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A15324 The doctrine of the Sabbath handled in foure seuerall bookes of treatises. The first of which intreateth of the day of rest. The second, of the duties of the day. The third, of the persons whom these duties concerne. And the fourth, the reasons vsed to perswade all persons to the practise of these duties vpon that day. Written by G.W. Master of Arts, and minister of the word of God in Portsmouth. Widley, George, b. 1566 or 7. 1604 (1604) STC 25610; ESTC S119957 129,925 252

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this law was kept thousands of yeres before these ceremonies were added so I see no reason but that they may cōtinue thousands of yeres after they be done away § Sect. 4 In the assured ground of which truth the Apostles being well setled and grounded by the great teacher of the world retaining the rest change the time from the seuenth that the Iewes The change of the time of the Sabbath kept vnto the first day of the weeke Which change of theirs appeareth in their practise that vpon this day they did vsually assemble as wee may see first Ioh. 20. 19. that day vpon which Christ rose they were assembled together then eight daies after which was the next first day of the weeke they were againe assembled vers 26 and Acts 2. 1. when the holie Ghost descended vpon them they were again assembled vpon this day where although the first day of the week be not named yet Pentecost is which fell vpon the first day of the weeke as appeareth by that Leuit. 23. vers 15. where they were required to bring a sheafe of their first fruits the morrow after the Sabbath in the Passeouer and betwixt that and Pentecost they were to reckon fiftie daies so that the day of his resurrection falling the morrow after the Iewes Sabbath which is the first day of the week Pentecost must needs also fall the first day of the weeke And as the Apostles did practise this so did also the whole Church Act. 20. 7. Yea and the Apostle himselfe doth there celebrate this day with the administration of the word and Sacraments As also 1. Cor. 16. 1. hee doth vpon this day ordaine collections in the Church of Corinth like as hee there testifieth he had done in the Church of Galatia And last of all to giue the greater assurance of this Rom. 1. 10 the Apostle calleth it the Lords day thereby as it were vpon his new institution to grace it the more the time being changed as he did the Sacrament in the like manner by calling it the Lords Supper the signe being chaunged 1. Cor. 11. 20. § Sect. 5 Now this they did vpon these reasons First to put a difference betwixt the Iewish Sabbath The reasons of the change and the true Christian Sabbath Secondly because as God the Father did sanctifie the seuenth from the creation by his resting vpon it from the work of the creation so did God the Sonne sanctifie this seuenth from the redemption by his rising againe and resting vpon it from the worke of the redemption Thirdly because that this worke of the redemption being a greater work than that of the creation and his rest from affliction being a greater rest than that from labour it better deserued to beare the name and credit of the day than that from the creation Fourthly because Christ did vouchsafe also to honour this day aboue all the other daies of the weeke by his seuerall appearings vpon it as well as by his rising againe vpon it For vpon this day when hee rose hee appeared foure times first to Mary Magdalen in the morning Ioh. 20. 1. 14. Secondly vnto the other women as they were going to relate vnto the Apostles his resurrection which the Angels had told them of before at the sepulchre Matth. 28. 9. Thirdly to the two Disciples going to Emmaus which also was the same day for they said it was the third day since these things were done Luk. 24. 21. And lastly the same day at night hee appeared vnto his Disciples Ioh. 20. 19. but afterwards though Thomas his faith wanted confirmation in the matter of the resurrection yet hee did not againe manifest himself vntill the returne of the same day which Iohn noteth when he saith hee appeared againe eight daies after vnto them when Thomas was present Fiftly as Christ did vouchsafe to honor this day by his resurrection so also doth the holie Ghost by his descention vpon it for Whitsontide or Pentecost did fall vpon that day as before is manifest And last of all vpon this day began the creation of the world so that vpon this day wee haue to meditate both vpon our creation redemption and sanctification Now vpon all these reasons the Apostles changed the Sabbath into the first day of the weeke Now had they done it because they might do it by their authoritie Apostolique for they were lead into all truth by that spirit which could not erre or had they onely done it because it was meete to be done that the people might be kept from Iudaizing which in trueth inclined too much that way or had they done it because happely the day was ceremoniall who could haue iustly accepted against it But now being they haue done it vpon such reasons as you haue heard it were intollerable for any to call their doings againe into question especially when as yet if we should goe about to mend the choise wee should certainly marre with mending and put out a better and fitter day than wee should put in the roome thereof For if we should place in the roome thereof a shorter time men would crie out wee cannot dispatch our businesse betweene the Sabbaths if a longer then Gods busines should be too much slacked let vs therfore hold the meane which the Apostles haue kept and in truth which euer hath been kept namely one day of seuen holy § Sect. 6 Yea but will some man say all this while wee see no Apostolicall institution for this day A strange case when wee pleade the institution of the Sabbath to prooue the perpetuitie of the Sabbath then men call for the practise thereof now we vrge the practise of the Apostles for the chaunge of the day they call for the institution But as Christ answered the Pharisies when they accused him falsely of breaking the Sabbath Haue you not read what Dauid did how that when he was hungry c. thereby defending that his doing by the example of Dauid in the like case so may we answere those that accuse vs for the keeping of the Sabbath vpon this day Haue you not read what the Apostles and the Church did how they did assemble vpon this day to heare the word and receiue the Sacraments I say haue you not read it If you haue then what meane you yet to call for an institution whose practise alreadie you see and whose example being not against the word is a word Although neither yet doe I doubt but that they being lead by the spirit into all truth they had a warrant for their so doing if not then from that spirit yet from him who was Lord of the spirits and of the Sabbath too who had before his departing sufficiently instructed them what to doe Which I rather think because I see the practise of their assembling vpon that day before the holie Ghost was descended Though in very deed I take this to be very great curiousnesse to inquire for their word when we see their
practise in assembling vpon this day and if not the institution yet at least an argument that there was such an institution amongst them in that it was called the Lords day § Sect. 7 But here I know I shall be required to make good two things before I may proceed any further the first whereof is to maintaine our translation The second is to maintaine that by the Our translation iustified Lords day in the Reuelation is meant the first day of the weeke That which will be put vnto me as concerning the translation will be how I can maintaine that in the Acts chap. 20. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth the first day of the weeke and that 1. Cor. 16. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth euery first day of the weeke When the one should rather signifie the first of the Sabbaths and the other some one of the Sabbaths For the iustifying of our translation thus I answere that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must be vnderstood either properly as the words themselues do signifie the Sabbaths or els they must be figuratiuely vnderstood and signifie the whole weeke now the first I thinke they will be vnwilling to graunt least these places should speake too lowd for the perpetuating of the Sabbaths that should successiuely follow in ranke and order the one after the other It must therefore be vnderstood of the second that is of the whole weeke which I thinke they will not denie in that elsewhere in the Scripture it is so taken as Leuit. 23. 15. Seuen Sabbaths shall be compleate that is seuen weekes And Luk. 18. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I fast twice in the Sabbath that is in the weeke for it is impossible to fast twice in one day so in this place I take it that by Sabbath the weeke is meant though to retaine the proper signification would be more aduantagious for vs. Yea but yet the doubt is behinde for how come wee say they to translate it the first day of the weeke when the words seeme rather to signifie some one day of the weeke First we translate it so because the Apostle seemeth to note out some set time of the Disciples assemblie which if it were so translated some one day of the weeke could not import that which the Apostle meant Secondly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is an Hebraisme and the Hebrues vse often by one to signifie the first as Gen. 1. 5. the euening and the morning are said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one day that is the first day And Gen. 10. 25. Heber had two sons 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the name of one that is of the first for hee nameth afterwards his brother So one moneth for the first moneth is an Hebraisme And to translate it thus we are lead by that Matth. 28. 1. where he saith in the end of the Sabbath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vsing the same phrase that here is which we must needs translate thus as we doe in the end of the Sabbath when the first day of the weeke began to dawne for that day must needes bee the first day of the weeke insuing that dawneth first next after the week past and that this is out of question true appeareth Mark 16. 4. where that which hee calleth vers 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one day of the weeke he calleth afterwards vers 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first day of the weeke And thus I hope I haue iustified our translation § Sect. 8 The second question is how it may appeare that by the Lords day was meant the first day of the That by the Lords day is meant the first day of the weeke weeke seeing that the Lord had so many daies as some say as the day of his birth the day of his death the day of his resurrection and the day of his ascention c. Therfore to make this appeare first it is most certaine that as in generall all the beasts of the field are said to be his Psalm 50. so all the daies of the weeke may bee said to be his But more properly that day which is set apart to his seruice is said to be his And in this sense that supper wherein Christ departing did institute the Sacrament is called the Supper of the Lord 1. Cor. 11. 20 the table the Lords table the cup the cup of the Lord 1. Cor. 11. 21 c. because they were all more specially consecrated vnto the Lords seruice So must it also necessarily here be taken that by the Lords day the Apostle meant some one day that was famously knowne in the Church to be consecrated to his seruice or else he would not so barely and nakedly haue passed it ouer especially if that were true that there had been so many Lords daies at that time kept as they would thrust vpon vs the Apostle had neede to haue made his speech plaine vpon which of these hee was rauished in the spirit But it is most certaine that in the Scripture there is not any other day mentioned than this and therefore it must consequently bee vnderstood of this It being then kept as I haue shewed in the Apostles times and the other daies then not obserued but brought in afterwards And that it was so it will appeare yet more plainly if we giue any credit vnto that which Master Beza noteth which is that he found in a certain ancient Greeke coppie these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the Lords day added in the text 1. Cor. 16. 2. which words being added the text must runne thus euery first day of the weeke which is the Lords day c. And so it is plaine that by the first day of the weeke must be meant the Lords day As also is euident by that which Master Iunius obserueth out of the Syriak translation which is that whereas it is in the Greeke when yee are come together in the Church in the Syriak it is when yee are come together on the Lords day which maketh the truth of this fullie to appeare that this first day of the weeke vpon which we keepe our Sabbath was the Lords day And further to make it euident that this day That the first day of the weeke is the Lords day shewed also by the Fathers was the Lords day the Fathers who came neerest vnto the Apostles times giue euident testimony As Iustinus Martyr in Apol. 2. who setting downe first the meetings of the Church Secondly the greetings of the Church with an holie kisse Thirdly their prayers Fourthly their administration of the Sacraments Fiftly the reading of the Scriptures then exhortation by the Pastor Lastly deliuereth the time of all this their meeting which was vpon the Sonday as he calleth it first because on it God began to create the world Secondly because on it Christ rose again from the dead by which it euidently appeareth that this day was then kept And Ignatius as ancient as he sheweth in
thine owne thou wouldest not endure For if thou hauing seuen pounds in thy purse shouldest giue sixe of them to some debaushed souldier if hee should wastfully spend that thou gauest him on harlots and then afterwards should come and take from thee all the remainder sauing two or three shillings wouldest thou not thinke that he did incroch two much vpon thee wouldest thou not say he hath robbed me And bee not these as great theeues that rob God as those that rob men Doubtlesse they be greater and therefore take no part of this day from God to spend vpon thy lusts for it is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God and take heede how thou wrong him and curtoll his day as Hanun did Dauids seruants garments 2. Sam. 10. 4 for hee will not take this wrong at thine hands Againe in the third reason where God proposeth himselfe vnto thee for an example to follow looke how long a time God rested so long a time must thou rest But hee rested the seuenth day wholy for he made nothing the seuenth day but finished all in sixe daies and therefore must thou rest a whole day as hee did Lastly in the last reason looke what time God blessed and sanctified to be kept holie that time ought in right to be kept holie for this is the nature and propertie of things sanctified they being set apart from the common vse may not otherwise be imployed than vnto his honour as appeareth Leuit. 27. 28. Yea Nebuchadnezzar as very a beast as he was yet would not put the vessels of the house of God to a common vse but put them in the house of his God Dan. 1. 2. but now I say God blessed and sanctified the whole day which he rested on and therefore the whole day must be kept holie And in very truth is not a whole day needfull for the performance of a whole seruice and worship of God to heare the word and minister the Sacraments pray reade meditate conferre instruct And why then doe men thinke that they haue sufficiently kept the Sabbath if they heare diuine seruice as they call it in the forenoone and in the afternoone thinking that they may doe all the rest of the day what they list as though God forsooth would take that at mans hands which a man will not at his seruants to worke an houre or two and to play all the rest of the day But the Apostle you will say willeth that we should condemne no man in part of an holie day Col. 2. 16. True neither in respect of an whole holie day such as hee there meaneth that is a Iewish holie day which as I haue shewed before you are not bound vnto But this is the Lords day and it is the Lords Sabbath which you must keepe holie and wholie holie vnto him as you haue seene alreadie prooued for 1. the day 2. preparation thereunto 3. rest and 4. holinesse these foure things being in the commandement expressed we must obserue for euer as being morall and not ceremoniall § Sect. 2 Though neither yet is this sufficie to keepe the Sabbath day from morning to night for they are deceiued that thinke that the Sabbath is ended when the Sunne is fet but wee must keepe the night also for it is a part of the day naturall of which here is mention for so Moses Gen. 1. accounteth the euening and the morning but one day so that the artificiall day and the night make but one day naturall which is the seuenth part of the weeke and is Gods and therefore the night must bee kept holie aswell as the day for that is a part of the Sabbath Therefore Psalm 92 which is called a Psalme of the Sabbath Dauid saith not onely that he will declare Gods louing kindnes in the morning but his truth also in the night And Paul being at Troas taught vntill midnight and then celebrated the Lords Supper which was a Sabbath daies exercise thereby shewing that the night was a part of the Sabbath also Though neither yet doe I speake it to this end that wee should keepe it in the same manner as Paul did I know it well it was extraordinarie but yet neuerthelesse in the nature of a night we are more holily to repose our selues that night than at other times A fault in those that other nights pray with their families but this night ouerpasse it esteeming it sufficient that they haue prayed at the Church § Sect. 3 But here I know it will be demaunded when the Sabbath beginneth and whether wee must keepe the night before the Sabbath or the night following Answ True it is that the Iewes kept their Sabbath the night before the day for Leuit 23. 32. from euen to euen shall you celebrate your Sabbath but wee begin our Sabbath at the dawning of the day for these reasons first because Christ rose in the dawning it was necessarie our Sabbath being to be kept in remembrance thereof that our day should then begin Secondly to put a difference betwixt the Iewish Sabbath and the true Christian Sabbath it was needfull that ours should begin at morning when by the resurrection of Christ the world began to bee renewed whereas the other began at night when the world in the creation was finished Thirdly that the night following is accounted a part of the day precedent we see Act. 20. vers 7. where it is said that Paul preached at Troas vntill midnight being the next morning to depart hauing staied there as the text sheweth vers 6. seuen daies but if the last night had not been a part of the seuenth day then he had staied at least a night longer than seuen daies and so more than seuen daies for hee should haue staied part of another day But that this night was a part of the Sabbath which they then kept doth yet further appeare in that the Apostle keepeth this night in the manner of a Sabbath with performing the exercise of holinesse therein as also in that being to depart hee would not depart till the rest were ended Which I obserue in that it is said ver 11 that he communed with them till the dawning of the day and so departed both which circumstances concurre well with this to prooue that hee held the night following to be a part of the Sabbath Now if any man will say that by this reason we may iustifie the deliuerie of the word and Sacrament in the night I graunt it the time being as this was a time of persecution otherwise not But this to keepe the night of the Sabbath in the nature of the night I take to be no extraordinarie but an ordinarie thing such as is now also required of vs and I presse it no further than to shew the practise of the Church from which wee ought not rashly or vnaduisedly to dissent And this hath been obserued euer sithence the Apostles times to be iust who keep the day first and call the night following
enough for vs to forbeare our works and so to keepe it idly but we must rest to keep it holily therefore it is called a holie Sabbath and a holy rest and here remember to keepe holy the rest It is true that the first thing that is here commanded is rest but it is not the principall thing Rest is but the huske but sanctification is the almond rest is but the shadow but sanctification is the bodie rest is but the meanes but sanctification is the end and if wee doe but cease from our labours and do no good it is nothing but the oxes Sabbath if we come to Church for nothing but to sleepe that is Eutychus Sabbath if wee cease from our labours and follow riotousnesse that is worse that is the golden calses Sabbath they sate downe to eate and drinke and rose vp to play Exo. 32 or if we keepe it onely vpon constraint that is the Princes Sabbath and not Gods Lament 1. 7. it is said that the enemies of the Church of God seeing their Sabbaths they laughed at them how iustly I know not but this I am sure if the diuell see vs keepe such Sabbaths he wil laugh at them but the Lord will say Goe your waies I know you not nor your Sabbaths and Who required these Sabbaths at your hands Esai 1. 12 13. It behooueth vs therefore to doe that which hee exhorteth vs vnto in so many places of the Scripture namely to sanctifie his Sabbath § Sect. 2 But here I know it will bee demaunded how is this day sanctified seeing all daies are alike and What it is to sanctifie a thing one hath no more holinesse than another in themselues The bread and the wine in the Lords Supper haue no more holinesse in them of themselues than other bread and wine the water in Baptisme is in it selfe but as other water the trees in Paradise of life and of the knowledge of good and euil in themselues were but as other trees what is it then that maketh them holier namely this that they are put apart from other things vnto a holy vse and so are the bread and wine holie in the Lords Supper so is the water in Baptisme so were the trees in Paradise so were the Priests holie so were their garments holie so was the Temple holie and so is this day holie But this way the day is rather said to be holie in regard of the institution which is from God who hath only power thus to sanctifie but there is another holinesse which is in the obseruation and in that respect wee are said to keepe it holie The manner of which sanctification the Prophet Esay expresseth thus If thou turne away thy foote from the Sabbath from doing thy will vpon mine holy day and call the Sabbath a delight to consecrate it as glorious to the Lord and shalt honour him not doing thine owne waies nor seeking thine owne will nor speaking a vaine word then shalt thou delight in the Lord c. Esai 58. 13. In all which words hee doth nothing else but set downe the keeping of the Sabbath And first to shew the rest of this day he cals it a Sabbath Secondly to shew it must be sanctified hee calleth it his holy day Now as touching the rest of this day first he requireth a bodily rest of thee to turne away thy foote from it that thou breake it not viz. by any bodily labour Secondly hee requireth a spirituall rest from sinne also thou must not doe thine owne will vpon it Hauing thus shewed the rest then he sheweth the sanctification of this rest First it must bee called a delight so that we must take comfort in the approching of it and our hearts must leape within vs as the babe did in Elizabeth at the approching of Mary For this is the day of our prouision this is the market of the soule wherein we must furnish our selues of that spirituall Manna the foode of our soules in the strength of which wee must walke all the weeke following as Elias did after his refection by the Angell Secondly it must not bee our delight as some delight in that day to spend it on their lusts but it must be a delight to consecrate it and that not vnto our Whitson Lords and Ladies vnto our groues and hill-altars vnto our May-bowers and shreenes of pleasure not vnto our Theaters to gaze in nor vnto our fields to walke in but it must be consecrated as glorious vnto the Lord. And therefore as Hanna desired her sonne that she might offer him vp vnto the Lord 1. Sam. 1 so must we this day that wee may consecrate it vnto the Lord. Lastly because the nature and propertie of things consecrate vnto the Lord is that they may not be other waies imployed than vnto his honour and vse therefore hee addeth that thou shalt honour him vpon this day to serue him and to giue worship vnto his name and that wee may the more safely keepe it he shewes how wee breake it For danger is not well auoided vnlesse it be foreseene and knowen he setteth downe therefore three things which must be looked vnto that wee breake not his Sabbath our workes our thoughts and words and first for our workes wee must not doe them not doing saith he thine owne waies Secondly for our thoughts wee must not thinke them thought is not free neither are our tongues our owne for wee must not speake a vaine word So then to conclude will you know who keepeth holie the Sabbath Esay telleth you he that keepes the rest of this day that keepes it as the Lords holy day that cals it his delight that consecrateth it as glorious vnto the Lord that doth not his owne waies that thinketh not his owne thoughts that speaketh not a vaine word he is the man that keepeth the Lords Sabbath and he it is whom the Lord wil honour and make to mount vpon the high places of the earth and heauen also § Sect. 3 Hitherto hath the Prophet giuen vnto vs the true patterne of a Sabbath which euery Christian is bound to obserue as being both the summe of this and the same with this precept of the Sabbath which we haue in hand the keeping of which holy consisteth in the performance of the duties of holinesse which are of three sorts publique priuate or mixt of all which wee will seuerally speak and first of the publique And because these duties cannot bee well performed without the helps and meanes conducing thereunto wee will therefore first shew the things required to the performance of these publique duties which are in this precept commaunded as well as the duties themselues and they be these foure First that we assemble our selues for there can be no publique exercise without a publique assemblie Secondly that the assemblie must bee timely Thirdly our demeanour whilest we be in the assemblie And fourthly our continuance in the assemblie § Sect. 4 And first that vpon the
it he giueth sight thereby Ioh. 9. 6. Who would not thinke that if a man should strike a rocke that he should rather make fire come out of it than water yet he strikes the rocke and the waters flow Exo. 17. 6. Who would not thinke that Colloquintida should rather poyson a man than be healthsome meate for him yet he blessing it there is no euill in it 2. King 4. 40 41. Who would not think that the fire should not burne yet the three children put into the fornace were not only not burned but had not so much as any smell of fire about them Dan. 3. This therefore hath this vse to comfort vs that when comfort shall seeme to stand a farre off like Abraham in the heauens yet we be not dismaied for God is stronger than the Duiell and therefore though wee be troubled yet wee may be still comfort is on foote and in the middest of them we shall finde helpe in the middest of the wildernesse we shall finde water as the Israelites in the Lions belly an hony combe as Sampson in the prison an Angell as Peter and in the middest of the fire one like the Sonne of God as the three children And so much for the third reason CHAP. IIII. The fourth reason because God blessed the seuenth day and hallowed it What it is to blesse and hallow Sect. 1. The vse of this Sect. 2. The summe of the whole booke Sect. 3. § Sect. 1 NOw followeth the last reason to bee discussed in these wordes Therefore the Lord blessed and hallowed the Sabbath day In which let vs first see what is meant by blessing and hallowing which two words that I may speak of them to our purpose haue a double sense and vnderstanding in the Scripture For first blessing is vsed to signifie the setting apart of some thing to a holy vse in which sense the wine in the Lords Supper is called the cup of blessing when it is set apart to that holy vse and the setting of it apart to that vse is called the blessing of it as 1. Cor. 10. ver 16. The cup of blessing which we blesse c. And to the same purpose also is this word sanctifying or hallowing vsed as Exod. 13. 1. Sanctifie to me the first borne that openeth the wombe that is set apart to my seruice This is plaine I neede not to shew it further The second sense of blessing or hallowing is when as some gift is bestowed vpon any one hee is said therein to be blessed and so gifts are called blessings Gen. 33. 11. I pray thee saith Iacob to his brother take this blessing that is this gift And Iudg. 1. the daughter of Caleb prayed hir father to to giue her a blessing and what was that springs of water Iudg. 1. 15. The same sense also hath sanctifying when God shal bestow some gift of sanctification vpon vs that day Now both these waies God doth blesse or hallow this day first in instituting this day vnto his seruice Secondly in that in this his seruice he doth effectually blesse vs vs I say and not the day for all daies in their owne nature are alike and not one more holie than another more than in regard of the institution in that it is set a part to holie vses or of the blessing that is this day bestowed vpon vs aboue any other Now God doth consecrate it in the first respect and wee must in the other that the blessing may bee vpon vs but take it in which sense you will yet it standeth as a strong argument to perswade And if in the first sense then it is thus gathered To what end God did blesse and hallow this rest to that end it must be kept but God did therfore blesse and hallow this day that it might be kept holy and therefore so it must be kept holy The equitie of this reason is grounded vpon the right and authoritie that God hath to commaund or institute any law which if he doe it is like vnto the lawes of the Medes and Persians which cannot be altered but by himselfe for thou must put nothing to his word Deut. 12. 31. The reason is Pro. 30. 6. Least he reproue thee and thou be found a lier neither must thou take any thing therefrom there must be no clipping The reason also is yeelded Deut. 4. 2. That thou maist keepe his commaundement which thou canst not doe if thou take any thing there from and as thou maist not adde so thou must not alter but thou must keep his Sabbath as he commandeth Deut. 5. 16. Yea thou maist not so much as varie from it for thou must turne neither to the right hand nor to the left the reason that is giuen is drawne from the benefit that comes thereby namely that thou maist prosper Ios 1. 7. As who should say if thou turne either to the right hand or to the left thou shalt not prosper but if thou keepe it and turne not aside then thou shalt prosper for he will blesse thee as here thou seest For this is the second signification of blessing or hallowing and is the thing that God especially here intendeth to shew namely that hee will powre foorth his blessing vpon those that keep his Sabbath And that blessing he most fully promiseth Isai 58. If thou wilt turne away thy foote from the Sabbath not doing thine owne waies nor seeking thine owne will nor speaking a vaine word these three things on the Sabbath must bee auoided but what followeth to bee done First we must call the Sabbath a delight Secondly wee must consecrate it as glorious vnto the Lord. And thirdly we must honour him vpon that day But then what shall they haue that thus honour the Lord Why God will honour them againe and make them to mount vpon the high places of the earth and like a tree planted by the waters side shall they prosper and not onely so that they shall be blessed with worldly blessings which might perswade worldly men but much more with spirituall blessings which may perswade Christian men he will feede them with the heritage of Iacob as if hee should haue said they shall enioy all the priuiledges of his Church loe thus shall the man bee blessed that shall keepe his Sabbath And therefore Isai 56. 3. Let no man that keepeth the Sabbath say The Lord hath separated me from his people Why so For he will feede them with the heritage of Iacob as now you haue heard neither let the Eunuch say Behold I am a drie tree No for if he keepe his Sabbath and chuse the thing that is good and take heede of his couenant he shall mount vpon the high places of the earth as there he promiseth Yea and as it followeth he will giue him a place in his house and a name better than of sonnes and daughters But can all this be true Yea certainly make account of it for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken
THE DOCTRINE OF THE SABBATH HANDLED IN FOVRE SEVERALL BOOKES OR TREATISES The first of which intreateth of the day of rest The second of the duties of the day The third of the persons whom these duties concerne And the fourth the reasons vsed to perswade all persons to the practise of these duties vpon that day Written by G. W. Master of Arts and Minister of the word of God in Portsmouth Isaiah 58. 13 14. If thou turne away thy foote from the Sabbath from doing thy will on mine holy day and call the Sabbath a delite to consecrate it as glorious to the Lord and shalt honour him nor doing thine owne waies nor seeking thine owne will or speaking a vaine word Then shalt thou delite in the Lord ●nd I will cause thee to mount vpon the hie places of the earth and feede thee with the heritage of Iaakob thy father for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it BY WISDOM PEACE BY PEACE PLENTY LONDON Imprinted by Felix Kyngston for Thomas Man dwelling in Paternoster row at the signe of the Talbot 1604. TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE CHARLES BLVNT Earle of Deuonshire Lord Mounioy Lieutenant generall of Ireland Master of the Ordinance Gouernour and Captaine generall of the towne and Garison of Portsmouth and the I le of Portsey Knight of the noble Order of the Garter and one of his Maiesties most Honorable priuie Councell RIght Honorable and by right most worthie to be honorable because deserts haue made you truly honourable The wisest hath said it that much reading Eccl. 12. 22. is a wearisomnes vnto the flesh And therefore in this scribling age wherein presses be oppressed with the number of bookes without number it may seeme a thing not meete any more to write vnlesse for the sufficiencie of the worke it might be in steed of all other writings and so the reader might be eased of the labour of much reading Notwithstanding by the iustnes of the cause which I neither might if I could because it is iust nor could if I might hauing in a publique assemblie taught it forsake I haue been drawen to publish this treatise that what I haue taught may here be made more fully to appeare to any that is otherwaies minded Now whereas it may seeme ouer great boldnes for me to presse your Honour with these my labours that are alreadie ouer pressed with your owne if yet they may be said to be yours and not rather the labours of the Church and Common-weale yet I haue presumed to doe it vpon these two reasons First in respect of the cause which I manage Secondly in respect of my dutie vnto your Honour And first in respect of the cause the Sabbath being a principall meanes whereby the seede of religion is sowen in our hearts and the holie fire as it were is kept in amongst vs. It being assailed by aduersaries of diuers sorts to whom should it flee as vnto a Sanctuarie for succour rather than vnto your Honor who haue alreadie taken home vnto your honourable familie the truth like as the beloued Disciple did the Ioh. 19. 27. mother of Iesus being recommended vnto his care Yea being your Honor haue not alone taken home the truth but also publiquely in the highest and solemnest assemblie of this land vndertaken the maintenance and the defence of the same truth against the common aduersarie the Papist In regard whereof as the eare that heard you blessed you and the eye that seeth Iob. 29. 11. you giueth witnes vnto you and the hearts of all well affected Christians to whom the report thereof hath come applaude it shouting and crying as in the Prophet Grace grace vnto it So could I ioyning in Zach 4. 7. heart and affection with them doe no lesse than testifie the same by presenting these my labours vnto your Honour to whom of right they appertaine as a part of that truth which is vndertaken by your Honour but gainsaid by these aduersaries For first they hold the Sabbath Rhem. in annot in Mat. 15 sect 3. Rhem. annot in Reu. cap. 1. sect 6. to be but a tradition Secondly the alteration of the day to be without scripture or commandement yea plainly otherwise than prescribed by God himselfe in the 2. Commandement for so it pleaseth them to terme this fourth commandement Thirdly the rest but perfunctorie and sleight for they allow such workes to be done vpon the Sabbath as shall be permitted by their Prelates that is such as please Bellar. lib. 10. de cultu imag themselues or such as by custome which euer declineth haue preuailed And lastly the holinesse of the day to consist in comming to shrift and hearing of Catechis Rom. quaest 21. de Sabbath Masse Against all which falshoods this truth of the doctrine of the Sabbath flieth vnto your Honour for patronage and after a sort maketh supplication vnto your Honour to be a meanes that as by the Kings most excellent Maiesties proclamation it hath alreadie so by law it may further be prouided for at least vt ne quid Sabbathum detrimenti capiat for Gods lawes to many are but as cobwebs to the great flyes which they easily breake without they be strengthened by the Princes lawes as with other nerues and sinewes for want of which we see that the Sabbath the best day of seuen is more prophaned in most places than all the other seuen as though God had made it to be prophaned and not to be kept holy And this in respect of the cause Now in respect of my selfe also I could doe no lesse for being imbarked in that ship whereof your Lordship vnder the Kings most excellent Maiestie as the master Pilot holdeth the helme I meane your Lordships garrison towne of Portsmouth and succeeding others a teacher in that Lecture whereinto your Lordship first breathed life I could doe no lesse than in dutie present these firstlings of my labours vnto your Honour especially hauing alreadie receiued fauours from your honourable selfe as also no small incouragements from Sir Beniamin Berry and Master Anthony Ersf●eld these your Lordships worthies and notable instruments of gouernment in that place So that I thanke my God vpon the point of whose prouidence I haue alwaies steered on my course I may most truly say that of them my conscience bearing me witnesse that I lie not which once Tertullus spake with another mind of Felix that by them wee haue receiued these two benefits great quietnes and many worthie things haue been Act. 24. 2. done vnto vs onely that which followeth wholy and alone appertaineth vnto your Honor that this is wholie by your prouidence And therefore should not I as in particular for my selfe or as the mouth of many others wholy acknowledge it we might yet be more vngratefull vnto your Honour than Tertullus to Felix By these reasons therefore right Honourable I being lead haue presumed to approach so neere vnto your Honour as to put foorth
these my labours vnder the liuerie of your honourable fauour Wherein although there be nothing answerable vnto your greatnes yet if as the finger serueth to point vnto the Sunne and the iuyce of a Limmon to ingraue aswell as Aqua fortis so this may serue to point vnto that which I would but cannot attaine vnto sufficiently to make knowne your Honours worthinesse and something to expresse the thankfulnes of my heart I wanting better meanes to vtter it I shall thinke my selfe not to haue attained the lowest degree of happinesse in my low estate And thus humbly crauing of your Honour pardon for my boldnes I cease any further to interrupt you from your waightier affaires yet not ceasing in my best wishes vpon my knees to pray vnto that God who is good without qualitie great without quantitie infinite without place and euerlasting without time that hee would long preserue your Honour amongst vs that the Prince may long enioy you such a subiect the Common-wealth such a Councellour the Church such a stay the truth such a Champion the souldier such a Leader and learning such a Patron and after this life here ended there to enioy with him another that neuer shall haue end Your Honours in all dutie most bounden GEORGE WIDLEY A TABLE OF ALL SVCH THINGS AS ARE contained in the seuerall chapters of euery booke The first booke CHAP. I. HOw the whole law is distributed pag. 1. 2 How the first table hath reasons annexed which the second for the most part wanteth pag. 3 What force these reasons of the fourth Commaundement haue to perswade vs to obedience 4 What things this Commaundement containeth in it in speciall aboue the rest 6 How this fourth Commandement is analysed or diuided 6 CHAP. II. How many sorts of Sabbaths there were among the Iewes 7 How the morall and ceremoniall Sabbaths differ 8 What vse the ceremonies had vnto the Iewes 10 Whether the Sabbath be perpetuall 13 CHAP. III. The time of the Sabbath or rest changed 31 To what day it was changed 37 Why the time of the Sabbath was changed 38 Whether it may be changed againe 53 Whether we may still call it the Sabbath 52 Whether by the Lords day Reue. 1. 10. be meant our Sabbath or day of rest 43 Obiections against the Sabbath answered 46 CHAP. IIII. Whether the whole day naturall be to bekept 57 How the night is to be kept 60 When the Sabbath beginneth and endeth 61 The second booke CHAP. I. That wee must prepare our selues to sanctifie the Sabbath and why 63 Wherein this preparation doth consist 68. 69 CHAP. II. Rest commanded 72 This rest must be a solemne rest 73 What workes are forbidden to bee done vpon the Sabbath 74. 75. 76. 77 What works be allowed to be done vpō the Sab. 90. 91. 92. 93 With what cautions workes of necessitie must be done 95 CHAP. III. Whether recreations may be allowed vpon the Sabbath 98 Whether pastimes as dauncing c. vpon the Sabbath may be allowed 102 Whether the Sabbath may be broken by our speech 113 Whether it may be broken in thought 118 Whether a man may doe the things commanded to be done vpon the Sabbath and yet breake the Sabbath 117 CHAP. IIII. Whether the rest of the Sabbath must be sanctified 119. and how 120 What these duties are which be required to the sanctitie of the Sabbath 123 Whether we be enioyned to come to the publique assemblie vpon the Sabbath 224. and how to demeane our selues there 126. 127. 128 Whether the word must be preached vpon the Sabbath 130 Whether the people be bound to heare it vpon the Sab. 132 Obiections to the contrarie answered ibid. Whether the Sacraments and discipline bee duties of the Sabbath 136. 137 CHAP. V. Duties both publique and priuate to be done vpon the Sabbath as first prayer 138. 139 Reading of the Scriptures 141 Singing of Psalmes 144 Catechisme 145 Workes of mercie 149 CHAP. VI. Priuate duties vpon the Sabbath which are meditation 152 Conference 156 Sloth pride dumme Ministerie le ts to the sanctification of the Sabbath 150. 161 The third booke CHAP. I. Whether euery man is bound in his owne person to keepe the Sabbath 164 Whether euery man be bound to see those that are vnder him to keepe the Sabbath 166 Whether the father be bound to see that the sonne keepe the Sabbath 169 Whether the master be bound to see that the seruant keepe the Sabbath 171 CHAP. II. Whether wee be bound to see that our cattell rest vpon the Sabbath and why 177 Whether we be bound to see that the stranger rest that is within our gates and why 179 Whether euery man be bound to hinder the iustruments of euill 182 Whether we be bound to labour to bring others to the knowledge of God 186 Whether toleration of a false religion may not be suffered 186 Whether the gouernours be bound to compell Idolaters to worship the true God 190 The fourth booke CHAP. I. In what manner the first reason of this Commandement perswadeth to the keeping of the Sabbath 195. 196. 197 Whether all Gods commandements are grounded vpon reason 199 Whether it bee sinne not to dispatch our worldly businesse vpon the sixe daies 200 Whether it be not lawfull vpon any of the sixe daies to vse recreation for the health of the bodie 203 Whether a man may consecrate any one or more of the sixe daies to Gods seruice 206 CHAP. II. How the second reason of this commandement perswadeth to the keeping of the Sabbath 208 How God is our Lord and how he is our God and what we thence learne 209. 211 To whom we must consecrate daies 215 CHAP. III. How the third reason perswadeth vs to keepe the Sab. 216 How farre we are to follow examples 217 Wherein we are to imitate God and wherein not 221 How God may be said to rest and the vse of the words 222 CHAP. IIII. How the fourth reason here brought perswadeth to the keekeeping of the Sabbath 228 What it is to blesse and ballow the Sabbath namely to blesse the keepers of it 219 Whether the breakers be accursed 219 The end of the Table THE DOCTRINE OF THE SABBATH HANDLED IN FOVRE BOOKES THE FIRST BOOKE TREAting of the Sabbath day CHAP. I. The distribution of the whole law Sect. 1. The Commaundements of the first Table haue their reasons annexed Sect. 2. The reasons annexed to the fourth Commaundement Sect. 3. The contents of the fourth Commaundement Sect. 4. The analysis of it Sect. 5. § Sect. 1 THe whole law which is a doctrine requiring what men ought to be and condemning them for not being perfectlie such as they ought being at large deliuered in the whole volume of the Scriptures is notwithstanding for the helpe The distribution of the whole law of mans memorie abridged by God himselfe in those tenne words which he spake on the Mount Sinai and writ in two tables of stone as it were in a booke of two
labour which this is one doubt that sticketh vp like a thorne in a drunkards hand wherewith hee hurteth himselfe and others namely that euery day is a Sabbath or rest from sinne and that therfore now wee are not any more bound to keepe any particular Sabbath Now to proue that we must keep euery day a Sabbath they alleage that Heb. 4. 10. where it is said that he that is entred into this rest hath ceased from his owne workes as God did from his and that therefore we must euery day keepe a rest from sinne To which I answere Were it so that all they that vrge this did it of a desire and loue they haue to the Lords Sabbath they were the lesse to bee blamed howbeit it is certaine that they pleade this most that least delight in the Sabbath when it comes and they doe it not that they would haue other daies to be kept as the Sabbath but because they would haue the Sabbath to be kept but as another day But howsoeuer yet I do not see how out of that place they may make this appeare For first I see not how Gods resting from his workes may be a figure of our resting from our sinfull workes there being no proportion between them which alwaies is betweene the signe and the thing signified Secondly if this rest were a signe or figure of our rest from sinne it must be so vnto Adam also for the law was giuen vnto him Now how could that be a figure vnto him of his resting from sinne when as yet hee had not sinned Thirdly be it that there were such a rest yet what doth the keeping of this rest morally hinder the keeping of that from sinne nay rather is it not a principall meanes for the furtherance thereof For doth not rest from wordly affaires and imployment in holie duties take away all occasions of sinne Fourthly were it granted that we must rest euery day from sinne yet this their collection that therefore wee should not rest from labour to keepe the Sabbath holy followeth not therupon no more than because a man is bound to receiue euery morsell of meate with giuing thankes that therefore he should say he were not bound to receiue the Lords Supper otherwise than as common bread or rather not to receiue the Lords Supper at all because he euery day receiueth bread with giuing of thankes Fiftly that which in that place is made significant was the seuenth day from the creation for the text saith he speaketh in a certaine place of the seuenth day not of the Sabbath Whereby it is plaine that that which was significant was the seuenth day from the creation on which God is there said to rest and it might be this was a signe that they should in the like manner rest vpon the seuenth day from their works as God did from his to which end Gods example is brought as a reason to perswade vs to rest because God rested as also it might bee a signe of our eternall rest in heauen And that indeede the Apostle meaneth there when hee saith vers 10. that hee which hath entred into his rest that is into heauen hath ceased from his owne workes What of sinne No but of his calling for this rest Adam should haue entred into though he had neuer sinned But last of all be it that in this place he meaneth this rest from sinne to bee shadowed out yet that rest is in heauen but in this life no man hath or indeed can rest from his sinfull workes as God did from his workes which the Apostle affirmeth of those that haue entred into his rest But this argument how wind-shaken it is I hope euery man seeth I will spend therefore no more time to pluck this thorne out of the drunkards hand It resteth that I should here answere that which is vrged by some out of the Epistle vnto the Coloss chap. 2. vers 16 17. Let no man condemne you in respect of an holy day or of the new Moone or of the Sabbaths But because we shall haue a more fit oportunitie offered to speake of it in the next chapter I therefore thither remit the reader That which remaineth to be spoken of last of all is the vse of this that being the Sabbath is perpetuall therefore men take heed how they suffer this truth to be wrested away from them by the cunning sleights of Sathan or be drawne on by the alurements of euill men to abuse it to their owne pleasures or profits to runne ride or sport themselues vpon it as if it were lawfull as vpon another day or as if God had neuer said the word keepe it holy And this much as touching the first point namely that the Sabbath is perpetuall CHAP. III. The time of the rest not perpetuall Sect. 1. It was meet the Sabbath day should be changed Sect. 2. How the Sabbath is changed and yet perpetuall Sect. 3. The Sabbath changed from the seuenth day to the first Sect. 4. The reasons of that change Sect. 5. 6. 7. 8. Obiections to the contrarie answered Sect. 9. 10. Whether wee may call it still the Sabbath day Sect. 11. Whether the time of the Sabbath may not be changed againe Sect. 12. § Sect. 1 BVt now as is the rest so is not the day or time of the rest perpetuall The time of the rest not perpetuall for if you marke God saith not remember the seuenth day to rest vpon it but remember the day of rest which is the second thing that we obserue in this commandement and giueth vs occasion to consider of another question Which is whether the Apostles might chaunge the Sabbath vnto any other day then that which the Iewes kept Which they might doe first because the seuenth day kept amongst the Iewes was ceremoniall and did shadow out vnto vs our eternall rest as appeareth Heb. 4. 4. 10. which was one cause that moued the Apostles to chaunge the day As also they might doe it because they found no limited day set downe in the commaundement For as for that which followeth afterwards the seuenth is the Sabbath it is no part of the morall precept but onely an explication of it For if that were a part of it then this also must be a part sixe daies shalt thou labour which to graunt were absurd because then we should make duties betwixt man and man to bee taught in the first table which onely teacheth man this dutie to God and the second the dutie of man to man as Christ sheweth Matth. 22. 38. as also they being two things so contrarie as rest and labour I cannot see but they must also be two commaundements Besides all this in the reasons there be many things that concerned onely the Iewes as in the fifth commaundement Honour thy father and mother the reason is that thy daies may be long in the land which the Lord thy God giueth thee Now it is certaine that this promise had only reference vnto
his Epistle ad Magnesianos not only that this day was chosen of the Church but also why it was done namely that all occasions might be cut off from the Christians of Iudaizing And August tom 2. ad Ianuar. Epist 119. saith that the Lords day was deliuered to Christians by the Lords resurrection and thereof it began to be celebrated And last of al Cyril in Ioh. lib. 17. cap. 58. saith it must needes bee that the eighth day on which Christ appeared to Thomas must bee the Lords day Loe thus haue you a clowde of witnesses all testifying this day to bee the Lords day but of the other daies which they call feasts no such matter Neither yet had these feasts been so ancient would any of them so iustly deserued the name of the Lords day as this because in nothing he did so much shew himselfe to be Lord as in this his rising againe from the dead for therefore hee died and rose againe that hee might bee Lord of the quick and dead Rom. 14. 9. And therefore as the Lord would haue the Israelites after their comming out of Egypt there and then to begin the account of their moneths in remembrance of their great deliuerance from their bondage in which they were in vnder Pharaoh Exodus 21. 2. so would hee haue vs in remembrance of our great deliuerance from the thraldome of sinne and spirituall bondage of the diuell by Christs suffering and rising againe there and then to begin our account The conclusion then of this point is that seeing the seuenth from the creation was not commanded in the morall law but was ceremoniall and therefore meete to be changed and being it might bee done without any preiudice to the commaundement The Apostles did well to change the time of the Sabbath which was kept euery seuenth from the creation into the seuenth from the redemption § Sect. 9 Hauing thus made the truth of this point euident it remaineth now that we remoue such lets Obiections answered and cleere such doubts as may any waies seeme to arise in the hearts of men whereby they might be hindred from admitting this truth And here first may these places of the Apostle Galat. 4. 10. and Col. 2. 16 17. incomber some whose mindes are not so well established in the present truth in the first of which places the Apostle seemeth to condemne all set times and in the second to cleere men from any iust imputation or condemnation for the not keeping of them and by name of the Sabbaths so that it may seeme we are set free from keeping any Sabbaths at all for saith the Apostle Let no man condemne you in respect of the Sabbath For answere whereunto as I will not greatly contend for the time of the Sabbath it being as I haue alreadie shewed done away and the abolishing thereof may by this place iustly be warranted for hee here speaking against the obseruation of times especially those that were Iewish it may as iustly be extended against the time of the Iewish Sabbath as any other feast amongst them especially being that the time of the Sabbath is called the Sabbath as in this commandement the seuenth is the Sabbath that is the time of the Sabbath and Leuit. 23. 3. The seuenth shall be the Sabbath of rest that is the time of rest or the time of the Sabbath As I say I will not contend with them for the day which the Iewes kept it being abolished so by no meanes can I be drawne so much as once to imagine that therefore the Sabbath should be together with the Iewish day abolished being that Christ hath warranted the whole law and euery iot or tittle of it to remaine Yea but you will say the Sabbath it selfe is ceremoniall for Exod. 31. 13. it is made a signe of our sanctification A signe what then Is it therefore a ceremonie and shadow Is there no difference thinke you betweene a signe and a shadow For my part I haue euer held that shadowes signifie things to come but signes things alreadie come aswell as to come Againe shadowes and the bodie or substance of them can neuer bee together but when the one is come the other is gone and where the one beginneth there the other endeth but the signe and the thing signified neuer agree better than when they goe together Indeede I confesse the shadowes may in some sense bee said to bee signes but that all signes should bee shadowes that will neuer bee made good by the dint of any argument be it neuer so sharpe As for example the signes in Egypt were tokens of Gods anger yet they were not shadowes the Sacraments are signes confirming our faith Rom. 4. 10. yet no shadowes the miracles that Christ wrought were signes shewing foorth his glorie Ioh. 2. 11 yet no shadowes the Rainbow was a signe putting God in minde of his couenant that hee would not againe the second time drowne the earth Gen. 9. 13. and 15 and then may not the Sabbath also be a signe that is a document or instruction to teach vs our sanctification or a signe memoratiue to put vs in minde of our sanctification but that it must presently therewith become a shadow Why then become not all these signes shadowes aswel as it Indeede I confesse that the strict keeping of the rest by the Iewes commanded Exo. 16. 23. was a shadow as also was the seuenth day yet that the rest commanded in the precept was so or had any ceremonie annexed that I denie But be it so that the rest in the commandement had also a signification added vnto it yet from the beginning it was not so but came afterwards and was made so vnto the Iewes who were to be lead on vnto Christ by these things as children by their A. b. c. and first elements as it were of religion and may not this that is meerely accidentall and added vnto it fall away but that it must destroy that also with it which is substantiall If this should be graunted I see not but that the whole law must also be abolished because there was no commandement but had some ceremonie or other as I haue alreadie prooued added vnto it Yea and the Sacraments must also bee done away because the outward signes were shadowes and so we should be without either word or Sacrament with which this would suite well to abolish the time of them both that there might not bee so much as any speech of God or godlinesse But how farre much better haue the Apostles done who haue abolished that which was ceremoniall and added vnto the morall law retaining and keeping still the substance and law it selfe as also they doe in retaining and keeping the same Sacraments which the Iewes had 1. Cor. 10. 3 4 though they chaunge the signes which they had And what I pray you hath this commaundement deserued why it should not finde the like fauour with the rest to remaine although the day bee changed
but that together with the day it must be quite cashered from the rest of the cōmandements as vnprofitable This it is the diuell knoweth that by the keeping of this commandement his kingdom is most of all shaken and therefore hee laboureth aboue all to shake at least if not to ouerthrow this time appointed for the worship of God § Sect. 10 Yea but in that place of the Galatians the Apostle seemeth altogether to disallow set times That of the Galatians falsely vrged by some answered in so much as he saith he is afraid that he hath bestowed his labour vpon them in vaine because they obserue daies and times But of those that vrge this I would know whether they thinke that the Apostle in this place condemneth all set times or some onely if they shall say all indifferently then it shall not be lawfull for the Church at all to appoint any set times no not for the deliuerie of the word and Sacraments which whosoeuer maintaineth is an absolute Atheist and seeketh no lesse than the ruine of Christ and his kingdome and of all religion amongst men How be it this I know those that vrge this will not allow of it to haue a day set for Gods worship being a thing both tending to edification and good order Now if they will say that it condemneth but some set daies then it either condemneth those which the Church then kept or those which the Iewes kept for there were not a third sort of daies at that time If they shall say those which the Church then kept I would know of them whether the Church might not then as lawfully appoint daies for Gods seruice as now the Apostles being then of the Church and lead by that spirit that could not erre And secondly whether they might not appoint the first day of the weeke as well as any other all daies being as they say indifferently alike Both which things if they will graunt I see not how the Apostle might iustly blame them for vsing their christian libertie in making choise of some day for to keepe the Lords Sabbath vpon Whom if hee might not iustly blame for vsing their libertie much lesse then might hee so sharply rebuke them as to stand in feare of them for the keeping of such a day as if by it all his labours had been to none effect or purpose Yea if the keeping of such times had been so bad he should haue yet done much worse himselfe to haue kept it with them which yet hee doth Act. 20. 7. But this hee should haue added aboue all that hee should speake against times set and yet should himselfe set times as we see he did in the Church of Corinth yea and in this very Church of Galatia appoint collections to be made euery first day of the weeke as wee may see 1. Cor. 16. 1 all which things or any of them once to conceiue of so great an Apostle were intollerable It remaineth therefore necessarily that they must bee vnderstood of those Iewish daies and times and yeres And that they were such appeareth euidently Col. 2. 17 where he sheweth that these daies were shadowes of things to come which onely was proper to those Iewish daies and no other And indeed the truth was thus there were crept into these Churches certaine false Apostles that laboured to ioyne Moses with Christ and to inthral their consciences with the ceremoniall yoke as though they were in conscience bound yet to keep the ceremonial law the retaining of which was no lesse than in effect to denie Christ to bee come who was the bodie of all those ceremoniall shadowes Which he obseruing beginneth to be afraid of them as he saith least they should by this meanes haue made his preaching of Christ Iesus to haue been of none effect vnto them Now as for our parts we are so farre from Iudaizing as that we retaine neither any conscience of their daies nor yet the daies themselues And therefore we obserue the Sabbath vpon the first day of the weeke whereas they kept it vpon the seuenth as hath been heretofore sufficiently declared that thereby we may be sure to auoide all Iudaisme Moreouer being the day is chaunged it will §. Sect. 11. be demanded and of some is whether we ought not for the auoiding of Iudaisme to forbeare to call it the Sabbath day Whereto for my part I answere that although I know that all things ceremoniall in the Sabbath bee abolished yet I could neuer learne that the name was any ceremonie and therefore I see not but that it may bee vsed with that indifferencie as wee vse other names it being fit and apt to expresse the nature of that which we would signifie by it Secondly being the rest is perpetuall as I haue prooued why should it not carrie with it the perpetuitie of the name of rest But why then were new names giuen vnto it Not because the old names were abolished or might not bee vsed but they were inforced to vse other names for distinctions sake for if they had not called the Sabbath by some other name they could not haue been so wel vnderstood whether they had spoken of the Iewes Sabbath that was to bee abolished or of ours therefore to auoide this ambiguitie they call it by another name that they might thereby be the better vnderstood But now being that the Iewes Sabbath day is quite abolished and that custome hath made it familiar and vse carried it vnto our Sabbath I see not but that we may indifferently vse the name of Sabbath euen as any of the rest of the names of the day especially then when wee doe desire most to expresse the rest of the day as when wee would expresse the change of it to call it the first day of the weeke and when the reason of the change to call it the Lords day so when we would expresse the rest to call it the Sabbath day And this much as touching the chaunge of the Sabbath vnto the first day of the weeke § Sect. 12 But now vpon this which I haue shewed that the time of the Sabbath might be and was iustly changed by the Apostles it will be demaunded and of some is though ouer busily I confesse for we should be more readie to keepe than to alter the constitutions of the Apostles yet I say it will be demaunded whether the Church may not chaunge the day of the Sabbath vnto any other day of the weeke To which I answere that although the Church hath power Gods warrant going before vpon some extraordinarie occasion as plague famine sword or such like vpon any of the weeke daies to institute a fast as in Ioel. 2. 15. Sanctifie a fast or a feast as Hest 9. The feast of Purim is instituted or to turne a fast into a feast Zach. 8. 19. The fast of the fourth moneth and the fast of the fifth shall be vnto the house of Iudah ioy and gladnesse Yet to
idle word especially for those that they shall thus vainly babble foorth vpon the Sabbath And so much touching the outward breach of the Sabbath But yet here is not all for a man to cease from §. Sect. 4. these outward workes for these concerne the very beasts as well as man we must therefore consider that as a man doth consist of two parts a bodie and a soule so God hath a regard vnto them both and as he requires of the bodie an externall rest that no labour may hinder holinesse so he requires of the soule an internall rest from all sinne and that rest indeed is proper to man and it is to rest from the workes of the flesh which Esay 58. 13. are also called our waies or workes and these are properly and indeede seruile and the worst kinde of seruile workes of all others And therefore as other thy workes are here forbidden which are seruile because they hinder holinesse so these kinde of seruile workes aboue all others are forbidden because they not onely hinder holinesse but are opposite vnto it so farre foorth as hee which is subiect vnto them is free from holinesse Rom. 6. 20. Against these therfore it is that Esay so bitterly inueigheth I cannot abide your Sabbaths c. Esai 1. 13. But why so vers 15. he giueth a reason for your hands are full of blood And Esai 58. when they come vnto him in hypocrisie and seemed to finde fault with God that he would not accept their fast which had the nature of a Sabbath and as appeareth in the end of the chapter is called his holy day God yeeldeth them a reason why he did not accept it Behold saith he ye fast to strife and vnto debate to smite with the fist of wickednesse vers 4. Hauing thus shewed their fast then he rates them for it vers 5. Is it such a fast saith he that I haue chosen that a man should afflict his soule for a day call yee this a fast or an acceptable day vnto the Lord c. And hauing thus rated them then he shewes them what a true fast is to loose the bands of wickednesse to take off the heauie burthens to take away the yoke and putting foorth of the finger vnderstand to any euill work and wicked speaking if any man doe these things hee keepes a true rest I know well this rest from our sinnes must bee kept in the whole course of our liues yet vpon the Sabbath aboue all wee must take heede that sinne enter not vpon vs because it is opposite vnto the sanctitie thereof § Sect. 5 And as wee must haue a speciall care of committing any sinne because that is truly seruile so must we take heede that we doe not make the duties of holinesse seruile also by not regarding the manner of doing them which is that they bee done in faith and in obedience to Gods commandement For if wee shall doe these workes to that end that we may merit by the doing of them either the fauour of God or man then they become seruile works also and we haue our reward Or if wee doe them in hypocrisie the manner of doing them aright not obserued then God regardeth them not For he that in this manner killeth an oxe is as if hee slew a man and he that sacrificeth a sheepe as if he cut off a dogges head his oblation is as swines blood and his incense as the blessing of an Idoll Esai 66. 3. And therefore Matth. 7. Christ calleth such workers of iniquitie because though they did good workes for they prophecied and cast out diuels yet they did them not well but in hypocrisie for God doth not onely require at a mans hands that he doe good but also that he doe it well for if thou doest well saith God to Cain shall it not be accepted He doth not say if thou doest good it shall be accepted but if thou doest well to shew that good things must be well done And that he meaneth so appeareth in that which he presently addeth But if thou doest not well saith he sin lieth at the doore thereby putting it out of doubt that if a good thing be not well done it is sinne and in regard hereof it is that Esai chap. 58. reckoneth the hypocrite a Sabbath-breaker though hee did humble himselfe by fasting c. And therefore let the hypocrite and popish meritmonger bee well assured that though they digge deepe to couer their sinnes and dissemble deeply with God at the Church yet let them be well assured I say that their owne sinne will finde them out Num. 32. 23. and that it will waite and tarrie them like their dogges at the doore yea and will hunt them and neuer leaue them vntill it haue brought them vnto destruction if they learne not to serue the Lord aright And lastly as the soule must keep this Sabbath or rest from sin vpon this day especially so must we look also that our minds and thoughts be not carried away with the meditation of worldlie matters For God requireth not onely thy bodie but thy soule yea thy very thoughts Luk. 10. 27. And howsoeuer vpon the weeke it be lawfull for thee to ponder these things yet vpon the Sabbath thou must not thinke thine owne will Esai 58. 13. A man must not therefore busie his head vpon the Sabbath about his worldly businesse nor about the effecting of his delights in the weeke following but he must bee wholie as it were another man from that which he was in the weeke before and he must vpon the Sabbath let fall the care of these earthly things as Elias did his mantle when hee was rapt vp into heauen To conclude therefore this point of the rest whosoeuer vpon the Sabbath doth no seruile worke of his ordinarie vocation neither in his house at home nor in the citie nor in the fields abroad nor at sea sauing onely such as are of necessitie to be done or are for the performance of Gods worship commanded or else warranted by his extraordinary command and also forbeareth all recreations sports playes or pastimes keeping his tongue from vaine words and his heart from wickednesse and worldly cares hee truly and in deede keepeth the rest of the Sabbath And this much touching the first dutie required in the obseruation of the Sabbath which is to rest CHAP. IIII. The rest of the Sabbath must bee sanctified Sect. 1. What it is to sanctifie a thing Sect. 2. The duties of the Sabbath are publique priuate or mixt Sect. 3. On the Sabbath there must be a publique assemblie Sect. 4. How we are to behaue our selues in it Sect. 5. The publique duties are preaching and hearing Sect. 6. Administring and partaking the Sacrament Sect. 7. Execution of discipline Sect. 8. § Sect. 1 THat rest is here commanded we haue alreadie seene but that is not all this The rest of the Sabbath must be sanctified rest must bee sanctified For it is not
6. They liue at ease and what followeth vers 5. They drinke their wine in bowles Idlenes causeth wantonnes Dauid after his sleepe in the day time lusteth after Bathsheba 2. Sam. 11. 12. Idlenes causeth tale-bearing for they being idle goe about from house to house and become pratlers and busie bodies 2. Tim. 5. 13. like Bishops in another mans diocesse What shall I say more in a word they are inordinate walkers as the Apostle calleth them 1. Thess 3. and therefore what good may be looked for from them Then to conclude seeing such a legion of sinnes waite vpon this one sinne let vs shunne and auoide it and let vs walke in that vocation wherein God hath called vs considering that as the iron that lieth still rusteth the water that runneth not corrupteth and the field that is not manured bringeth foorth weedes so it fareth with the soule of the sluggard in steede of the good graces of God which rust and decay euery day in him there ariseth nothing but the affections of an idle braine as weedes in a land vntilled Let vs therefore betake our selues vnto some honest vocation wherein we may profit either Church or Common-wealth and let vs know that it is not left in our power to labour or not but let vs assuredly know that God enioynes vs labour for Sixe daies shalt thou labour § Sect. 2 But here two questions arise to be discussed First whether it bee not lawfull for a man vpon any of the sixe daies to vse recreation for the health of his bodie being he commaunds him to worke sixe daies Secondly whether it bee not lawfull to consecrate any one or more of the sixe daies to Gods seruice Touching the first it is true which the Apostle saith Bodily exercise profiteth little 1. Tim. 4. 8. he speakes of fasting the best of these exercises yet something it doth profit and for that profits sake we are allowed at some time to vse it seeing that God allowes a time thereunto as Eccles 3. There is a time vnto euery purpose a time to laugh a time to daunce c. Yea and if wee consider the weaknes and corruption of our nature wee shall finde that we haue neede of such times for wee are not of such a temper as to hold out still if our natures bee not repaired and refreshed but it is like vnto a bow if it stand long bent it will cast aside and therefore it is allowed vnto vs sometimes to vnbend as it were our wits and to refresh our spirits and as in a great combat to breathe a while that we may returne with a fresh incounter And to that end God hath allowed vs exercises both for the bodie and minde for the minde as Sampson vsed riddles Iud. 14. 12. and Dauid his Harpe 1. Sam. 16 for the body as Ionathan his bow 1. Sam. 20. and Esau vsed hunting Gen. 27. And this a man may doe if hee consider these things First that the mirth be allowable or that it be not corrupt or scurrilous for foolish iesting is condemned Eph. 5. 4 or dangerous as Pro. 20. 18. The foole faineth himselfe mad and casteth firebrands and arrowes and mortall things and saith Am not I in sport Secondly that wee vse them with moderation We must doe as Salomon when we giue our selues to these things we must be sure to leade our hearts in wisedome Eccl. 2. 1. And though we taste of the hony combe with Ionathan yet we must not eate too much Prou. 25. 27. And therefore if wee much desire it then we must remember Salomons watch-word Put thy knife to thy throte Pro. 23. 2. In the vse of these things therefore a man had neede doe as Vlisses when hee heard the Syrens first to binde himselfe fast vnto the maine mast that he might not be drawne away by them for though these bee not the diuels cart-ropes yet they be made dangerous cords of vanitie oftentimes to draw a man to further mischiefe especially if hee consider not the end of these recreations that wee vse them in respect of a greater good and to make vs fitter vnto better things euen as a man vseth sauce to sharpen his stomack because it is weake But many men in their sports know neither end nor measure whole nights or daies are not sufficient but that they must change and alter Gods couenant and turne the nights into daies to extend their sports vnto the vttermost limits yea and to leape from one sport vnto another as the flye doth from one scab vnto another When will these men I thinke be wearie will they neuer haue done meane they to make it the end of their life to liue to play Woe worth such a life tenne times worse than death because liuing they die as the widow that liued in pleasure was dead whiles she liued 1. Tim. 5. 6. And shall they not then dying die eternally as the rich man that went to hell for all his pleasures Luk. 16. 25. But what speake I I know my words are too weake to perswade these they are so deeply set Well yet let them remember the voyce that will come at midnight and happely may speake vnto them in the middest of their pleasures as the hand-writing appeared vnto Baltasher in the middest of his pleasures I say no more but think vpō it And last of all weigh well the circumstances of time place persons with whom thou vsest these recreations for there is not the least of thē but may make thy recreations sinfull As for example other things cōsidered it may be lawful for a man to shoote or bowle but is this lawfull to doe it when the preacher is in the pulpit or is it lawfull to play in the time of prayer or to vse it with those whom a man would disdaine that they should sit with the dogges of his flocke they bee so vile and prophane But what power or force circumstances haue in things indifferent to make them lawfull or vnlawfull I haue abundantlie shewed in the beginning of the chapter of rest Let this therefore suffice for answere to the first question § Sect. 3 The second question is whether it bee lawfull to consecrate any one or more of these daies vnto the Lords seruice The answere is that vpon some extraordinarie occasion the Church and the Magistrate may appoint one or more of these daies vnto Gods seruice For although a man may not prophane or make common that which is consecrate vnlesse in case of necessitie as Dauid did the shew bread Matth. 12. yet he may consecrate vpon a iust occasion that which is common as appeareth euery where Yea euen of these sixe daies wee finde some consecrate vnto the Lord as two daies in Hester called the feast of Purim Hest 9. And the feast of Dedication instituted by the Macchabees and obserued by Christ himselfe Ioh. 10. 22. So also did they consecrate of these daies vnto the Lord by keeping their fasts vpon this day
againe vnto life and liuing to giue thee euerlasting life and with it al happines all which he doth assure thee of when he calleth himselfe thy God then I say keepe his Sabbath For this hee requireth at thy hands who is thy God and hath done all these things for thee in becomming thy God And thus much for the motiues that this reason containeth in it to perswade vs to keepe his Sabbath § Sect. 2 One doctrine hence I note in that he saith it is holy vnto the Lord wee are therein taught to whom to consecrate holy daies namely vnto the Lord. Therefore Isai 56. he calles the Sabbath his holy day and Ezech. 20. 12. his Sabbath So doth he call the place of his worship his house Luk. 19. 46. And indeede being his seruice is there and then performed and that he wil haue no partners therein for he will not giue his glorie vnto another Isai 42. ought not the day and so the place to be consecrated onely vnto him The more shame then for the Papists that consecrate daies and Churches to Saints Angels Apostles Martyrs men women of which their Callender containeth aboue an hundred certainly they are herein worse than the Israelites for though they set vp an Idoll yet they would not consecrate a day vnto it but they said to morrow is holy vnto the Lord Exod. 32. 5. not vnto the Idoll but these institute daies vnto them yea and powre foorth prayers vnto them Heare vs Mary and pray for vs Peter c. But doubtlesse did these Saints know it they would crie out as in the Psalme 115. 1. Not vnto vs not vnto vs O Lord but vnto thy name giue we the glory Yea I say howsoeuer these men giue this worship vnto them did they know it they would euen rend their long white robes in an holy zeale as Paul and Barnabas did their garments and they would crie out vnto them from heauen as those did to the Idolaters vpon the earth O men why doe ye these things Act. 14. 15. But what needed they when as their practise in the Primatiue Church standeth vp against them There were I am sure holy men in olde times Patriarkes and Prophets yet did neither Christ nor any of his Apostles euer institute any day or make any prayer vnto them Which doubtlesse they would haue done had they held it a matter meete to bee done onely when they did consecrate a day they called it the Lords day being lead thereto by this in that it is called the Sabbath of the Lord thy God And thus much as concerning the second reason CHAP. III. The third reason is taken from Gods example who rested the seuenth day Sect. 1. Wherein we are to imitate God and wherein not Sect. 2. How God can be said to rest Sect. 3. The vse of these words Sect. 4. § Sect. 1 THe third reason followeth to be considered in these words For in sixe daies the Lord made heauen and earth c. And it perswadeth from an example of the like thus That which I did for thine example thou oughtest to doe the like but I laboured sixe daies and rested the seuenth for thine example and therefore thou must doe the like So that the force of this reason standeth in the example of God himselfe the best president that the world or word it selfe can yeeld Now of what force examples are wee see in that men are lead by example rather than by law and hold it a good warrant for the doing of any thing for that others doe so but if they be great ones that doe it then it is put out of question For would such men doe so say they if it were not lawfull Now God seeing men so to be carried by example and that this commandement is so commonly broken by the example of great mē especially who esteeme of the Sabbath but as of another day therefore he opposeth against their examples his owne example who is higher than the highest of them whose breath is in their nostrels and his example alone is able to waigh downe all the examples or reasons that can bee brought to the contrarie And if a man will be lead by example it is meete he should be lead by the best example and if it may be by such an example that cannot erre Now all the examples of men be they neuer so holy haue much weaknes in them and in one thing or other they misse Let vs make proofe of some of the best of them As for example Salomon had a wise and an vnderstanding heart so that there was none like neither before nor after him 1. King 3. 12. a very high commendation yet hee had his blemish he loued outlandish women 1. King 10. 1. Asa did right in the eyes of the Lord but will you know his fault he put not downe the high places 1. King 15. 14. Dauid was a man after Gods owne heart that did what was right in the sight of the Lord and turned from nothing that he commanded all the daies of his life yet in one thing he is chalenged in the matter of Vriah the Hittite 1. King 15. 5. So then wee see the best men come short and in many things wee sinne all I am 3. 2. And therefore the best dare propose themselues for examples to be followed no further than they follow Christ 1. Cor. 12. 1. If a man be iust another may be as iust as he if a man be learned another may bee as learned as he if a man preach well another may preach as well as he if a man write well another may write as well as he and often we see the scholler to exceede the master Now if these be the best examples we can propose vnto our selues then the best come short of that they should be and another man may possibly doe as well as they and so he may haue occasion of boasting but God his example is an example propsed without example it is so exact so full and so absolute that all the world cannot yeeld the like example neither can a man take any exception against it and therefore this is an example aboue all to bee followed And this his example hee so proposeth here as first setting it downe for a law and then afterwards keeping the same law in his owne person so that if either law or example will doe any thing with vs hee would by both of them perswade vs to keepe the Sabbath Nay further whereas in the other commandements you shall not see the example of God obserued in the keeping of them yet in this one you may obserue a double example giuen by God For twice in the Scripture his keeping of the Sabbath is obserued first in the beginning when he created the heauens and earth then hee rested the seuenth day Secondly when hee rained Manna in the wildernesse euery day yet when the Sabbath came he ceased Exo. 16. 26. 27. Well then hath the
prepare thy selfe before it come for thou art forgetfull that there is any difference betwixt this and other daies therefore saith he remember This is as it were the first stake Secondly he doth not only giue this commandement but he afterwards explaines it to the full sheing not only what workes are forbidden vpon this day to be done but also vnto whom and why Thirdly least thou shouldest bee drawne away by the example of great men to breake it hee sets before thee the example of him that is higher than the highest who did keepe it God himselfe did keepe it A rare example and a thing that he specisies not in any of the rest nor scarce againe in the whole Scripture so that in these three things this commandement is alone and neither these nor the like things may be found in any of the rest expressed You must thinke God had a meaning in it and what else can it be but that hee would haue this commandement vnderstood and remembred as being most necessarie for vs to know because vpon this day we are taught how to walke in the obedience of all the rest Which that wee may the better attaine vnto let vs see what things offer themselues in this commandement to be examined and considered of CHAP. II. The diuerse kindes of Sabbaths Sect. 1. The difference betwixt the morall and the ceremoniall Sabbaths Sect. 2. The vse of the ceremonies to the Iewes Sect. 3. That the Sabbath is perpetuall Sect. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Arguments to the contrarie answered Sect. 11. and 12. § Sect. 1 THese words being thus vnfolded it now remaineth that we proceede to the handling of them And first of the Sabbath day or day of rest that I may bee vnderstood of what rest I intreate How many sorts of Sabbaths there were amongst the Iewes We are to consider that amongst the Iewes there were two kinds of Sabbaths one of yeeres another of daies That of yeeres was euery seuenth yeere in which they might not sowe their land but let it rest or euery seuen times seuen yeeres which was the yeere of Iubile in which bondmen went out free and alienated possessions returned againe vnto the owners Leuit. 25. 10. Of these Sabbath of yeeres we intend in this place no further discourse we come therfore vnto that other part of the diuision namely the Sabbath of daies And here againe I must distinguish for the Sabbath of daies was also two-fold ceremoniall and morall Now of the first sort were all the Sabbaths that were instituted by Moses in the ceremoniall law such as were the Passeouer Pentecost the new Moone and the feast of Tabernacles which Leuit. 23. are called Sabbaths Of the second sort which wee call morall is that Sabbath which is commanded in the Decalogue or tenne Commandements of which here in this treatise our purpose is to write § Sect. 2 Now betwixt this morall Sabbath which we so call because it is a part of that law which giueth instruction for manners and these other ceremoniall Sabbaths there is great difference which Moses Leuit. 23. 37 38 pointeth at where The differēce betwixt the morall and the ceremoniall Sabbaths hauing spoken before in the chapter both of this Sabbath and of those feasts before named hee concludeth his speech of the feasts thus These are saith he the feasts of the Lord which ye shall call holy conuocations c. besides the Sabbath of the Lord that is besides those Sabbaths which they were to keep euery seuenth day Now the difference was First this morall Sabbath God himselfe spake it immediatly Exod. 20. 1. and afterwards writ it in tables of stone with his owne finger Deut. 9. 10. and therefore Exod. 32. 16. these tables are said to be the worke of God and this writing to be the writing of God ingrauen in the tables And this he writ not once but when the tables were broken he wrote in the second time Exod. 34. 1. And lest any man should say that God also spake and writ the rest when Moses Deut. 5. 22. had rehearsed the tenne Commandements vnto the Israelites he addeth that all these words God spake and added no more but wrote them vpon two tables and when he had written them as appeareth Deut. 4. 13 14. hee commanded Moses at the same time that he should teach them ordinances and lawes which they should obserue in the land which they went to possesse So that this is manifest that the Decalogue or tenne words was only spoken and written by God but all the rest added by Moses which is the first difference Secondly this morall Sabbath was more ancient For it had his institution as appeareth Gen. 2. 2 the very next day after mans creation yea and his obseruation together with his institution for God himselfe rested vpon it where as those ceremoniall Sabbaths tooke their beginning but from Moses Thirdly it was also more holy for where as vpon this day it was not lawfull for the Iewes to dresse their meate Exod 16. 23. nor to kindle a fire Exod. 35. 3. vpon these ceremoniall Sabbaths it was permitted vnto them to doe it Exod. 12. 16. And lastly it was more durable for the couenant of the moral Sabbath was an euerlasting couenant Exod. 31. 16. as also shall anon further appeare whereas the other was but a vanishing shadow and to last but vnto the comming of Christ for it was foretold by Daniel that the Messiah should cause the sacrifice to cease Dan. 9. 27. And that the Iewes knew well enough in that Iohn being demaunded by them what he was and denying that he was either the Christ or Elias or any of the Prophets They demanded again of him why he did then baptize thereby intimating that vnles he were one of these he might chaunge nothing in the Law wherin they secretly graunted that these might doe it And as the Messiah had authoritie in himselfe to change the ceremoniall law of Moses so might he also change these ceremoniall Sabbaths they being a part of that law which was ceremoniall which also hee did And therefore saith the Apostle Let no man condemne you in respect of an holie day or of the new Moone or of the Sabbaths which were but a shadow of things to come namely of our eternall rest in heauen which wee obtaine by faith in Christ Which Sabbath the Iewes thought did shadow out only their rest in Canaan but the Apostle Heb. 4. vers 8. confuteth them for saith he if Iesus that is Iosua had giuen them rest then Dauid would not after that day haue spoken of another rest saying that God sware in his wrath that the vnbeleeuing should not enter into his rest for their vnbeliefe sake yet this rest in heauen remaineth now vnto the children of God that is to the beleeuers although the shadowes thereof be done away the bodie which is Christ being come § Sect. 3 Indeede it pleased God in the minoritie
eate the Lords Supper And hereupon doth the Church define a Sacrament to bee a publike action And in the Primatiue Church it was vsually deliuered vpon the Sabbath therefore it was called dies panis In regard of this no complaint can sufficiently bewaile the backwardnes of this age whereinto we are fallen that some scarce once in a whole Iubile of Sabbaths nay if law had not prouided to the contrarie scarce once in a whole Iubile of yeeres would bee partakers of the Sacrament which we see euidently in that they come no oftner vnto the Lords table than they are compelled Moses was like to haue bin slaine for the neglect of circumcision What shall wee thinke the neglect of this will bring vpon vs And if vnworthie taking make vs liable vnto iudgement 1. Corinth 11 what shall we thinke of this not taking at all When Christ talked with the Iewes of a bread from heauen euery man would haue it Ioh. 6. 34. This is so and yet no man calleth for it though the price bee vnualuable and the vertue no lesse than the communion of the bodie and blood of Christ And if the very hemme of his garment had vertue to heale vncurable diseases how much more shall this his bodie heale vs if we be truly partakers of it But surely for such as take it onely by constraint and compulsion well they may finde the cloathes where Christ his bodie was but not his bodie And because they receiue it not worthily and with comfort but of constraint therefore in steed of a seale of his mercie they may receiue a pledge of his wrath And so much for the second dutie § Sect. 8 The third publique dutie is the administration of discipline admonition reprehension excommunication The execution of discipline a dutie of the Sabbath c. A publique worke also of the Sabbath to looke vnto the manners of men to admonish them that are vnruly 1. Thess 5. and to deliuer the obstinate sinner vnto Sathan that his soule may be saued And this the Apostle sheweth also to be a worke of the Sabbath 1. Cor. 5. 5. where he willeth them that when they were gathered together in the name of the Lord Iesus they should deliuer ouer the incestuous person vnto Sathan Now their assemblie was vpon the Sabbath as before hath been shewed and therefore that should then also be done as a worke of the Sabbath CHAP. V. Of mixt duties Sect. 1. Namely prayer Sect. 2. Reading the Scriptures Sect. 3. Singing Psalmes Sect. 4 Catechising Sect. 5. And shewing mercie Sect. 6. § Sect. 1 THE next duties that follow to bee handled are such as are mixt of which sorte are prayer thanksgiuing singing of Psalmes catechising almes c. which I terme mixt because they are such as may bee done in publique or in priuate which also are to bee performed vpon the Sabbath as they shal be best fitting with the time and place Now many men when they haue bin at Church they thinke they may doe all the rest of the day what they list As the harlot when she had payed her vowes she thought she might play the harlot Prou. 7. So do many they serue God in the forenoone and the flesh and the diuell in the after-noone But they must know that God doth require the whole day to be spent in holy duties And therefore as thou maist in no part of the day breake the rest by labour so much lesse maist thou breake the holinesse for God commaundeth the one aswell as the other holinesse aswell as rest nay rest should not haue been commaunded but for holinesse And therefore as I haue shewed before it was a sin to breake the rest so is it much more to breake the Sabbath by omitting the duties of holinesse Indeed thou art not tied to spend the whole day in the publique exercises before mentioned neither were the Iewes for they had but their sacrifice euening and morning Numb 28. and prayers with their sacrifice as appeareth Luk. 1. 10 in that the people prayed whilest the incense was a burning Then they had a lecture of the Law and Prophets Act. 13. 15 after that preaching For when they had read the Law they gaue the sense thereof and caused the people to vnderstand the reading Nehem. 8. 8 and then thanksgiuing All which cōtinued not the whole day but the congregation was dismissed at mid-day Nehem. 8. 10. 12. And they returned at three of the clocke at what time Peter and Iohn went vp to pray which is called the ninth houre answering vnto our third at what time also was the euening sacrifice But yet the interim before betwixt and after was spent either in priuate exercises of godlinesse or else in these which are both priuate and publique which are therefore noted and obserued in the practise of the Church that wee might draw them also into imitation which being at other times of the weeke to bee done so much more were they on the Sabbath and the exercises of religion being vpon that day doubled Numb 28 why should God bee now lesse serued vnder the Gospell than hee was vnder the Law § Sect. 2 To come therefore vnto these duties which we call mixt first of prayer Which that it is an exercise The mixt duties are first Prayer of the Sabbath is euident in that his house is called the house of prayer Ioh. 2. and the word cannot be without it Therefore Neh. 8. Ezra before he preached praised God And though Christ would haue vs to pray in priuate Matth. 6. yet God requireth the same to be done also in the assemblies Psal 107. 32 and that not alone by the teacher as Dauid in the midst of the congregation would praise the Lord when hee did declare his name Psal 22. 22. but by the people also Therfore when Zachary was burning of incense within the people were in prayer without Luk. 1. 10 which as it must bee done in the morning so also at night For Dauid would haue his prayer as the incense which was the first thing the Priest did when hee came into the Temple and the lifting vp of his hands as the euening sacrifice Psal 142. which was on the Sabbath at night offered so must our prayers be It maketh me the more to marueile at some kinde of men that thinke if they haue been at seruice as they call it in the fore-noone that God is beholding vnto them for that and that they are not bound to returne againe in the after-noone but that they consecrate vnto some pastimes as though they had been at Church in the morning to aske God leaue to goe to play in the after-noone Now as this is a publique exercise of the Sabbath and must go before and after the word so also at other times or else why are wee commaunded to pray continually 1. Thess 5. 17. and in all things to giue thankes Yea God to shew how well he likes it compares it to
incense And least we should pleade ignorance that wee know not how to pray hee giueth vs his spirit to helpe our infirmities Rom. 8. yea and promiseth that his eares shall stand open whensoeuer we pray Psal 34. 15. This then maketh against those that on the Sabbath or else neuer pray But let such know that it is a certaine token vnto them that they are wicked men For Dauid going about to describe wicked men giueth this as a speciall marke of them they call not vpon the Lord Psal 14. 4. Secondly it stirreth vs vp to performe this dutie especially seeing Christ requires it Cant. 8. 13. My loue let me heare thy voyce And so much for prayer § Sect. 3 The second exercise that is both priuate and publique is the reading of the Scriptures which 2. Reading of the Sriptures appeareth in that Christ willeth vs to search the Scriptures and Matth. 12. Haue you not read in the law as though wee were bound to reade it And in very truth the King himselfe is bound to doe it Deut. 17. 19. Which wee will yet doe so much the sooner if we consider that he is blessed that readeth c. Reu. 1. 2. Which reasons lead the Bereans Act. 17. 11. when they had heard Paul to see whether it were so or no. And as we must reade the word in priuate so must it be read in publique Paul would haue his Epistle read in the Church of Laodicea Coloss 4. 16. And Nehem. 8. the Priests first read the law and then afterwards gaue the sense So Act. 13. they had a lecture of the law And Act. 15. Moses was preached seeing he was read Now it may be many would reade but as the woman answered Christ when hee would drinke thou hast nothing to draw so they would reade but they haue no bookes Of those that come to the assemblie how many can reade I mistake I would say of those that can reade how many haue bookes If a man haue taken a peece of ground he is neuer quiet til he haue his lease or coppie or deeds If he doubt in any clause he will either looke in it himselfe or goe to him that can reade But in these things wee passe not wee thinke wee shall stumble vpon saluation well enough though we neuer seek it It is reported of the Iewes that they Iosephus knew the Scriptures as well as their owne names but amongst vs many scarce know the names of the Scriptures When a booke is named they know not where to finde it This was the policie of popish times to keep the people in ignorance hauing herein followed the policie of the Philistines who because they would keepe the Israelites in slauerie would not allow the vse of any weapons vnto them Ionathan and his Armour-bearer and Saul onely excepted whom forsooth they would seeme to grace nor permit a Smith among them the reason was least they should make them swords and as for their tooles they must come downe to the Philistines to sharpen them So deale the Papists they claspe vp the book of God in an vnknowne tongue and wrest out of lay mens hands the sword of the Spirit which is the word Onely they vouchsafe it to some few of their faction for a mischiefe but as for the people they must come downe to the Popes Decrees and Church-traditions vnwritten truths and vntrue writings and there they must sharpen their tooles but Smith must they haue none no Preacher least hee make them swords Yea but they will say many grow into errors by reading of the word Answ First I know no greater heresie than Poperie that is an heresie of heresies Secondly if this bee a good reason that because many abuse it therefore others may not vse it I see not but that men must forsake their meate and drinke also because some be drunken and some surfet So the Sacrament should be banished because some receiue it to their condemnation Nay so the word yea Christ himselfe should not be receiued because he is put for the fall of many Luk. 2. They must therefore know that in things indifferent in themselues though the abuse doth take away the vse yet not so in things commanded vs yea but shall we giue holy things to dogges No but will you withhold the childrens bread because the dogs catch at it Should a Captaine because some be alwaies quarelling stabbing and killing therefore presentlie commaund that all his souldiers should lay aside their weapons No but rather that they take armes to beate downe the quarellers And so wee say that the wearing of weapons breedes peace and so must we vse our spirituall weapons but whereas they pretend a feare of running into errors God hath promised to giue his spirit vnto his that shal leade them into all truth and better they cannot bee lead than by the word for that is a glasse wherein a man may see what is amisse Friends dare not tell a man his faults for feare of displeasing Enemies will not But reade the word and thou shalt see there is no fault which thou hast committed in all thy life but either Moses or Dauid or Salomon or Peter or Paul or one of the Prophets or of the Apostles will tell thee of it And therefore being that reading shewes a man his error how can it be that it should bring him into error And so much for the second dutie that is mixt § Sect. 4 The third dutie is singing of Psalmes which also is an exercise of the Sabbath as appeareth in The third is singing of Psalmes that all are exhorted and stirred vp thereunto Kings of the earth and all people Princes and all Iudges of the world young men and maides old men and children all must praise the Lord. And againe Psal 147. 1 2 Praise the Lord. Of which he giueth diuers reasons First it is a good thing then what better time than to doe it vpon the Sabbath Secondly because in good things wee are soone wearie vnlesse we delight in them therefore he saith it is a pleasant thing so that it is as it were the Sabbaths recreation Lastly because there are many things pleasant which yet are not seemely therefore he shewes that it is such a pleasant thing that is also comely There are good things that yet are not pleasing as afflictions which are grieu●us for the present Heb. 12. 11. And there are pleasant things that yet are not comely as foolish iesting Ephes 5. 4. But this hath all three it is good pleasant and comely Good in it owne nature pleasant to the hearers and comely to the vser It is good there is no euill in it it is pleasant there is no harshnes in it it is comely there is no affectation in it In regard hereof Paul and Silas sang in prison Act. 16. 25. And Christ after supper sang a Psalme or Himne Matth. 26. It was their exercise and that in publique as well as in priuate as
as the Israelites kept a fast in Mispeh 1. Sam. 7. And Hest 4. 16. there is a fast kept of three daies long yea Daniel keepes a fast of three weekes of daies Dan. 10. 3. Neither in so doing is there any breach or alteration of Gods ordinance but rather an obseruation For as Christ brake not the commandement when he neglected his dutie to parents to performe his dutie to God so neither doe we breake this ordinance of God when wee on any of the sixe daies neglect our owne businesse to serue God the cause and necessitie so requiring for if necessitie may cause vs to breake the Sabbath for the good of man may not necessitie aswell dispense with our daies and cause vs to sanctifie a Sabbath for the good of man Nay further I take it that this commandement being a Synecdoche and but a part put for the whole as are all the other commaundements doth warrant yea and commaund such time conuenient in the weeke daies to be set apart vnto Gods seruice And we see that Christ and the Apostles preached on these daies as well as vpon the Sabbath which they would not haue done if it had been vnlawful for the people to heare And as I thinke that any of these daies may by the Church be set apart to Gods seruice the cause so requiring so also doe I perswade my selfe that some part of euery one of these daies should be set apart to holy exercises as morning and euening to pray with our families And of these wee see Isaac had one hee went out in the euening to pray Gen. 24. 63. Daniel had three for he prayed three times a day Dan. 6. 10. And Dauid prayed seuen times a day Psal 119. 164. And thus much as touching the second question and so consequently of the first reason to perswade to the keeping of the Sabbath for as for such things as be here obserued about the rest I haue handled them before in the discourse of the rest of the day CHAP. II. The second reason because it is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God Sect. 1. Holy daies are to bee consecrated onely to the Lord Sect. 2. § Sect. 1 THe second reason followeth and is drawne from the end and institution of the Sabbath contained in these words It is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God And it may be thus gathered If the Sabbath bee consecrate vnto the Lord and his worship then you must rest on it from your works but the former is true for it is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God and therfore it followeth that you must rest from your works And here marke with me first the workmanship of this reason how fitly it is framed for first least any man should bee so bold as to aske him for his commission as Exo. 2. one demaunded of Moses Who made thee a Iudge or as Mat. 22. 23. the Priests demanded of Christ By what authoritie doest thou these things Therefore he shewes his authoritie namely that he is authoritie it self and he may command for he is Lord and no man will say vnto him vnlesse he be a diuell What hast thou to doe with vs Matth. 8 for he hath to doe with vs for he is thy Lord and that diuers waies First hee is thy Creator hee made thee and therefore looke how the vessell is in the potters hand so art thou in his Rom. 9. This Dauid knew well enough when he said Come let vs fall downe before the Lord our maker Psal 95. 6. Secondly as he is thy Lord by creation so also is he by redemption He hath bought thee with a price 1. Cor. 6. 20. a price not of gold and siluer but with his most pretious bloud 1. Pet. 1. 18. And therefore this is rendred as a reason of his dying and rising again that he might be Lord ouer vs Rom. 14. 9. Thirdly as by his redemption so by his soueraigntie rule and authoritie in that he is absolute in his commaund and doth whatsoeuer he will both in heauen and in earth Psal 115. 3. No man can stay his hand neither dare any say vnto him what doest thou Dan. 4. 32. for he is Lord of Lords Rom. 17. 14. and his hests stand like the lawes of the Medes and Persians that cannot be recalled Dan. 6. 12. Yea a degree further he is the Lord of spirits Num. 16. 22. and therefore will commaund not as other Lords thy bodie onely but thy soule too Matth. 21. 37. Thou must serue him with all thy soule and if it please him he can cast both bodie and soule into hell fire Mat. 10. 28. Now then if he be thy Lord and master in so full and so absolute a manner what then why then where is his feare Malac. 1. 6. He calles for that and good reason for if there bee no master but will haue some seruice shall God so great a Lord and master be without it No he will not and therfore he here requireth it of thee on this day to serue him Now there is one thing which the master oweth vnto the seruant and that is protection and euery man harpes vpon that string if he stands in need of his helpe then Master saue vs we perish Matth. 8. 25. But there is another thing that the seruant oweth to his master and that is obedience and there wee breake with him He saith goe and we goe not come and wee come not doe this and we doe it not wee keepe his commandements with notes as the Atheist beleene the Articles of faith But may it not be that there is cause as that he is a hard man or hee will not stand by his seruants to defend them or else he giues not so good wages as others Surely it is not so for first Dauid tels vs that he will not alwaies chide nor keepe his anger for euer Psal 103. 8. Yea if he see vs once to fall downe before him and to craue him to appease his anger he forgiues vs all Mat. 18. 27. then he is no hard master And as for defence he will suffer no man to doe vs wrong but wil reproue euē kings for our sakes Psal 105. 14. And as for his hire there is no seruice like vnto his no not the seruice of the King You cannot say of him as Saul said of Dauid will he giue euery one of you fields and vineyards will hee make you Captaines ouer thousands c Yea he will and more than that he makes all his seruants Kings Reu. 1. 6. and giues euery one of them a crowne of life 2. Tim. 4. yea an euerlasting kingdome that withereth not reserued in heauen 1. Pet. 1. 4. All this hee giueth and he giueth it liberally not reproching and casting men in the teeth with it as Saul did his followers why then what shall let vs to serue such a master Yet behold and wonder let a flattering diuell a little intice vs with a shew of any matter or
pleasure of sinne though it be but for a season yet we are presently in loue with it and forsake our old Lord and master to serue him like children that though they haue good things in their hands yet they will cast them away for toyes and trifles doth not God behold this and is not this our sin of disobedience written euen with the point of a Diamond before him Surely he will not forget it neither shall it bee put out vntill we die if we repent not and learne to serue him better who is the Lord of all flesh by creation but by a more neere band the Lord of his elect euen by redemption and therefore much more to be serued by them And this is another motiue to moue vs to serue him for though as a Lord he might onely commaund and wee ought not therein to disobey him yet as a mercifull God in Christ he had rather perswade and to that end he vseth an argument drawne from the couenant of grace that he hath made with man in that he vouchsafeth to be called to bee called doe I say nay in that hee vouchsafeth indeed to be his God for he saith not that it is the Sabbath of the Lord but in a more particular sort he addeth thy God pleading as it were thy possession in him and his interest in thee and indeede in this the very bowels of Gods mercie and compassion are as it were wound vp in that hee saith hee is thy God And it containeth in it plenteous redemption yea and assurance also Hee is able to saue for hee is God and hee is willing for he is a God vnto thee Therefore hee calles himself thy God Were he a Lord a God a Christ a Iesus what is that to thee if he be not thy God thy Lord thy Christ thy Iesus It would not much profit vs to know that meate is eaten an hundred miles off if wee perish for hunger As little would it auaile vs to know that Christ is a God and a Sauiour vnlesse hee be thy Sauiour And this is indeede the very marrow and honie combe of the word to know that the promise is made vnto vs and to our children Act. 2. 39 that a childe is borne vnto vs Isai 9. 6 that Christ is vnto vs wisedome and sanctification and redemption 1. Cor. 1. 30 and that he died for our sins and rose for our iustification Rom. 4. 25 and here that he is not ashamed to be called thy God But the greatnes of a benefit can neuer be conceiued vnlesse we conceiue first our great neede and our great vnworthinesse And first for our basenesse and vnworthinesse may wee not say as Dauid Lord what is man or the sonne of man that God should be mindfull of him Psal 8. that he should vouchsafe to be called his God Man is a very grashopper of the earth Isai 40. 22. yea all men together are but as a drop of water and as the dust of the ballance Isai 40. 15. and as little goodnesse haue wee as greatnes The best is but as a brier and the most righteous as a hedge of thornes Mich. 7. 4. What were the Israelites themselues they were but brickmakers and pioners in Egypt their foode was but onyons and garlicke their worship but Idolatrie Gen. 12. their father but an Amorite their mother but an Hittite Ezech. 16. 3 then what are wee who in respect of them are but the wilde branches of the Oliue and they the naturall Romanes 11. vers 21. Now as Dauid saith seemeth it a light thing vnto you to be the Kings sonnes seeing I am but a poore man and of small reputation So may we a thousand times more iustly say in respect of the highest Maiestie Seemeth it a light thing vnto you that God should vouchsafe to be called our God secing we are poore men and of no reputation But this was not all wee were not onely meane but miserable also wee were by nature the children of wrath Ephes 3. and the fire of Gods vengeance did burne against vs vnto the bottome of hell for our sins Yet then doth he step in and becomes vnto vs a sauing God by his bloud to clense vs from all our sinnes And not onely so but in this that he vouchsafeth to be called our God to giue vnto vs the assurance of the forgiuenes of our sinnes the assurance of the resurrection of our bodies the assurance of life euerlasting yea the assurance of all graces whatsoeuer That all this is promised in these words shall appeare first that it containeth in it the forgiuenes of sinnes appeareth in that Dauid saith The man is blessed whose God is the Lord Psalm 33. 12. Now there is none blessed but he that hath his sinnes forgiuen him Psal 32. 1. And therfore he whose God is the Lord hath his sinnes forgiuen him Secondly as it containeth in it forgiuenes of sinnes so also doth it containe in it the promise of the resurrection of the bodie And that Christ sheweth Mat. 22. 32. where he proueth against the Saduces the resurrection of the bodie by this God is the God of Abraham Isaac and Iacob now he is not the God of the dead but of the liuing The reason holdeth thus whose God the Lord is hee is their God by an euerlasting couenant and they shal liue for euer but hee is the God of Abraham Isaac and Iacob therefore they shall liue for euer and so consequently if he be thy God thou shalt liue for euer And that it containeth the promise of life euerlasting in it is manifest Heb. 11. 16. God was not ashamed to bee called their God for hee had prepared for them an heauenly citie The reason is thus concluded If he had not prepared for them a citie to come he should haue been ashamed but their God cannot be ashamed therefore he prepared a place for them and so consequently he will for thee if hee bee thy God In a word in this one word thy God are al the promises of God Yea and Amen for as the Apostle reasoneth He which gaue vs his sonne how shal he not with him giue vs al things also Rom. 8. 32. And if God vouchsafe to giue vs himselfe how shall he not with himselfe giue vs all things also Let vs then seeke to make this sure that God is our God and all things are ours whether Paul or Apollo or Cephas or the world or life or things present or things to come euen all things are ours together with him and that shall we know by this if wee be his 1. Cor. 2. vlt. And his wee are assuredly if his law be written in our inward parts to doe it then I say are we sure that he is our God and wee his people Iere. 31. 33. So then to conclude this point if in thy basenes God aduanced thee if in thy miserie he relieued thee if he forgiues thee thy sinnes assureth thee that thou shalt rise