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A65753 A vvay to the tree of life discovered in sundry directions for the profitable reading of the Scriptvres : wherein is described occasionally the nature of a spirituall man, and, in A digression, the morality and perpetuity of the Fourth Commandment in every circumstance thereof, is discovered and cleared / by Iohn White ... White, John, 1575-1648. 1647 (1647) Wing W1785; ESTC R40696 215,387 374

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the principall end of the Sabbath Adam needed that Law for the observation thereof as well as we In the last place it is urg'd that if the Sabbath had been instituted in Paradise Answer to the third then had the Patriarchs been bound to the observation of it and had certainly observed it Now that the Patriarchs did not observe it it is evident say they because we find no mention upon record of the observation thereof by any of them either before or after the Flood till Exod. 16. immediately before the giving of the Law We answer that if they can make it appeare that none of the Patriarchs did observe the Sabbath we will be willing to grant them that they had no Law that bound them to any such observation But it will be a very hard matter to make that appeare by any convincing argument Yes say they if they had observed it there would have been left some record of it by Moses who wrote their lives as say they he hath left us instances of their observing of the other Nine Commandements but for their observation of the Sabbath day he makes not so much as the least mention at all To this we answer divers things First 1. It followes not we have no recording of the Patriarchs observing the Sabbath therefore they observed it not we except against this form of arguing from Negative authority which according to the sentence of Logicians proves nothing at all and hereof though we might give other instances we will content our selves with one only concerning the point which we have in hand In all the Books of Ioshua Iudges Ruth For 550 years after Moses we have no record of keeping the Sabbath the two books of Samuel and the first booke of Kings containing the history of the Church for 550. yeares and written much more largely then the books of Genesis and the beginning of Exodus we finde not upon record so much as the very name of the Sabbath shall we therefore conclude from thence that the holy men of those times especially Ioshua Samuel and David kept not the Sabbath when we know they had a Law that bound them thereunto and yet we have instances enough out of the same books of their keeping of the other nine Commandements It will not be sufficient to except against the instance produced by us that we know these holy men kept the Sabbath though there be no record of their keeping of it because we are sure that they had a Law that bound them to keep it but the Patriarchs had no such law this I say is no just exceptiō against our instance for it is to beg the point in question All that they can gaine by this Allegation is that it is not so certaine that the Patriarchs kept the Sabbath because it is not so certaine that they had a Law that bound them to observe it Now this is a wild form of arguing It is not certaine though we prove it is or at least not so certaine that the Patriarchs had a Law that bound them to keep the Sabbath therefore it is certaine that they kept it not As for that colour that they make use of for the strengthning of their exception against our instance that Moses records the Patriarchs keeping of the other nine Commandements It were enough that we have said already that we have the like evidences in the books of Ioshua Objection Iudges c. of those holy mens keeping of the other nine Commandements We have records of the Patriarchs keeping the other nine Commandements But to give a fuller answer I conceive they will not say that in the book of Genesis there be instances of the Patriarchs observing of every duty required and prescribed in those Nine Commandements Answer but will name us some duties only which they performed in obedience to every one of them Not of all the duties of all those nine 4. And we have records of the Patriarchs publike worship And we say that we finde instances of the Patriarchs observing of the Fourth Commandement for we read that they worshipped God publikely Gen. 4.26 chap. 12.8 which that phrase of calling upon the name of the Lord implies as I conceive they themselves will not deny And I am sure they acknowledge that publike worship is a duty of the Sabbath But hereunto they will reply that the performing of this publike worship proves not the observation of the Sabbath or seventh day for that worship To which we answer that using of publike worship necessarily supposeth a time a fit time and a time of Rest for that worship for so much themselves acknowledg to be of the Law of Nature And it is probable on the seventh day Adde hereunto what is recorded of the sending out of Noahs dove just at the distance of seven daies Gen. 8.10 12. Surely this could not be done casually that they should accidentally light just upon the distance of seven daies so many times together If then it were done purposely why was that number chosen above all others was there any mysterious holinesse in that number If conjectures might take place we might with great probability conceive that Noah and his children had upon those daies dedicated to his worship been suing for peace and sent out to see whether there might be any tydings of a comfortable answer to their prayers These I confesse are no infallibly-concluding arguments to prove the Patriarchs observation of the Sabbath or seventh day but seeing it is possible nay more very probable that Moses in this relation points at some such thing it is enough to overthrow the opposites conclusion which must be this That it is certaine that Moses makes no mention of the Patriarchs observation of the seventh or Sabbath day Secondly we answer that the place Exod. 16.23 2. It appeares Exod. 16.23 that the Sabbath was known before the Law was given proves evidently that the observation of the Sabbath was a thing sufficiently known to the children of Israel before the Law was delivered unto them upon Mount Sinai For when the Elders of Jsrael wondering that the people had gathered twise so much Manna on the sixth day as they had done each of the five daies going before come to Moses to enquire of him what the reason of that strange event might be ver 22. he answers them presently To morrow is the holy Sabbath of the Lord c. which is all one as if he had said as he doth afterwards in expresse termes ver 29. that the Lord gave them on the sixth day a sufficient portion of bread for two daies that no man might breake the rest of the Sabbath by going out to gather food upon that day In that place you see Moses speaks of the Sabbath as of a thing which the children of Israel well knew beforehand or else he had spoken Parables to them in naming a day and referring the into an Ordinance of which
of holy rest consecrated to the Lord thy God Now things are said to be Gods for the peculiar interest that he hath in them whether by Creation as Psal 100.3 He made us and therefore wee are his people By redemption or purchase so the children of Israel God challengeth to be his own because he had bought them Isa 43.1 By deputation or designation as Christ is called Gods king Psal 2.6 and David a Type of Christ Psal 89.19 20. Or by advancing or honouring so a day may be called Gods because he hath advanced or honoured it above other daies Psal 118.24 Or lastly by consecration and dedication to God so the Priests are the Lords Levit. 20.26 the tythes vessels c. the Lords for his service Now in both these latter respects the day of holy rest is the Lords day as he calls it his Sabbath Exod. 31.13 Both because his works have advanced that above any other day and besides because upon that ground it is consecrated to him and set apart for his service To restrain men from violating of the holy rest of the Sabbath it is sufficient that it is the Lords but to make a deeper impression of it upon mens hearts he thought fit to adde The Lord thy God a dreadfull name to his people Deut. 28.58 This foundation being laid that the Sabbath is the Lords No manner of works that is of thy calling not excluding he hath a sufficient ground to take upon him to dispose of it and therefore in the next ensuing clause strictly enjoyns In it thou shalt do no manner of worke he means none of the works mentioned before properly called our own works 1. Works about Gods service or works of our particular callings As for works about Gods service such as were those about the service of the Tabernacle justified by our Saviour Mat. 12.5 Works of necessity for the creatures preservation which also Christ allows Mat. 12.11 2. Works of necessity from which also God himself ceaseth not Joh. 5.17 Works of mercy 3. Works of mercy though not of absolute necessity such as was the restoring of the mans withered hand Matth. 12.12 13. yea though it be to our selves vers 7. they are not to be accounted among the works forbidden upon this day If there were any stricter rest then this enjoyned the Jews which perhaps will not so easily be proved it is not required by any restraint in this Commandement and therefore not exacted upon us Christians As for the forbidding of the kindling of a fire and dressing of meat Exod. 16.5.13 35.3 they were inhibitions which determined as it is most probable with the Israelites peregrination in the wildernesse and laid upon them by other laws so that hitherto we meet with nothing ceremoniall in this fourth law The last main branch of this law is the reason or confirmation of it No reason annexed to any law but only to this fourth Commandement But before we undertake the opening of the phrases and tearms in which it is penned we cannot but take notice of one thing by the way that we find no reason annexed to any other Commandement of the Decalogue but to this alone We find indeed some Sanctions annexed to the second third and fift Commandements but none save this fourth is confirmed by a reason The cause hereof can be no other but this because whereas the duties commanded in other laws are either laws of nature or at least approvable by naturall reason as soon as they are delivered Because the grounds of other laws are evident in themselves but the ground of this law could not be known unless it had been revealed because the grounds upon which those lawes are founded are evident in themselves the grounds of this fourth Commandement could not have been known unlesse they had been revealed by God himself Indeed that God must be publikely worshipped That a set time must be appointed and that it must be a time of rest from private employments are dictates of naturall reason But why we must observe a weekly Sabbath and not a monthly and why the seventh or first day of the week rather then the third or fourth no man could have found out the reason unlesse God had revealed unto us the Creation of the world in six daies and his resting upon the seventh by the consideration whereof the equity of this law clearly and manifestly appears and upon the manifestation thereof is as easily approved and assented unto even by the light of naturall reason So then the reason alledged in this Commandement shews us not why God ordained a Sabbath which the very light of nature taught even the very heathen as we know but why he commands a weekly Sabbath and why upon such a day of the week rather then upon any other That therefore which we are to search after in the examining of this reason is how the equity of these two particulars is discovered therein that we may acknowledge this Commandement also to be just and good as S. Paul speaks of all the rest Rom. 7.12 yea equall and right concerning all things as the Prophet David speaks Psal 119.128 and thereupon submit unto it not by constraint but by a willing mind 1 Pet. 5.2 Now concerning the former of those two particulars why God allots out such a proportion of time as one day weekly for his Sabbath we have already in a great part discovered the equity thereof in the explication of this law wherein it appears that so much time may be spared without prejudice to our particular callings which if it should be denied God makes farther manifest by this reason annexed which we have before us To make it appear that six daies in the week are sufficient for the dispatch of our secular affairs one ground must be supposed Why we may spare one day of seven for this holy rest which is unquestionable that mens labours about the things of this world are onely for the conservation of the creatures and fitting of them for mans use That ground being laid this reason for the strengthning of our faith laies before us the example of God himself who created the world and all things therein in six daies from whence we may strongly reason that he that without the help of mans labour created the world in six daies can easily by mans labour of six daies support and conserve the world If it be questioned whether he will do it reason will easily conclude that the same goodnesse that moved God to give a being to things that were not will much more move him to conserve and provide for the things that are being all the work of his own hand seeing we know him to be a faithfull Creator as the Apostle calls him 1 Pet. 4.19 Wherefore we find that the godly for the strengthning of their faith and dependence on God upon any incident occasion usually have recourse to the creation of the world
It is objected that the Rest commanded in the fourth Commandement was a figure of Christs rest in the grave and therefore is now banished with the rest of those shadowes We answer this typicall relation to Christ Answer was accidentall to the Sabbath not essentiall That was accidentall to the Sabbath it was a Sabbath before it was a Type for it was a Sabbath before Christ was looked upon as a sacrifice for sin that is before man had fallen and consequently before there was any need of our Saviours resting in the grave Seeing therefore it was a Sabbath before it was a type it may remaine a Sabbath though the type be taken away They will it may be grant that there must be a rest from labour upon the Sabbath day Objection 2 but the strictness of that rest such as the Jews observed The strictnesse of the rest enjoyned the Jewes is taken away is ceremonious and abolished The rest say they to be observed of us Christians is only for publike worship and no longer so that the remainder of the day after publike duties are ended is free and then men are at liberty to make use of the time remaining for recreations or for any secular affaires as occasion shall required In answer hereunto we have shewed already that although publike worship be principally yet it is not solely provided for in this Law which as we have proved out of Esay 58.13 reacheth to our private carriage also And the Law calls the whole day the Sabbath or rest of the Lord that is both commanded by him and consecrated to him For the whole week being distributed into seven parts sixe are allowed for labour and the seventh is consecrated unto God which therefore must be a naturall day as the other sixe are To replie that we are not bound by that Law is to begge the question But why should not Christians be bound to rest the whole day as well as the Jews The Jews not bound to rest but for holy duties Surely if the Sabbath were a type of Christs rest in the grave yet there could be no type in a whole day as there was in Jonas his three daies So the rest of the whole day having no type in it is not abolished for that cause What then was it a part of the burthen of those ceremonious observances from which Christ hath freed us To give the fuller answer hereunto let us examine what rest was enjoyned the Jewes that we may discover wherein the burthensomenesse of that rest consisted First I conceive no man will think that the Jewish rest was a totall cessation from all action like that in the Aegyptian darknesse Exod. 10.23 as if men after the publike exercise were to sit still and to do nothing Was it then a ceasing from labours to follow sports that the Sabbath might be like the feast of the Calfe Exod. 32.6 or was it rest from worldly labours to fit men give them the more leisure to attend holy duties Such a rest indeed the Law requires For which we have as much need of rest as they and the Sabbath to be kept holy Now if this were all that God required of the Jews to rest that they might be exercised in hearing reading praying c. Is this the liberty Christ hath purchased unto us that we may be lesse godly then they lesse frequent in prayer and other holy duties then they For if we are bound at least to equall if not to go beyond them in our exercise in those holy duties we have as much need of rest from ordinary employments as they had This will be made more evident unto us if we lay before us these five particulars First 1. As having a more weighty ground for observing this holy rest our ground of consecrating the Sabbath is as great and weighty and more cleer and evident to us then it was to the Jews seeing Gods mercies towards man are more cleerly represented us in mans redemption then they could be to them in the worlds creation and conservation Secondly 2. And are as much bound to advance Gods majesty as they 3. And more helps then they 4. And as much need to prevent distractions as they 5. And our duties are as many or more then theirs the majesty and greatnesse of God to whom we consecrate this day is as fully manifested to us as to them Thirdly our helps and means for the raising up of our spirits to an holy rejoycing in God are greater and more effectuall then they were unto them Fourthly we need as much as they all helps to prevent the distraction of our minds and to the quickning of our spirits Lastly our exercise in spirituall and holy duties is in all respects as much or more then theirs So that if all be laid together the observing of a whole day of rest for our exercise in holy duties is as usefull and as needfull to us Christians as it was heretofore to the Iews To cleer this point yet more fully 1 Private prayer and reading let us lay before us the right manner and order of performing the duties in which the Sabbath day is to be sanctified First therefore all men must needs grant that the private exercises of prayer reading Gods word and meditation which are constantly to be used on other daies are not to be neglected but ought rather to be enlarged on the Sabbath day 2. Recordation of Gods mercies generall and Particular Again as the Sabbath ought to be a day of gladnesse and rejoycing in God Psalm 118.24 for all his mercies to man in generall so it is a time of recounting his extraordinary favours to our own souls in particular which will be of speciall use to quicken and fill our hearts with the love of God by tasting the sweetnesse of his goodnesse and to carry us on with more cheerfulnesse and life of spirit in the performance of all the duties of that day both private and publike Thirdly 3. Preparation to publique duties for the publike duties themselves they can never be rightly performed without precedent preparation David will wash his hands in innocency and so compasse Gods Altar Psal 26.6 and Solomon tels us we must take heed to our feet when we enter into Gods house Eccles 5.1 and bethink our selves of the majesty and greatnesse of that God before whom we present our selves and of our own vilenesse that are but dust and ashes Gen. 18.27 nay which is worse unclean and filthy persons Isa 64.6 unworthy to stand before a God that hath pure eyes and the Apostle tells us of superfluity of naughtinesse that must be laid aside when we come to hear that we may receive the word with meeknesse Jam. 1.21 into an honest and good heart Luk. 8.15 Meditations by which we must prepare our hearts in our private exercises of reading Gods word and prayer much more in these which are more solemn and publike Again
faile to supply you with such estates as will be best and meetest for you I assure my selfe you want neither will nor resolution to set forward the workes wherein Gods honour and the welfare of this place are so much concerned Onely I desire you to embrace the first opportunities which the Lord shall put into your hand to bring your purposes to effect Say not with the people Hag. 1.2 The time is not come that the Lords house should be built Things of publike concernment ought to be our first and chiefest care which when we labour to set forwards with all our power we engage the Lord himselfe to take care of and prosper our private affaires Now the Lord stirre up the spirits of you all as he did the spirits of Zerubbabel and Ioshuah Zech. 1.14 to take his work in hand with speed and courage and be assured of the same successe that these holy men found and besides honour to your selves and comfort in your owne hearts at present the entering into the Joy of your Lord hereafter Mat. 25.21 23. Which that you may doe and finde is and shall be the prayer of Your Humble Servant IOHN WHITE To the Author Sir NOtwithstanding yours or the Printers haste and importunity I must not let these Treatises of so much worth goe out of my hands without that due testimony which my heart gives of them As the compilement of them is close and pithy so the materials full of spirituall vigor accompanied with a strength both of Harmonious and also Argumentative Reason The subjects themselves all seasonable when enjoyments of God through Scripture Revelation without us and by Faith and spirituall experience withinus is esteemed but a living upon the letter a way beneath for infant Christians to walke with God in And both these you have here with much evidence vindicated and cleared As likewise the Morality of the fourth Commandement the conscientious observation of which hath through the blessing of God following his own institutions both elevated and preserved at its height the practicall part of the power of godlinesse in this Kingdome which is laid aside by many true professors of piety as a part of the Iewish paedagogie For the particulars themselves your Description of a spirituall man is deeply fetcht from that which constitutes him such and doth genuinely distinguish him from all other by that which is most proper to his constitution and peculiar to his Faith namely The Demonstration of the Spirit And as the subject is spirituall such are your characters given and your way of reading it exceeding spirituall even according to the Apostles owne direction comparing or suiting spirituall things with spirituall and accordingly is also full of that demonstration of the spirit which you therein make essentiall and constitutive of his faith I see how ever we may differ in Ecclesiasticks and matters of outward order a little yet in spiritualls or what is more conjunct to the inward and spiritual man we agree All our lives meet not in that part of the circumference yet in this center we unite and embrace and herein I doe rejoyce and will rejoyce for ever In your first main part concerning the Scriptures your discourse beares a comely suitablenesse to the nature and scope of that subject also For as the Historicall beleefe of their authority end and use is the foundation of all so your demonstrations thereof are formed out of and framed into a congeniall Harmony and consonancy to right Reason and containe a naturall Genealogy and story of divine Truth about them whereof one is the off-spring of the other which way of setting forth divine Truths as it carries with it the greatest conviction and as your selfe in that forementioned Treatise expresse it begets Faith Historicall which hath for its ground a rationality and consonancy to reason so it is made use of by the holy Ghost as a blessed subservient to that which you make the immediate proper cause of saving Faith The Demonstration of the Spirit For your last peece The more generall notion of such an indefinite sense of the Fourth Commandement I remember you and I long since mutually pleased our selves to have singly and apart agreed in But this your so exact particular explication and demonstration of this intent of God therein exceedes what I either did then or have since imagined could have with that rationality perspicuity even to more then a probability been made forth of the words thereof I doe herein exceedingly admire the wisdome of God in penning and ordering the words of that Fourth Commandement in such a posture whereof you have made observation as that command might become a genuine and naturall root more naturall then Abraham is to Jew and Gentiles successively First to beare that last seventh day that old Sabbath the Omega of the weeke and when that should be lopt off then to give as fresh sap to the first seventh day the Alpha of the week the Lords day Sabbath It makes me say of the Commandement with an inversion what the Apostle sayes upon the like reason of that of Love It was an old Commandement and yet is still a new one Sir as the honour you have done me to commit these Treatises to the Test of my weake judgement ere you transmitted them to the presse hath cleane taken off that little of jealousy of any strangenesse by reason of these unhappy differences in comparison of former intimacy so the quickning materials hereof have fully revived in my heart that intensenesse of Christian and Brotherly love towards you with this just cause of addition and encrease That after your having sacrificed your spirits and strength in the most publique way of service to God and his Church with more then ordinary activity and selfe-denyall you still retaine such a spirituall vigor both of Grace and judgement as this issue shewes in these yeares of old age and infirmities Thus much if any stampe of mine might arise to any such a value for a private encouragement at least be pleased to accept as it is given with all faithfulnesse from Your ancient and still true and faithfull Friend and unworthy Brother Tho Goodwin A Table of the title of the severall Chapters and Sections contained in the Treatise following Cap. 1. OF the necessity of preparation to Reading Pag. 1 Cap. 2. Sect. 1. Of the Author of the holy Scriptures Pag. 7 Sect. 2. That the holy Scriptures appeare evidently to be the word of God Pag. 18 The first Marke by which it is evident that they are so The Style and Phrase of them Pag. 19 The second Marke The Subject or Matter handled in them Pag. 25 The third Marke The powerfull effect of the Scriptures on mens hearts Pag. 33 Cap. 3. The Scriptures having God for their Author must needes be of Divine authority Pag. 45 Cap. 4. That the pen-men of holy Scriptures were holy men guided in that worke wholly by Gods Spirit Pag. 57
but his own Spirit 1 Cor. 2.11 It is true concerning a mans mind seeing it is moved according to reason in order to the end which he proposeth to himself therefore one that knows another mans end may with some probability guesse at his thoughts and purposes tending to that end which Solomon implies in affirming that though counsell be hidden deep in the heart of man yet a man of understanding may draw it out Prov. 20.5 And so a man knowing that Gods main end in all his ways is his own honour may conclude that Gods law must be such as may direct men in those ways in which they may most glorifie God But what those particular directions must be it is impossible for men to guesse till God himself reveal them It is true that the very light of nature which God hath planted in every man will discover unto him some of the chief heads of the duties that he requires of him as to love the Lord with all our hearts and to fear and serve him Deut. 10.12 And to serve one another through love Gal. 5.13 But in what particular services we are to expresse our piety to God or love to men what man can prescribe or imagine For that the ways by which both these main duties may be performed are various and divers it is evident now to which of these different ways God would direct one it was impossible to guesse till God himself had made it manifest in his own word To give instance of this truth in some particulars Especially laws positive must needs bee given by God alone it was impossible for any man to conceive what ceremonies or outward acts God would accept and be best pleased withall in the duties of his worship No man could divine that the tree of life should be a Sacrament to Adam in Paradise or Circumcision to the Jews or Baptisme and the Lords Supper to Christians For ought any man could conceive to the contrary the Priesthood might have been setled upon the Tribe of Simeon as well as Levi. The rest of the Sabbath might have been fixed on the second or sixth day as well as on the seventh and on the first if God had so appointed it And for the duties of the second Table it was not of absolute necessity that God should establish such a kinde of subordination and subjection of one man to another as he hath done or give every man a propriety in his goods to possesse them as severall to himself or limit one man to one wife and ordain marriage for the onely way of propagation of mankinde seeing that although all these are fit and convenient yet God if hee had pleased might have given other rules for the governing and establishing peace amongst men and it was as lawfull for him to give the creatures what laws he pleased as to give them what natures he pleased So that seeing the law for the right ordering of the creatures depends meerly upon Gods will which cannot be known unlesse himself reveal it it must needs be granted which was first proposed that none could give the law to Gods Church but God himself Next if it had been possible 2ly Nor is it convenient that any other then God should give this law 1 For preserving Gods authority it was no way fit either for the advancing of Gods honour or for the furthering of mans good that any other should give that law then God himself Not fit for Gods honour in two respects First Gods authority could be no way so well preserved as by giving his own law to his people seeing all men acknowledge that giving of laws is an honour annexed to the highest power although the execution of them be committed to Magistrates of a lower degree It may be probably guessed that even heathen Law-givers by pretending either consulting with their gods in giving their laws or allowance of them by them acknowledged law-making to be a divine prerogative which yet is more fully manifested by this that we acknowledge no law to bee just that is not either founded on or consonant to Gods law either written in mans heart or delivered in his word So that it was fit that God should give the law to his own people to preserve his own authority amongst them Again it is requisite for Gods honour in another respect 2 And that we might have a perfect mirrour of him Which none could give but himself that none but God himself should give his own law to his people because none is able to give so perfect a mirrour of God as himself As for men we know none of them hath seen God at any time John 1.17 and it is so little a portion that they know of him Job 26.14 that it is impossible they should set him out as he deserves Now it is for Gods honour that hee should be expressed as fully as may be which neither is nor can be performed so exactly by any man as it may be by his law which represents unto us the image of his minde and will and gives us a more distinct knowledge of him then his works can doe Nay his word serves as a Commentary to his works as laying before us the rule according to which God orders all his ways so that by the help thereof we understand the righteousnesse and holinesse of all his acts as David did Psa 73.17 which he could not finde out before It is true indeed that the very works themselves praise God and shew him in his tender mercies Psal 145.5.8 in his mighty power Job 36.22 37.23 Godhead Rō 1.20 yea commonly in his righteousness in rewarding and punishing Psa 58.11 But they neither expresse him so distinctly nor consequently affect the heart so deeply as they doe when they are illustrated by the word as Job confesseth chap. 42.6 that he never saw God so clearly nor abhorred himself so much as when God described unto him his works in that conference Job 38. c. Wherefore seeing the image of God is most exactly expressed unto us in the word it is most fit that the word that represents him to us should be given by God himself who knowing himself best can give us the most perfect draught of his own face Besides these respects unto Gods honour in regard of mans good it was not convenient that the Scriptures which contain Gods law to his Church should be given by any other then God himself For first 3ly For mās good 1. To subdue his heart to obedience mans heart would hardly be brought to stoop to any power but Gods alone whose voice onely prevails upon the conscience and subdues the very thoughts and imaginations of the spirit which the voice of no man can doe Besides 2. To make his services accepted nothing can make our services performed to God or man to be duties of obedience but the undertaking of them upon Gods command which we do when we know the
while the whole nature of mankind was in our first Parents upon that ground therefore supposed and granted by all we thus argue That which Moses relates God to have done Proved by the series of the history Gen. 2. that he did in the manner and order that he relates but Moses relates that God instituted the Sabbath from the beginning as well as marriage and some other Laws therefore it was so and then done The words of Moses his relation of the Institution of that day of rest Gen. 2.3 are these And God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it Now that these words Blessed and Sanctified in the most proper and ordinary construction signifie instituted and annexed a blessing to the observation of it I conceive no man will denie Wherefore seeing this is the most usuall and proper signification of these words and seeing no incongruity with other clauses and expressions in the letter of that text no contradiction to any other place of Scripture nor repugnancy to any principle of faith enforce us to seeke out any other more unusuall signification of them we have sufficient warrant to construe and interpret them according to their usuall literall and proper sense in this place Now that Blessing and Sanctifying the Sabbath was from the beginning besides the series of the history And by the tearmes blessed and sanctified which is a stronger more convincing argument to prove that it was so then any that is or can be alleadged to prove the contrary may be evineed and farther made good by these reasons First we find the Lord himself in the fourth Commandment affirming that he had blessed and sanctified the Sabbath day for so all the Interpreters render these words according to the most proper signification of them in the originall tongue as remembring and referring unto an act done before the giving of the Law Repeated in the fourth Commandement and pointing at an act past Now we find in no place of Scripture any mention of the Lords blessing sanctifying the Sabbath day before the publishing of the Decalogue upon Mount Sinai but in this only Gen. 2.3 Neither doe those that deny the Morality of the Sabbath mention or suppose any time precedent to the delivery of the Law by Moses wherein God blessed and sanctified the Sabbath day neither if any such thing had been done by God would the Scripture have omitted the recording of it being a matter of so great importance neither lastly 3. Neither was any time so fit for giving this Law of the Sabbath as in the beginning was there any time so fit for the giving of this Law as when the ground of the Institution of this holy Rest which was Gods manifesting of the perfecting of the worlds creation by his resting on that day was new and fresh in memory This reason taken from the fitnesse of the time for the enacting and publishing of this Law carries with it the greater weight because we know how carefull God is to make every thing beautifull in its time Eccl. 3.11 and consequently we have no reason to imagine that God would omit the fittest time for the giving of this Law and defer it to a time lesse seasonable As appeares in instituting other Feasts especially seing we see that in the Institution of the Feasts of lesse imporportance as Easter and Pentecost of lesse frequent observation and to last but for a time he tooke care to ordaine them when the mercies were yet fresh and new for the preserving of the memory whereof they were appointed The same course the Church tooke afterwards in the ordaining of the Feast of Purim wherein both the occasion and Institution of the Feast went both together Nay even the Heathen themselves by the very light of nature were directed to follow the same rule as all men know But the strongest and clearest argument to prove the Institution of the Sabbath by God from the beginning is the testimony of the Apostle The Apostle affirmes it Heb. 4.3 4. Heb. 4.3.4 in these words Although the works were finished from the foundation of the world for he spake in a certaine place namely Gen. 2.2 of the seventh day on this wise And God rested the seventh day from all his workes To shew the force of the argument which is to be drawne out of this place we must in this whole disputation of the Apostle's begun chap. 3.12 and ending chap. 4.11 consider what he chiefly aimes at and intends to prove which is to disswade men from unbeleefe to which purpose he sets before them the dangerous consequents thereof namely that it excludes men out of heaven To prove this he alleadgeth the testimony of the Prophet David Psal 95.11 who threatens the people of his time to be shut out of Gods rest as their Fathers by hardening their hearts through unbeleefe were shut out of Canaan a Type of heaven if they proved unbeleevers and hardened their hearts thereby as their fathers had done If it should be replied unto the Apostle that David in that place alleadged out of the Psal meant not heaven by the rest which he there mentions the Apostle demonstrates plainly that David in these words which he relates could not possibly by the name of Rest meane any thing else but the rest of heaven The Apostle's argument by which he demonstratively proves that the Prophet in the words which he cites out of him could meane no other rest but the rest of heaven is this in briefe The rest which David mentions in that place must needs be such a rest as the men to whom he speakes had not entred into for then it had beene a vaine thing to threaten to shut them out of that which they had already in possession but had a possibility to enter in it or else it were a like folly to threaten that as a judgement upon them to deprive them of that which they should never have any possibility to obtain But saith the Apostle there was no such rest to be entred into by them in Davids time but only the rest of heaven therefore David in that place cited by the Apostle could meane no other rest but the rest of heaven To make good this argument he gives a sufficient enumeration of all the kindes of rests which were possible to be meant by David in the place alleadged which must all of them have this condition that they might be entred into by men which were three the rest of the Sabbath the rest of Canaan and the rest of heaven into all which men had a possibility to enter Now the rest out of which they are threatned to be excluded must be a rest which they had not already entred into But saith our Apostle into two of these Rests men had entred before Davids time into the rest of the Sabbath from the foundation of the world in which God rested after he had perfected his workes and into the rest of Canaan
they had never heard before yea neither the Elders nor any of the people so much as enquire of Moses what he meant by that name of a Sabbath as they would have done if the name had been new unto them but depart satisfied with Moses his answer without any farther scruple or enquiry Besides the Lord by Moses rebuking those that contrary to Gods Commandement went out to seek food on the Sabbath day expresseth himselfe to them in this manner How long will ye refuse to keep my Commandements and my Laws implying that this was a continued breach of the Sabbath as well as of other Laws of God By all those circumstances laid together and duely weighed it will appeare that the observation of the Rest of the Sabbath was well known to the Church of God by a long continued Law delivered from hand to hand to posterity although in processe of time much disused and neglected by men in the course of their practise especially in the Aegyptian bondage To elude the force of this Argument Objection 16 The Sabbath was not instituted till Exod. 16. And upon occasion of a double miracle 1. The giving of a double portion of Manna on the sixt day 2. And preserving it uncorrupted till the next day there are that affirme that Moses Exod. 16. mentions not the Sabbath as a thing formerly known but delivers it at that time as a new Ordinance from God himselfe instituted by him by occasion of giving them a double portion of Manna upon the sixth day and consequently being a Commandement then first given it was impossible to be known before Thus they make this declaration of Moses Exod. 16.23 to be the first institution of the Sabbath whereunto they say God prepares the people by a double miracle The First the giving a double portion of Manna on the sixth day The Second the preserving of that Manna which was left on the sixth day uncorrupted that it might serve them for food on the seventh day whereas upon other daies that which was reserved and kept till the next morning stanck and was full of wormes Exod. 16.20 And besides the words To morrow shall be the Sabbath carry the forme of an institution And that it may carry the full form of an Institution they render that clause ver 23. not as we doe To morrow is the Sabbath of the Lord but as it best suites with their owne purpose To morrow shall be the Sabbath of the Lord that the whole sentence joyned together in this form This is that which the Lord hath said to morrow shall be the Rest of the holy Sabbath unto the Lord may carry with it the compleat forme of an Institution To begin Answer 17 first with the double miracle the former of them which was the giving of a double portion of Manna on the sixth day 1. The first miracle 1. Perhaps was none at all may be questioned whether it were a miracle or no it is out of question that the stinting of the gathering of Manna upon the other daies was by the melting of it through the heate of the Sun ver 21. Now if it were longer before the heate of the Sunne did breake out upon the sixth day and by that meanes they had more time for the gathering of their Manna upon that day then they had upon other dayes what miracle was that that the same persons in a longer time gathered twise so much as they had done in a shorter time before 2. If it were it honoured the sixth day not the seventh Besides if it should be esteemed a miracle it honoured the sixth day on which it happened and not the seventh day which succeeded it 2. The second was certainly no miracle at all The second pretended miracle was questionlesse none at all For Manna being so pure a food might easily without a miracle be kept uncorrupted a day and an halfe as our ordinary provisions are preserved much longer without any corruption at all Nay rather the corrupting of that food so suddenly-upon other daies that being sweet at night it should not only stinck but be full of wormes too by the next morning seemes if any thing to be miraculous As for the formality of the words of this pretended institution which they make out of them by translating them according to their own phantasie First the Originall no more favours their interpretation then ours 3. The words in the Originall are only to morrow the Sabbath without is or shall be the words translated exactly are these To morrow the Sabbath of the Lord without is or shall be Secondly the context if it be well examined seemes rather to favour our then their interpretation neither can it be proved that there lies any command at all in that clause which they take for the institution And are a reason not acommand which seems more probably to be a reason of the command it selfe It is true the clause prefixed gives notice of a command to follow but of what Commandement Not of any command expressed in the clause immediately following but of that which comes after Bake that which ye will bake c. Which is indeed an expresse command seems to be the only direction given by Moses from God to the Elders the former words expressing only the reason of that which they enquired after why God had given them a double portion of Manna on the sixth day Namely because he would not have the Rest of the holy Sabbath violated by gathering of Manna upon the seventh day To examin things somewhat more distinctly First we have instructions given by God unto Moses and appointed to be delivered by him unto the people containing a promise of giving them Quailes and Manna and of Manna a double portion on the sixth day Reasons why those words Exod. 16.23 can be no institution of the Sabbath that they might not be put to the labour of gathering any upon the seventh day and withall a direction to prepare that overplus which they should gather that it might serve for provision for the day following but in these instructions which God gives to Moses there is not a word of the Sabbath 1. God mentions not the Sabbath in his directions to Moses but only upon the by Againe in Moses his directions which he gives unto the people from God all that he commands them is concerning Manna the Sabbath is mentioned only occasionally If God had minded to give this charge to Moses to deliver this Law for the observation thereof to his people he would not have given him such exact rules concerning the use of Manna and passed over the Sabbath almost in silence But it appeares plainly that only the direction of God concerning Manna and the use thereof was that new Commandement which he was to deliver to the people and therefore is fully and cleerely expressed whereas the Sabbath as being mentioned by him occasionally is passed
a particular day Ha doth not alwaies notifie 2. Where it doth it points out things by their eminency as well as by their particularity of purpose to point out a particular day as that particule usuall restraines an indefinite signification to a particular To this we answer First though this particle ha doe often notifie or put an Emphasis to the word to which it is prefixed yet very often it hath no notification nor Emphasis at all Secondly when it does notifie it notes out things by their eminency as well as by their particularity as if we should translate it in English That seventh day why may it not signifie that eminent Seventh day Objection 2 as well as that particular seventh day Ha added to a Numerall notes alwaies a particular Yea they replie but Ha added to a Numerall notes alwaies a particular of that number We answer divers instances may be given to the contrary where ha prefixed to a Numerall notes nothing at all Answer Not alwaies Instances to the contrary The foure branches of the River of Paradise are reckoned up by the names of first second third and fourth Gen. 2.11.13 14. where ha is prefixed to them all yet signifies indefinitely without Emphasis or respect to order The Pillars in the Temple Jachim and Boaz are numbred the first and second 1 King 7.16 and have ha prefixed yet signifie no more but one and the other without reference to order Iosephs brethren answer him concerning themselves and their brethren One is not the particle ba which is prefixed notes not which of their brethren whether eldest or second or sixth or eleventh it was that was not But suppose ha Objection 13 in this place notifies a particular why may it not note a partibular in proportion as well as in order Seventh in the reason of the Commandement implies seventh in order therefore it is so to be understood here The Second reason which they bring to prove that Seventh in this place must necessarily signifie seventh in order or the last of seven is this The same seventh day say they must be meant in this place in the explication of the Commandement which is meant afterwards in the confirmation of it But in that confirmation the seventh day mentioned is the last of seven therefore it must be so taken here Answer To this we answer It will appeare when we come to the reason that it is not so taken there that admitting that the tearme seventh is so taken in the next verse that proves not that it is so to be taken here unlesse it be manifest withall that the force of the reason of the Commandement lies in the taking of the tearme Seventh in that sense which will appeare to be otherwise for we shall shew that the strength of the confirmation of the argument lies in the tearme Seventh taken indefinitely not taken particularly that is for seventh in proportion not for seventh in order All words and phrases used in Arguments are not argumentative All tearms in an argument are not ●rgumenttaive some of them serve only to fill up the sense but prove nothing at all As for example Moses Deut. 4.15 16. to disswade the people from making any resemblance of God reasons in this manner Some are added to fill up the sense only and have no force of reason in them You saw no manner of similitude when the Lord spake unto you in Horeb out of the midst of the fire take heed therefore lest you corrupt your selves In this argument the naming of the place where and the fire in which God appeared to his people only fill up the narration the whole force of the argument lies in this that because they saw no similitude therefore they should make none So it is in Gods mentioning his Rest on the seventh day In this Cōmandement which we have before us Gods manifesting of the perfecting of the worlds Creation by his resting on the seventh day could not be clearly expressed without mentioning the day in which he rested which was indeed the seventh day from the Creation but the Lord proves nothing from the order but from the proportion of the time wherein he rested In arguing the tearms of the proporsion to be proved must where there is any Ambiguity interpret the tearmes of the argument because the argument is brought for the proporsition to be proved not the proposition for the argument The proposition to be proved then being that one day in seven must be consecrated unto God and the arguments brought to prove it being taken from Gods resting one day in seven although that happened to be the last of the seven daies yet the proportion of the time of rest being the only thing intended to be proved is the only thing to be respected both in the argument and in the tearms wherein it is expressed So then hitherto we see no reason why the tearme Seventh in the explication of the Commandement may not be taken indefinitely for one in seven as well as particularly and strictly for the last in seven Yea if all circumstances be duly weighed the taking of the tearme Seventh indefinitely best sutes with the principall scope which God aimes at in this Law and with the coherence of the Text. The strongest of those arguments which evince this truth it will be most convenient to forbeare till hereafter In the meane time we may take notice of this by the way that the very clause precedent to these words directs us to take the tearme Seventh in this place indefinitely The allowing of sixe daies for labour indefinitely directs to take the seventh indefinitely as pointing only at the proportion and not all at the order of the time wherein we are to rest First this is evident and unquestionable that God dividing the whole week into seven parts allowes unto us sixe daies for the dispatch of our businesse in our secular affaires and reserves the seventh for himselfe for his own worship In the next place it is as cleare that as the sixe daies allowed for labour are to be taken so we must take the seventh which is set apart for this holy Rest Now that these sixe daies allowed unto us for our labour are to be taken indefinitely and to be respected only according to the proportion of the time I conceive no man with any colour of reason can deny seeing the maine thing that God insists on and labours to cleare unto us is that sixe daies are sufficient for the dispatch of our secular affaires Now if the proportion of time be all that God respects in the sixe daies of labour then the proportion of time must needs be all that God can intend in the seventh day which he sets apart for a day of rest The next clause in the Law followes Is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God that is Sabbath of the Lord thy God that is consecrated and dedicated to him a day
it had been so expressed And questionlesse the second Commandement had been plainer if it had been expressed in some such manner as this Thou shalt not worship me with any worship of thine owne devising but in such manner and in the use of such ordinances as I shall prescribe 2. And the Commandement for baptizing of Infants And it had been plainer if our Saviour in giving commission to his Apostles to baptize had exprefly named the Infants of beleeving Parents as he did in commanding them to be Circumcised Many passages in Scripture might have been expressed in plainer tearms then those in which they are delivered It is enough to satisfie any sober mind that God who was at liberty to expresse himselfe as he pleased thought it fit to speak to us in this manner We may adde farther if we observe it well God manifests great wisdome in penning the second The discovery of such changes to follow had brought the services into contempt and fourth Commandements in this obscure manner for if God had in the second Commandement expressed himselfe at full that the Iews should for the present worship him according to the ordinances which Moses gave them but after the comming of the Messiah they should in stead of them use such Rites as he should ordaine And if in the fourth Commandement he had thus expressed himselfe Your Sabbath for the present shall be the last day of the week but after the Resurrection of Christ you shall change it to the first day of the week the discovery of the changes to come in the Rites and form of Gods worship had in all probability bred in Gods people a contempt of those duties which they were to perform at present as being temporary and imperfect and such as were to give place to better ordinances that were to succeed them which they could not endure to heare of Acts. 6.14 It pleased God therefore to pen the Law in such a form that his people might understand out of it as much as concerned them to practise at present and yet we Christians might find in it farther directions when there should be occasion to make use of them Gods wisdome in concealing these changes illustrated by the policy of Princes Thus Princes sometimes to keep their Counsells secret send out their commands with sufficient instructions what to doe at present and with farther Commissions sealed up and not to be opened till they come to the place where those farther directions which are contained therein are to be put in execution Having now examined the reason of this Commandement For in the Law shews the equity of the proportioning of the time set a part for this rest and shewed how it must be deduced and applied let us next consider the words wherein it is expressed This particle For referres both to our labour of sixe daies and rest upon the seventh manifests the equity of the Law in requiring such a rest of us as if we deale providently in managing our affaires needs not to hinder them seeing God allows as much time to us for the dispatch of our business as he took up in the Creation of the world requiring no more of us but the setting apart one day in seven to be kept holy in remembrance of the Creation of the world and that too for our own comfort improvement in grace and for the farther quickning and strengthening of our souls In sixe daies God made all things and therefore by sixe daies labour can and will assist thee to dispatch all thy work as well as for his own honour and glory In sixe daies God made heaven earth c. and therefore both is able and as a faithfull Creator will be ready to assist and prosper thee so in all thy labours that all thy businesse shall be dispatched in sixe daies namely whatsoever thy calling and needfull occasions shall require to be done as God in sixe daies created whatsoever was needfull as is implied in these words All that in them is It hath been before observed that Gods creation of the world is often mentioned as a meanes to move men to depend upon him and it may be probably conceived is remembred here to stay our murmuring at the sparing of one day weekly from our implomyments And rested the Seventh day which must not therefore be the last day of the week And rested c. And 1. thereby established his work 1. And rejoyced in it but is mentioned here only as one of seven not as the last of seven This was not a totall cessation whereof God being a continuall Act is uncapable but only a resting from works of Creation and implies two acts of God The first the establishing and setling all his works to continue in himselfe according to his own Ordinances Psal 119.89 90 91. The other his rejoycing and delighting himselfe in the work of his hands This Rest of God was not as ours for a day only for he never wrought in the work of Creation any more and may perhaps point at our eternall Rest wherein we shall cease from all our labours for ever Therefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day Therefore the Lord blessed c. as declaring by his rest that the Creation was perfected and sanctified it because he had by his resting on that day manifested the perfecting of the Creating of the world all things being made that were needfull so that there was no cause to goe on with that work of Creation any longer wherefore in memory of this great work of the Creation of the world God sanctified this day as being dignified above other daies by perfecting of so glorious a work Gods blessing of the day is the ordaining of it to be a day of blessing a day of thriving in Grace and abounding in spirituall comforts a day of rejoycing in God and his goodnes and encouraging our selves by the remembrance thereof to serve the Lord with chearfulnesse and gladnesse of heart Sanctifying is a setting apart of the day unto God to be imployed in holy exercises as preaching hearing reading praying c. Thus farre then we find in examining the phrases and expressions of the fourth Commandement nothing that may enforce us to acknowledge any thing to be Ceremonious in this Law nor consequently mutable seeing the set day of rest being not commanded there in particular but onely assigned by a generall rule which is appliable to the Sabbath of the Christans as well as to that of the Jewes in changing of the first day of rest there is nothing altered in the Law It remaines only that we examine whether we finde any Ceremony in the rest which if we doe not we must acknowledge that the Church of God is for ever bound to the observation of this Objection 1 as much as to any other of the Morall Laws The rest of the Sabbath was a type of Christs rest in the grave and therefore abolished
4. Recordation and application afterward hearing of the word without recordation meditation and particular application after we have heard profits not much more then our meats do without digestion Adde unto all these 5. Instructions to the family 6. Works of mercy instructions to the family Works of mercy in visiting of the sick comforting the afflicted relieving the poor c. and we shall find little spare-time left on the Lords day for other then religious and holy employments As for the objection that the Jews are precisely restrained from going out of their places to gather Manna on the Sabbath day or kindle a fire throughout their habitations on that day Exod. 35.3 For the restraint from going out to gather Manna we know that must needs be taken away when Manna ceased and bound the Jews no longer who had liberty otherwise not only to go out of their places but to go small journies on the Sabbath daies as appears Acts 1.12 As for the inhibition to kindle a fire on the Sabbath day some conceive it respected only the building of the Tabernacle which work though God would have hastned yet he would not have the rest of the Sabbath violated for the furthering thereof nor so much as a fire kindled in any of their tents about that work to which they alleage that charge of building the Tabernacle and of forbidding work on the Sabbath day go both together both Gods direction to Moses Exod. 13.11 13. and in the delivery thereof to the people Exod. 35.2 3 4. Howsoever that inhibition of kindling fire was but temporary during the Israelites peregrination in the wildernesse The reasons by which it appears that this restraint of kindling a fire on the Sabbath day was only temporary Restraint from kindling a fire on the Sabbath was but temporary 1. It hath not the form of a continuing ordinance 2. It crosseth our Saviours rule The Sabbath was made for man 3. The loosing of a beast on the Sabbath allowed 4. Christ was at a great feast on the Sabbath which could not be without a fire are these First we find not the usuall clause which is added in most ordinances which were to continue added in this restraint that it should be observed throughout their generations Secondly this seems to crosse our Saviours generall rule Mark 2.27 That the Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath he means for mans comfort and refreshing for which kindling of fire and dressing of meat may be and are in a sort necessary Thirdly our Saviour allows the loosing of a beast from the stall and leading of him to the water on the Sabbath day now we know the beast might be provided for by setting water in the stall over-night which would refresh it sufficiently and better then meat dressed overnight could comfort many men Fourthly we find our Saviour present at a great feast Luk. 14.1 where many and it seems persons of quality vers 7.12 were bidden now it is very unlikely that the provisions for that feast were dressed over night and if it were dressed on that day neither would the Pharisee have permitted nor our Saviour have countenanced the dinner with his presence if dressing of meat kindling of fires on the Sabbath day had been forbidden by the law Now why the dressing of Manna while the Israelites were in their peregrination in the wildernesse was forbidden though the dressing of other meats might be allowed afterwards there may be some reason given For Manna it may be might be as good and comfortable eaten cold as hot and the preparing overnight might be no inconvenience at all howsoever it is out of question that in that unsetled condition of the Israelites wandring in the wildernesse when they were enforced to pick up fewell where they could get it baking and boyling must needs be more troublesome and laborious then it was afterwards in Canaan where being setled in their dwellings they had all things whereof they were to make use for such works provided and ready at hand But to conclude suppose the strictnesse of the rest unto which the Iews were bound Howsoever such strictnesse of rest was not required of them by the fourth Commandement to have been as great as they imagine it must needs be granted that there is no clause in the fourth Commandement that enjoyns it which requires no more then a rest from our ordinary secular employments that we may be at leisure to attend wholly upon the duties of religious worship that we consecrate the whole day unto God as the words of that law do cleerly expresse it So the rest of the laws that enjoyn such strictnesse of rest being taken away the fourth Commandement may remain fully in force in every clause of it And as it hath been already intimated it concerns us to take speciall notice of Gods expression Six days shalt thou labour and do all thy work by which he can mean nothing else but the works of our particular callings which only may be properly called our works for there be generall works which be proper to all callings and subordinate thereunto as to eat and drink and to cloath our selves and to make use of the rest of the comforts of this life by which we are strengthned and enabled to labour in our particular callings These cannot properly be called our works and are as well to be done on the Sabbath as on other days with this difference only that whereas they are done on other days to enable us to labour they are to be done on the Sabbath to strengthen us to holy duties These reasons which we have laid down before amount to little lesse then a Demonstration that the rest of the Sabbath must be the rest of a whole day or the seventh part of the week which we Christians have both as much cause and as much need to consecrate unto God as ever the Iews had in times past And that we may do it with as little detriment to our selves in our secular affairs and with as much assurance to have our labours of six days so blessed that they shall be sufficient for the dispatch of our needfull employments is evident by the reason which is annexed to that Commandement which proves it by the creation of the world by God in six days a ground of faith which concerns us as well as the Iews Wherefore seeing we have as great reason as great helps and as great encouragements by the assurance of Gods blessing upon our six days labour to sanctifie an entire day of holy rest unto God as the Iews had And seeing the expresse words of the law appoint the whole day to be consecrated unto God why should not we take our selves to be as strongly bound as the Iews were to the keeping of the holy rest of this whole day which we call the Sabbath seeing there appears no sufficient reason why we should judge any jot or title of this law
help to those that ask it Iames 1.5 as his children finde by their owne experience 1 Ioh. 2.27 The publishing of this Treatise is by the Providence of God cast into the last of my daies perhaps that you might lay neerer to your hearts and more heedfully remember the last words and counsels of your dying Pastor as usually the last directions and advise of dying Parents or other neer friends make a strong impression upon the hearts of those to whom they are given Withall seeing being shortly to be taken from you I shall be able to doe you no more service in mine owne person I desire to leave this monument behind me that when I shall be seen no more being dead I may yet speake unto you as Abel is said to doe Heb. 11.4 And now Brethren I know you cannot but be very sensible of that sad condition into which you were lately reduced when not onely you suffered the spoiling of your goods but your very lives did hang in doubt before you and you feared day and night having no assurance of your lives as the Lord threatens it should happen to his people Deut. 28.66 And I desire that the memory of those sad times may be still fresh in your minds that your flesh may still tremble for the feare of God and you may be afraid of his Judgements to use the Psalmists phrase Psal 119.120 that observing for what evills the wrath of God was then kindled against you you may the more carefully watch over your waies for time to come that you provoke not the Lord hereafter to powre out his indignation in some more fearefull judgement whose hand you have found so heavy upon you in what you have felt already Notwithstanding I beseech you withall take notice of a mixture of many mercies even with that heavy Judgement As first that God gave you yet your lives for a prey which is all the favour that he promised Baruch Ier. 45.5 and that not onely by preserving you from the enemies sword but besides by withdrawing his owne hand when the last yeare he called to contend by the Pestilence which brake in upon you severall times and by severall waies and yet gleaned onely a few amongst you here and there at that time when some other Townes were almost layed wast by the same stroake of Gods hand but the Lord still repented him for this and said it shall not be Amos 7.3 6. Againe though your estates were wasted yet your dwellings were preserved that you might not bee as Sodome or like unto Gomorrah as some other places are as it was often threatned and as often really intended by your enemies and had questionles been accordingly executed had not the Lord by his Power and Providence almost miraculously prevented it saying unto them as he doth unto the sea Job 38.11 Hitherto shalt thou come and no farther and here shall thy proud waves be stayed as if God had reasoned with himselfe as he doth concerning his owne people Hos 11.8 9. How shall I give thee up Ephraim how shall I deliver thee Israel how shall I make thee as Admah how shall I set thee as Zeboim mine heart is turned within me my repentings are kindled together I will not execute the fiercenesse of mine Anger I will not returne to destroy Ephraim for I am God and not man c. Above all the rest of Gods favours mixed with those judgements which you lately felt esteeme not this as the least that although your Teachers have been driven into corners yet they have been by Gods goodnesse preserved for your farther service and are now restored to you in safety that your eyes behold them and your eares heare their voice shewing you the way that you should walke in when you turne aside to the right or left hand a mercy which God accompts sufficient to sweeten even the bread of adversity and the water of affliction Isay 30.20 And even that want of them for a while may be of speciall use to you to warne you to set an higher price on Gods Ordinances hereafter and to answer them with proportionable fruits lest God bring upon you that heavy judgement threatned against his owne people the utter taking away of his Kingdome from them to bestow it on a people that might yeeld him a better accompt thereof Mat. 21.43 As for the losses which you have sustained in your outward Estates which considering how long you were in the enemies hand were lesse then most other Townes have felt if you suffer any hurt thereby you have none to blame but your selves If God by your owne experience shew you the vanity of these outward things which we cannot hold when we have them that availe not in the day of wrath Prov. 11.4 that comfort us least when we need it most that too often prove snares unto us while we enjoy them and leave us nothing but sorrowes when we lose them and thereby take off your hearts from loving and depending on them that yee may take care to lay up your Treasures in Heaven as our Saviour adviseth Mat. 6.20 out of the reach of thieves and plunderers which we may truely conceive to be the end that God aimed at in delivering you into the hands of spoylers and robbers you may become great gainers by all your losses I know what carnall reason will suggest that it stands you upon to bee now more earnest in labouring with all diligence to repaire your losses and it grieves my heart to see that this counsel prevailes so much with many that should by this time have learned Christ better Give me leave to lay before you a praecedent of your owne About 34. yeares since the Lord sent upon this towne a fearefull fire which consumed the best part of it the losse at an under value amounting to more then fourty thousand pounds What fell out thereupon There met together about seven or eight well-affected persons and agreed to contribute in money and annuities out of their Lands the summe of eight hundred pounds for the erecting of an Hospitall for the setting of poore children on worke The whole towne consented to double their weekely rates for reliefe of the poore enlarged their Churches and reduced the towne into order by good governement What gained they by all this within the compasse of six or seaven yeares God so poured out his blessings upon the place that it was in that short space in better condition then it had been before that calamity fell upon them Can you have a better argument then that which is taken from experience among your selves Or is there to bee found a surer or more comfortable way of making up your losses then that which you found so successefull then Follow their steps honour God with the first of your substance which he hath left you relieve his poore servants set effectually upon the reducing of the towne to order by Government God is still the same God and will not
as Psal 19.7 when it is said that the Law of God converts the soule which is the most proper effect of the Gospell it is evident that in that place under the name of the Law the Psalmist must understand the Gospell too As likewise when he tells us that his delight is in the Law of God which sustained his spirit that he perished not in his afflictions Psal 119.92 he must of necessity understand Gods promises aswell as the precepts of the Law seeing they be the promises rather then the precepts that support the soule in times of triall when we know whom we beleeve who is both able and willing and ready to make good what he hath promised as his children find by experience that there failed not ought of any good which the Lord had spoken unto the house of Israel but all came to passe Iosh 21.45 But as for the Promises especially those that concerne the Kingdome of Christ which were revealed to the Patriarchs delivered by the Prophets and lastly enlarged and more fuly and clearly opened by the Evangelists and Apostles we shall consider them apart hereafter But only the Commandements For the present we have now in hand only that which is properely and most commonly understood by the name of the Law which containe those commandements and rules of practise which God hath given to his Church for her direction and left upon record in the Scriptures Now these we know are distinguished by the names of Laws morall Judiciall Ceremoniall Morall ceremoniall and judiciall which by Moses in sundry places are promiscuously called Laws Statutes Judgements and Ordinances Of these severall sorts of Laws that which we call Morall comes to be handled in the first place Of these this which is called the morall Law because it was given by God for regulating of mens manners and conversation is of all the rest of the Laws most ancient Which is the most ancient of all Laws most generall and most perpetuall First most ancient Psal 119.160 as being given to our first Parents in Paradise As given to Adam in Paradise that is to man assoone as he had any being I grant indeed that we have no record of any other Laws given to Adam but those which we find mentioned Gen. 2. which are only some branches of the Second Commandement in the tree of life of the Fourth in the Institution of the Sabbath of the Seventh in the Law of Marriage and of the Eight in appointing them to keep Paradise which are all of them positive Laws and therefore need to be expresly set down or else they could not have been known whereas the rest of the Laws being all Lawes of nature and therefore discernible by naturall right reason for which cause they are said to be written in mans heart might be known although they were not recorded and therefore are omitted by Moses in that briefe history But that the rest of the morall Precepts were given unto Adam although perhaps not by word of mouth Either by word or written in his heart but written in his heart at the same time must needs be granted unlesse we conceive that God made Adam more imperfect then any other of his creatures for that he gave all the rest of the creatures rules of their motions and operations either imprinted in their natures if they want sense or by the direction of sense in those that have it is as cleare as the light Now that God should either give no law or which is almost one an imperfect law to man who most needed was most capable and best able to make use of a law must needs much disparage either his kindnesse to mankind or his wisdome in rendring the most eminent and serviceable of all the creatures upon earth unusefull and unprofitable at the least for most part if he had no perfect law to guide him It must therefore be necessarily granted that the whole morall Law was given to Adam that is to mankind in Paradise And consequently most universall as given to the whole nature of man in him and by necessary consequent must be acknowledged to be of all laws the most ancient and upon the same ground must necessarily be generall or universall seeing it was given in our first parents to the whole nature of man which when that law was given was wholly in them It is true that the change of mans condition by Adams fall hath seemed to cause some small alteration in the law as it is not a duty that now binds us to labour in Paradise or to abstain from the one or to eate of the other of the trees that stood in the midst of it Notwithstanding even by that law all men in generall are bound to labour in such employments as God cals them unto and to abstain from all things that God forbids and to make use of all such ordinances as the Lord appoints for the confirmation and strengthening of their faith So that those laws given to Adam bind all men still in the grounds and scope of them although they oblige not his posterity in those things which had relation to that state wherein he then stood and from which afterwards he so sodainly fell And upon the same ground it must as necessarily follow Upon the same ground those morall lawes must needs be perpetuall that those laws which were given to Adam are perpetuall to continue as long as men have a being on earth For seeing they were given to him as the root of mankind they necessarily bind his posterity in succeeding generations to the end of the world We never find any new law given to the Church in any age It is true that the law given to Adam hath been since renewed perhaps to Noah after the floud Which have been renued as may be probably guessed by that which we read concerning murther Gen. 9.6 And it may be to Abraham after God called him out from Vr of the Chaldeans seing we find him commended for keeping Gods commandements his statutes and his laws Gen. 26.5 But most fully and cleerly it was renewed and restored by Moses upon mount Sinai But not altered And that the law then published for the substance of it was no new law appears by comparing the law given to Adam which is in effect the same with the second fourth seventh and eighth commandements of the decalogue with which in a generall consideration they are all one if they be compared together That this which we call the Morall law was founded for ever as the Psalmist witnesseth Psal 119.152 and was to remain and to be observed as a rule of life unto Gods Church our Saviour himselfe witnesseth in expresse words Mat. 5.18 where he professeth that untill heaven and earth passe that is till the worlds end one jot or one tittle shall not passe from the law Wherefore whatsoever was praescribed in that law we may observe and guide our selves
over in few words Again for three reasons we cannot conceive that in this Exod. 16. there is any institution of the Sabbath at all For first 2. There happened at that time no memorable event to ground an institution here is no ground of instituting a festivall day seeing that must needs be some memorable event which dignifies that day that is to be consecrated above other days which is a rule which God and the Church and even heathen men by the light of nature guided themselves by Secondly here is no convocation of the people 3. The people are not convened as they ought to have been to receive this law who ought to have been assembled to hear that law that they must all obey as they were not only Exod. 20. when God himself delivered them the morall law upon mount Sinai but also when Moses his servant delivers unto them from God the Ceremoniall and Judiciall Laws Exod. 34.32 35.1 whereas here we find only a meeting of the Elders But only the Elders and that occasionally only and that too occasionally not by the call of Moses but their voluntary recourse to him to enquire the reason why the people had gathered a double portion of Manna on the sixth day and what should be done with it Thirdly 4. Here is no direction for the observation of this new feast here is no direction for the observation of this new feast and without it the law is not only imperfect but in effect no law at all Whereas there is a full direction for the use of their double portion of Manna which makes it evident that the ordering of their Manna must needs be the only charge which the Lord sent by Moses to the people Others therefore there are who go not so far as to plead for the institution of the Sabbath in this Exod. 16. Objection 21 Though the words amounted to an institution yet they are a preparation to a following institution but will have these words of Moses to be only in the nature of a preparation to an institution which was to follow To this also we answer First that this opinion is pressed with the same difficulties that the former is if things be duly weighed Answer 1. The same reasons are against that too 2. There is no like instance in giving any other law 3. What needs it 4. Why is this ground omitted in the fourth Commandement Secondly let them but give us one instance of any such kind of preparation used before the giving of any other law Thirdly let them shew us what need there is of any such preparation at all when the people were almost immediately after to be prepared in so solemn a manner for the receiving of that and the rest of the laws Lastly if the giving of a double portion of Manna on the sixth day or the ceasing of Manna on the seventh were such great means to win credit to this new Sabbath how is it that neither the one nor other is so much as once mentioned in that whole fourth Commandement wherein notwithstanding is so fully and largely laid down the ground of the institution of that law especially this mercy being so new and fresh in memory whereas God in the fourth Commandement goes back to the beginning of the world to seek out another and firmer foundation of instituting the Sabbath without mentioning of this at all Thus when all circumstances are duly weighed it will easily appear to any not forestalled by prejudice that in this Exod. 16. Moses speaks of the Sabbath to the Elders of Israël Whence it appears that Moses mentions the Sabbath to the Elders Exod. 16.23 as a thing known as of a thing well known unto them before-hand and by consequent which the Jewes were wel-acquainted with before the Law was given to Moses on mount Sinai whereupon it must needs follow that they received it from the Patriarchs delivered from hand to hand as other truths and laws of God were and consequently by that the Patriarchs in their generations observed the Sabbath although their observation thereof be not left upon record by Moses whose task was not to write a diary of the Fathers lives but to leave to posterity the remembrance of the most memorable examples both of their actions and of the events that befell them both for Gods honour and our instruction SECT III. The morality and perpetuity of the Sabbath proved out of the fourth Commandement IF this principle which will at last appear to be an undoubted truth were generally received and acknowledged that the whole Decalogue is morall and consequently immutable this question concerning the morality of the Sabbath were at an end Now the generall opinion wherewith most men are possessed but without any firm ground either out of reason or Scripture that it must needs be granted that there is something ceremoniall in the fourth Commandement either the set day or the strict rest of the Sabbath or both hath been a great occasion of begetting and cherishing this errour that there is something mutable in the Decalogue and consequently that it is neither morall nor perpetuall If therefore upon a due and thorough examination of all the severall clauses and expressions which we meet with in the fourth Commandement we can make it appear that there is nothing in that fourth Commandement that is any way ceremoniall and therefore mutable we shall remove a great scruple which hath long troubled the minds of many men divers of them much esteemed both for their learning and piety Before we begin to take this task in hand it will be needfull to premise this one thing by way of caution That in this case we are not bound to prove that the phrases and expressions which we meet withall in this Commandement The words of of the fourth Commandement in a fair construction enjoyn nothing ceremoniall neither in the day nor rest can have no other sense then that in which we take them It will be sufficient for us to make it appear that according to the usuall course of grammaticall construction and without any incoherence or incongruity with other parts of the law they may be taken in such a sense as we give them For if we can but make this appear that our construction of the words is as fair and proper as any other that is given by others the consequent of establishing the immutability of the Decalogue is of that weight that I conceive any man of two probable interpretations will be willing to embrace that which most makes for the establishing of the morall law Which is as much as needs to be proved It must therefore be our care to make it appear that the sense which we give of the words of this law may stand according to a fair and usuall manner of grammaticall construction and those that will oppose us must prove on the other side that it cannot stand That we may proceed
methodically in the interpretation of the Commandement we must first enquire what the scope is at which it aimes The appointing of a day of rest cannot be the scope of the fourth Commandement For all Laws being rules directed to some end proposed cannot so well be interpreted any way as by the end unto which they are directed Now the appointing of a day of rest cannot possibly be the last scope of this Commandement seeing we know rest from labour is enjoyned to give us freedome for holy duties and the exercising of our selves therein But of rest for holy duties which consequently must be the principall thing intended in the fourth Commandement But then it will be questioned to what kind of holy duties this day is consecrated For there are many that imagine that God hath set it apart only for duties of publike worship Publick and private But this opinion seemes not to agree with the letter of the Law which in expresse tearms gives the whole day unto the Lord for his own immediate service in religious worship Now we know publike worship takes not up the whole day It must needs be granted therefore the Lord appointed that day of holy rest for the performance of something more unto God then publike worship and so much is expresly affirmed Isa 58.13 where we are forbidden to find our own pleasure or speak our own words upon that day which as all men must acknowledge must needs extend to the ordering of our carriage in private as well as in publike so that the setting apart of a whole day of rest unto God for his publike and private worship seemes to be the full scope of this fourth Commandement Next to the scope of this Law 3 Parts of the fourth Commandement the 1. Summe 2. Explication 3. Reason we are to consider advisedly the frame and composure of it and therein we are first to take notice of the principall parts of the Law which we shall find to be three First we have laid down unto us the summe of the Law Exod. 20.8 Secondly we have the explication of that sum ver 9. Thirdly we have the reason of all v. 11. Each of these two first parts containe three heads of duties pointed out in the summe and opened and unfolded in the explication and confirmed in the reason of the Law The first duty is Preparation intimated in the word Remember The second the Sequestration from ordinary employments implied in the word Sabbath The third is Sanctification of that rest expressed in the phrase to keepe it holy All these are explained in their order Our Preparation must be by the dispatch of all our Secular affaires in six daies Our rest must be a cessation by all persons from our usuall labours and imployments in secular affaires The Sanctification of our rest must be by employing our selves in holy duties The confirmation of all follows in the reason of the Law of Preparation and rest from Gods own Act of Creating the world in sixe daies and ceasing from his work on the seventh and the Sanctifying of that rest from Gods Commandement and ordaining the seventh day to be a day of rest unto us for ever Now wherein the strength of that Confirmation lies will be the maine point in question of which hereafter To come now to the Explication of the words and phrases in this Commandement The first word in the summe of this Law Remember is diversly interpreted some conceive that it implies the importance of the duty commanded as that word is used many times to intimate some matter of speciall observation as Deut. 9.7 Others there are that think it points at the Antiquity of that Law given many ages before and therefore to be called afresh to minde as the Psalmist saith he will remember the works of the Lord his wonders of old Psal 177.11 and 143.5 and withall some conceive that he taxeth the peoples forgetfulnesse of that Law and neglect of the observation of it in the time of their bondage in Aegypt Some or all of these senses may be implied in this word Remember but beyond all these we may probably conceive that it may import Remember implies Think upon and by dispatching of thy busines provide for the Sabbath Think upon and accordingly before-hand provide for the observation of this holy rest by dispatching of all the works of thy calling that nothing may be undone which providence and diligence might prevent that might hinder thy rest on the seventh day As for those which conceive that in this Law labour upon the sixe daies is commanded as well as rest upon the seventh they are much mistaken The precept for labour is delivered in the eight Commandement as the Apostle interprets that Law Eph. 4.28 In this place is commanded the dispatch of our secular affaires before the Sabbath whether it be done in six daies or fewer it is not materiall as to this Law The next tearme to be explained Sabbath is a day of rest which only and not seventh is expressed in sum and conclusion of the Commandement is the name of the Sabbath or day of rest and easing from labour as that word properly signifies which is repeated againe in the conclusion of the Commandement And it is not to be passed by without observation that whereas the old Sabbath from the beginning till Christ came was the seventh day or last of the weeke and both in the explanation and reason of the Commandement is appointed to be one of the seven yet God mentions not the name of seven either in the Summe or in the Conclusion of the Commandement We have therefore reason to conceive that seeing God in this Law was to prescribe something of the Law of Nature The day of rest being of the law of nature the set day of positive institution which is the appointing of a day of holy Rest to be consecrated unto God for his worship which the very light of nature teacheth and in the explanation and reason of the Law to adde something which is of positive Institution namely the proportion of the time and the set day wherein this rest was to be observed he first settles that which is of the Law of nature and afterwards establisheth that which is Positive God purposely makes choise of such fit expressions especially in his Law in which he is most exact as may best acquaint us with his minde Wherefore seeing this is a fit Method to be observed by him and seeing the composure of this Law agrees with it we have reason to conclude that the Lord himselfe intended it in this place The last phrase in the sum of this Commandement remains which is To keep it holy To keep holy is to employ the day in holy duties of Gods immediate worship Now to keep a day holy is to employ it in holy actions directed to the immediate service and worship of God in the use of such
establish in his kingdome both the Psalmist and the rest of the Prophets describe and set out unto us at large These which we have mentioned are some of the speciall things How to affect our hearts in the reading of these Prophesies whereof we are to take notice in reading the writings of the Prophets wherewith if we mean throughly to affect our hearts we must not only be perswaded that these things which were written beforehand were written for our learning as Saint Paul speaks Rom. 15.4 but must besides set them before our eyes as precedents and examples as he represents and applies them 1 Cor. 10.6 So that in reading of these Prophesies delivered to the Iews we must represent them to our selves not so much as the people of such a Nation but under the notion of the Church of God which now claime to be as they were at that time So that not only any people that is owned and esteemed to be a Church of God but besides any particular person that is a member of that Church ought so to heare and read the words of these Prophesies as to apply them to themselves in particular to take themselves taxed in their reproofes threatned in the judgements denounced against them and comforted in their promises seeing we know that all these are directed to and executed upon the Iews as not being such a Nation but as being the people and the Church of God So that in them as in a patterne there is laid before us the course and rule of Gods administration towards his Church in what Nation of the world soever it be planted Having now in briefe considered what use may be made of the reading of prophesies How to make use of examples recorded in Scripture we have now left us in the last place to be considered only the examples of the actions of men what use we may make of them for our own instructions and how farre we may follow them by way of imitation in the course of our practice Now it must be remembred that we have already taken notice of the actions of men in relation to the Providence of God dispensing either in mercy or judgement to every one according to his deeds We are now to consider the actions of those which are godly how far they may be of use to us for instruction First Examples are not the rule of our practice but the Law we must lay down this an evident truth that we have no rule but the Law onely that can warrant us in any thing that we doe That is our righteousnesse if we observe to doe all the Commandements of the Lord our God as he hath commanded us Deut. 6.25 The things that are revealed belong to us and to our children that we may doe them Deut. 29.29 As for the Apostles exhortations to us to be followers of him 1 Cor. 4.16 Phil. 3.17 they must be understood with the limitation expressed 1 Cor. 11.1 Be followers of me as I also am of Christ Now these examples which we are to take notice of are either the examples of Christ or of holy and godly men Concerning the examples of Christ In the examples of our Saviour that we may know what to imitate in them we must confider in him his Deity his Offices and his humane nature in which he was made under the Law Gal. 4.4 What he did by the power of his Deity we cannot imitate In respect of his Deity he did many things unimitable by us ●s all his Miracles which were wrought by his Divine power of which men are unfurnished and and some other acts of his which he did by his Soveraigne powre And what he did by his Soveraigne power we may not as Lord of all As when he sent his Disciples to fetch away another mans Asse Mat. 21.2 this was just in him which was Lord of all things to command that which was his own but leaves no warrant for us to imitate it being forbidden in the Law to meddle with that which is another mans As for those things which were acted by our Saviour What he did by vertue of his Offices they may imitate that are called to those offices by vertue of his Offices some of them may by fitly proposed for imitation to as many as are called unto the same offices so farre as those offices are communicated to men For it is true that unto the offices of a Priest and Prophet God hath left a succession of men in his Church but not to doe and execute all that Christ himselfe did and might doe by vertue of those offices Unlesse in the office of his Priesthood when he offered himselfe a sacrifice for sinne especially in that office of Priesthood wherein he offered up himselfe unto his Father a Sacrifice for the sinnes of his people which none could do but himselfe alone As for the offering up of Prayers unto God the teaching and instructing of the people in all the Counsells of God reproving of mans wicked lives clearing the truth of God from the corrupt glosses of false teachers they are duties wherein all that are called by God unto those publike offices of instructing the Church not only may and ought to imitate Christ but are bound withall to striv as much as they may to come up to those holy examples that he hath left unto them But wheresoever amongst our Savious actions we find recorded unto us The examples of his obedience to the law we must make use of any example of his obedience unto the Law there we have not onely sufficient warrant to imitate him therein as going before us in the way of Gods Commandements but besides may draw from such actions of his a strong motive to double our endeavours To stir up our selves to the like obedience having him for our pattern to tread in the steps wherein he walks before us and to submit with all readinesse to those duties which we find practised by the Sonne of God himselfe in obedience to his owne Law which seeing he gave unto his Church he might by all right have dispensed with at his pleasure which himselfe allead geth Luk. 6.5 in defence of his Disciples challenged by the Pharisees for breaking the Sabbath that if it had been a breach of the Sabbath he being Lord of the Sabbath had power to dispence with it In the next place for the examples of godly men Mens examples must be followed no farther then they are warranted by the Law we have no warrant to follow them farther then they are warranted by the Law which as we have shewed already is the only rule which we must follow And even in such actions of theirs we have many cautions which we must take with us for direction that we may not misapply their examples as we shall see by and by First therefore we must consider that some things which the Scriptures approve in them And