary vse of this duty where he commands women to aske and learne of their husbands at home and not to speak in the Church 1 Cor 14 35 1 tim 2 11. This is the holy duty which God commended in Abraham Gen 18 That he did command and teach his houshold Children which few men can do conveniently on the week daies when every one is about their worke some in one place and some in another onely the Lords day is the fittest The third is rejoycing singing of Psalmes and Praising God in our families this David commends for a duty of the Sabbath Psal. 92.1 And this Paul and Silas taught us by their example Act. 16.35 Where they two being in prison and in the stocks are said on the Lords day at midnight to pray and sing Psalmes with soe loud a voyce that the Prisoners heard them And yet I hope none dare call them Puritants and Hipocrites as the profane miscreaunts of our time call all the familes in which they heare singing of Psalmes on the Lords day The Fourth is visiting of the sick of prisoners releiving the poore and needy perswading of disagreeing Neighbours to peace and reconciliation These are works of mercie and of Christian loue and charity haue no proper end but to bring honour to God and to make him to be praised of his people and his people to be edified in loue And being an holie private service of God they may be done on the Lords daie our Church Doctrine doth teach them and Ecclesiasticall constitutions allow them The last duty is meditating on Gods workes magnifying them and speaking of them with admiration one to another if upon any just occasion or for necessarie refreshing we walke diuers together into the feilds This David mentions in the Psalme for the Sabbath day Psal. 92 45. Where he saith thou Lord hast made me glad through thy workes and I will tryumph in the workes of thy hands O Lord how great are thy workes Thus much for the speciall duties both publick priuate which Christians are bound to performe on the Lords day which is the Christian Sabbath Now the consideration of these severall duties being some publick some priuate some more proper for the Sabbath and some for all daies offer to us somethings more to be obserued First the publicke duties of the whole Church together must first be regarded and preferred before priuate duties at home and mumbling of private praies with our selves in the Church because they make more for Gods glory and mutuall edification and do shew and declare our Christian vnity Secondly publick duties must take up the best and greatest part of the day because they are proper to the day and to publick assemblies which are to be kept weekly on the Sabbath day Priuate duties are common to all daies of the weeke Thirdly the duties of mercy charity to men must giue place to the mediate worship of God when there is no vrgent necessity and they may bee deferred to another day without any inconvenience Men hauing oppertunity before must not put them off vntill the Lords daie and then by them shoulder out holy duties of piety and Gods solemne worshippe Lastly by the many and severall duties required on the Lords Sabbath wee see that to him who hath a care and respect of them all there will be no time left for for idle words and toyish talking praunsing in pride and vanity nor for any carnall sports pastimes and pleasures But Gods day wil be found little enough for holy duties which are to be performed And therefore I dare not allow any liberty for any sports how honest lawful so ever at other times except they bee holy and Gods worship be furthered and no better duties by them be hindered Which no man can in reason conceive or imagine If God be to be loved aboue all and honoured and served with all the heart and mind soule strength as the law commands J do not see but all Gods people ought so to do especially on the Lords day to be discontent grieued that they can̄ot do it so fully as they ought not to allow to themselves in these things anie liberty which may hinder Gods holy worship The greatest opposites of the weekly Christians Sabbath when they haue most vehemently disputed spent al their argumēts against the observation of the Lords day for an holy Sab day of holy rest are by the cleare evidence of the truth so convinced that will they nill they their conscience forceth them to confesse That the spēding of the whole day even the space of four twenty hours of the Lords day an holie rest cessation from all worldly thoughts cares from all seculiar affaires in holy duties of Gods worship service both publick and private is a thing Commendable praise worthy in them and pleasing and acceptable in the sight of God To that one only wise omnipotent immortall and eternall God who in all things and ouer all enimies maketh his truth to triumph be all honour glory and praise now and for euer FINIS Justin. Dialog cū Triphone Tertull. adversus Judoeos Irenaeus lib. 4. c. 20 * Tostatus Pererius Gomarus Heb. 11.10.16 Origen Hierom. trad in 2 Gen. Austin in Psal. 80. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gen. 8 21 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gen. 31.2 Heb. 10.26 1 Ioh. 5.16 Heb. 6·6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Doctrine 1 Reason 2 Reason 3 Reason 4 Reason 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. Position negative 1· Pit 1.3 Objection Answer 1. Position affirmative 2. position affi●mative Gen. 4. 3 position affirmative Objection Answer Object 2. Answer The severall opinions concerning the law of the Sabbath The distinction of Gods laws serm 251. de tempore serm de tempore 136. Zanch. lib de De Calog thes 1. 1 Argument 2 Argument 3 Argument Argum. 6 Argument 7 Argument 8. Argu. 9. Argu. Of mans sanctification of the Sabbath 1 Argument 2 Argument 3 Argument 4. Argu. 5 Argument Objection Answer Object Answer Prolog in Psalm Objection Answer Lexic● cold 1. Argument 2 Argument 3. Argument 4. Argum. 5. Argu Chrisostom in Cor. 16. Augst ser. 25 1. de temp Gregor Magn Epist lib 11.3
them a token and pledge of some great blessing and future good promised that God will haue them to keepe saf● and to hold fast vntill they receive the blessing and come to the full possession of it This is manifest by the tipes and sacraments of the law which could not bee a bolished nor without sinne purposely neglected vntill Christ was fully exhibited of whom they were signes and pledges and he was the body and substance And we finde by daily experience that the loosing or casting away of the pledg is the forfetting or forgoing of a mans right whereof it is a pledge If we will receiue the blessing we must do the condition of it Now the observing of a weekly Sabbath is not onely a signe of eternall rest in heaven but also a token and pledge if it given in the beginning togither with the first promise of Christ and conveighed ouer from the fathers to us setled on the day wherin Christ arose from death and perfected mans redemption That it is a pledg of the Sabbathisme which remaines for the people of God the Apostles words imply Heb. 4.9 And the best learned haue ever held it to be our pledge of eternall rest in Heaven As Aust●n Tom. 4. Quaest. 162. and lib. contra Adimantum cap. 13. divers others Therfore the holy weekly Sabbath upon the Lords day must be observed by all Gods people the law of the Sabbath binds them therunto perpetually to the end of the world to the day of resurrection to glory And thus I haue finished the Doctrine of the sanctification of the Sabbath as it is the proper act of God even his seperaing of the seventh day to be an holy rest by his word commandement CHAP. 14 THE thing which now followeth next in order is mans sanctifying the weekly Sabbath keeping of a seventh day holy to the Lord which God hath imposed on him for a necessary holy duty when by his word cōmādement he blessed sanctified it as here we read in the words of my text For Gods sanctifying of daies times places is not any infusing of his holy spirit into them as he doth into his saints even holy Angels men but this giving of a law commandement to mē to obserue keep them after an holy manner to use imploy them to holy heavenly supernaturall use even to divine worship exercises of piety religion as I haue before proued plainly And in that Gods sanctified the seventh day that is gaue a law in the beginning to man to keep observe it for an holy Sabbath as my text shews Therfore it is a necessary duty imposed by God upon man so to observe keep an holy sabbath every seventh day or a sevēth day in every week that duty of mans sanctification keeping holy the Lords sabbath comes now in order to be handled which is here necessarily implied included in the worde of my text In the opening handling wherof I purpose to proceed in this method order First I will shew that this duty of sanctifiing an holy Sabbath to the Lord is imposed by this act of God on all mankinde the children of men are bound unto it from the seventh day of the world after the first beginning of the creation untill that last day of the generall resurrection judgment in which they shal be called to an account reckoning of all things which they haue done in this life Secondly I will shew how farre upon what termes conditions men are bound to this duty by Gods law given for that purpose in his act of sanct●fying the Sabbath Thirdly I will shew more speciall the speciall workes wherein the sanctification and observation of the weekly Sabbath consisteth The duties are of three sorts 1. Some are common to all Gods people in all ages from the beginning and all states and conditions of the C●urch both in the old and new Testament Some are proper to the fathers of the old Testament while the Sabbath was limitted to the last day of the weeke and grounded upon Christ promised onely 3. Some are proper to the Church and people of God vnder the Gospell in the new Testament when the Sabbath is ch●unged to the fi●st day of the week even the Lords day builded upon the finishing of mans redemption and Christ fully exhibited and Gods resting in Christs satisfaction consummated which is a more excellent ground Of all these in order The ●●rst point concern●ng the obligation of all mankinde to the keeping of an holy weekly S●bbath from the first seventh day of the world vnto the last resurrection when the elect and faithfull shall both in their soules and bodies enter into the eternall rest in Heaven may be proued by divers Arguments My first Argument is drawne from the law by which God here in my text did first bind man to this duty thus J briefly frame it That duty which God hath enjoyned by a commandement given to our first parents without limitation exception or exemptiō of any that he hath imposed by his commandement upon Adam and all his seed and posterity in his loynes and they are all bound unto it to the worlds end The sanctifying of a seventh in every weeke and keeping it an Holy Sabbath is a duty injoyned by a Commandement which God gaue to Adam without limitation or exemption of any of his seed and posterity Therefore it is a duty imposed by God upon all mankinde and they are bound unto it in all ages vntill the end of the world The first proposition cannot with any colour of reason be denied if any shall object that God gaue to Adam upon the promise of Christ a law of sacrificing cleane beasts and offering first fruites which bound him and his seed in his loynes and yet they are not bound by it in all ages but onely untill the comming of Christ and his offering of himselfe a sacrifice which is the substance of all sacrifices and after that men are boūd no longer to that duty I answer that though the last of sacrifices of other service worship which were types shaddows was given to Adam upon the first promise without expresse limitation and reached to his seed in his loynes and as Caine Abell so Noah Abraham and all the patriarches people of God were bound to that dutie vntill Christ yet there was a limitation in the things commanded which being types and shaddowes onely of Christ promised were of no use but onely while Christ was yet expected and not actually offered up a sacrifice of perfect attonement and Gods people had neede of such types and figures to lead them to Christ. Therefore this Objection doth not touch nor infring this proposition which speakes of a law of a duty whi●h is of use to all mankinde in all their generations The assumption also is manifest For here we