Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n command_v day_n sabbath_n 10,415 5 9.9260 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A56363 Holy time: or, The true limits of the Lords Day I. Proving, that the Lords Day doth begin with the natural morning, and that the morning of the natural day doth begin at mid-night; and so consequently that the Lords Day must both begin with the natural morning at mid-night, and end with the natural evening at mid-night. II. Proving, that the Jews beginning of the day at the sun-set evening was only in relation to the date of the person purified from his levitical uncleanness. III. That the Jews themselves did hold, that the natural day did continue after sun-set till mid-night. Part II. By William Pynchon Esq; Published by authority. Pynchon, William, 1590-1662. 1654 (1654) Wing P4308A; ESTC R27470 105,890 137

There are 8 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Gnarbaiim is eleven times over put for the two distinct parts of the natural Evening p. 19 And because Gnarbaiim the two Evenings are but the two distinct parts of the full natural Evening therefore the Seventy Interpreters do translate them in the singular as one proper Evening p. 22 And the Hebrew Text doth often make the two Evenings to be but one proper Evening p. 23 SECT 3. Proving by seven demonstrative grounds that the natural Evening begins at Mid-day at the first declining of the Sun p. 24 The Jews divided the Artificial day into four great hours as they divided the Night into four Watches p. 27 CHAP. III. This Chapter hath three Sections and five Objections are answered SECT 1. Proving that the time of the first Darknesse was called Boker the Morning at last namely after all the parts of the natural day were shaped framed and set together p. 35 Boker the Morning doth signifie Early p. 35 Boker is put for Gods early seeking out either to punish the wicked or to protect the godly p. 37 Boker is put for the first time and for the first beginning of a thing p. 37 Boker is put for the Sun-set Evening because the time of Sun-set is the first beginning of the Jews Ceremonial day of Cleannesse for then the person purified began the date of his day of Cleannesse p. 40 56 86 SECT 2. Proving that the Morning doth begin in the darknight p. 41 SECT 3. Proving that the Morning in all likelihood doth begin at Midnight besides the former certain proof from the exact beginning and sending of the natural Evening from Mid-day to Midnight p. 44 CHAP. IV. This Chapter hath three Sections and four Objections are answered Proving that the Jews Custome in beginning their weekly Sabbath at the Sun-set Evening was occasioned by their Ceremonial Custome because the persons that were Ceremonially purified were commanded to begin the date of their new day of Cleannesse at that point of time p. 50. And hence it follows 1 That this accidental beginning must not be accounted for the true beginning of the natural day 2 Therefore the Sun-set Evening is not the right time for us Christians to begin our Lords day p. 50 The Jews were cleansed from their Ceremonial defilements in two degrees of time 1 In the time of the afternoon by washing or baptizing their bodies 2 In the time of the second Evening which did alwayes begin at Sun-set then and not till then they must begin the date of their day of Cleannesse p. 51 54 All Israel are called men of Holinesse in regard of their outward purity by their Ceremonial Cleansings p. 54 The Jews Morrow began at Sun-set in Ceremonial respects onely p. 56 86 It is disputed by some that the Sun-set Evening is not fully come untill it be full Twilight or somewhat past or else they confesse it cannot be proved that Christ lay three dayes in his grave p. 57 104 The time of Sun-set is fully come as soon as the body of the Sun is gone out of sight and therefore before it is Twilight p. 57 The time of Christs burial was at Star light p. 7. 105 They did not begin their Religious Festival Suppers untill three Stars appeared in the sky p. 60 The Jews observed a double date of the day 1 They observed the date of their Ceremonial day 2 They observed the date of the Natural day for several purposes p. 61. 95 96. at Object 18 CHAP. V. Proving that the Passeover-Evening did begin and end according to the Natural Evening from Mid-day to Midd-night p. 63 And in this Chapter eighteen Objections are Answered Some think that no other Evening belonged to the Jews Sabbath but the Evening before the Sabbath but they are much mistaken for that was the Evening of the Sabbath no otherwise but onely in relation to the date of the person pu●ified But the proper Evening of the Sabbath it self begun at Mid-day and ended at Mid-night as the Passeover Evening did p. 64. 110. 95. at Object 18. All Passeovers were Sacrifices and therefore the blood of them all must be sprinkled at the Lords Altar in his Temple p. 69 Blood was the Lords portion and in that respect he did prohibit the Jews to eat blood and likewise some sorts of fat p. 69 The Lord permitted many private Altars for Sacrifice in the dayes of Samuel for the use of a particular person or Tribe but he allowed but one publick Altar for the publick Sacrifices of all the twelve Tribes such as the Passeovers were p. 70 The Passeover-day was none of the Jews Festival Sabbaths it was but a half Holy-day p. 72 No Levites but Priests onely must sprinkle the blood of the Sacrifice upon the Lords Altar p. 74 It was not convenient for above twenty persons to make their count for one Lamb-Passeover p. 75 A digression to open some difficult phrases about the Passeover because they are borrowed from the unusual known dialect of the Thalmud p. 77 The time of Christs Burial was at Star-light p. 83. 57. 105 Boker the Morning is put for the beginning of the Jews Ceremonial day which did exactly begin at Sun-set 86 The Jews accounted the first half of the night to belong to the former day as a true part thereof in the case of their Religious Feasting upon their Passeovers and in other cases also p. 90. 51. 64 110 The second part of the Passeover Evening was the appointed season for the time of their Religious Feasting from Sun-set till Mid-night p. 93 CHAP. VI. Proving that the day of Reconciliation was an extraordinary long Fasting Sabbath and therefore the beginning of that day ought not to be produced as an exemplary patern neither for the beginning of the Lords day nor yet for the beginning of any other Fasting day p. 98 No Fasting day among the Jews was so long as the day of Attonement was p. 110 CHAP. VII Answering their Objections more particularly that hold the Lords day to begin at the Sun-set Evening p. 103 Such as hold the Sabbath day to begin at the Sun-set Evening can never prove that Christ lay three dayes in his grave p. 104 Luke saith that the time of Christs burial was when it began to be Star-light p. 105. 57. 83 The Hebrew Doctors held the Sun-set Evening after the Sabbath to be a true part of the Sabbath it self p. 110. 50. 64 The Hebrew Doctors allow no more but seven Furlongs and a half to an English mile p. 114 CHAP. VIII Proving that the punctual time of Christs Resurrection was in the Morning just at the time of Sun-rising p. 117 A TABLE OF Such Scriptures as are Illustrated or Explaned Genesis Chap. Vers Page 1 2 35 44 1 5 8 16 22 31 14 15 58 24 63 51 32 2 21 38 38 17 18 12 43 9 12 49 27 17 24 37 Exod. 8 21 22 13 12 6 19 65 79 12 7 68 12 8 42 93 95 97 12 11 48 12 1
Festival Supper which belonged to the last day of unleavened Bread which was the one and twentieth day of the Month did also bear the date of the two and twentieth day to the person purified and this latter evening was the allowed season for all their Holy Festival Suppers and often-times it was little enough for they must boyl and rost all the flesh of their Peace-offerings which were of the greater kind as sheep and Oxen for no Fowls were allowed for Peace-offerings See Ains in Lev. 3. 6. this did much increase the quantity of their Provisions and therefore it required the longer time both to Cook it and to feast on it and all these days of Feasting were commanded to be done with great solemnity especially the first and the last and with many relations of Gods goodnesse for their deliverance out of Aegypt and with Songs and Psalms of praise Deut. 16. 15. Exod. 23. 15. Deut. 27. 7. See Ains in Exod. 12. 8. and in this respect the latter evening was a competent time for these religious Solemnities and to continue the time of feasting longer was a transgression for it is expresly commanded in Lev. 7. 15. that the holy flesh must be eaten in the same day in which it was sacrificed But if the Sun-set evening had been the true beginning of the Natural day then this Holy flesh could not have been eaten the same day as I have noted the reason thereof formerly and then God by Moses had commanded us to do that which is not possible to be done therefore the Sun-set evening is a true part of the same Natural day wherein the flesh was sacrificed Maymony saith as I noted in objection sixteen that the Priests did eat the two Loaves which were presented to the Lord with the Meat-offering of the Congregation on the day of Penticost in the same day and in half the night as the flesh of the most holy things were See Ains in Levit. 23. 20. so then in the judgement of the ancient Hebrew Doctors for Maymony doth but record their judgement the latter evening till mid-night was a true part of the same Natural day in which the Sacrifices were offered though yet notwithstanding the purified person began the date of his new day at the Sun-set afore 5 Thus saith Maymony after he had related divers circumstances about the Passeover then is brought in a Table furnished with bitter Herbs unleavened Bread and the Body of the Paschal Lamb and the flesh Chagigah which is saith he for the fourteenth day of the Month he doth not say which is for the fifteenth day of the Month though otherwise he doth call this time the fifteenth day of the Month both are true in a right sense namely in the sense formerly given and in another place Maymony saith thus The evening of the fourteenth of N●shan is not like the evening of other Festival days because in it are the Feast and the killing of Sacrifices See Ains in Lev. 23. 5. He makes the time of feasting to belong to the fourteenth day and secondly he preferres this evening to the evening of the Festival Sabbaths and therefore prescribes a greater punishment for servile work done on this evening than for working in the evening before the Festival Sabbaths for so is the comparison to be made as I have noted it elsewhere because in this evening was solemnized the proper Feast of the fourteenth day but the evening before was but in way of preparation to the Sabbath it self Thirdly Maymony saith thus They searched out Leaven in the beginning of the night of the fourteenth day Maymony calls the night before the Feast of the unleavened Bread the fourteenth night and yet in another place he calleth it the fifteenth day Thus have I proved not only by Scripture but also by the consent of the Hebrew Doctors that the Sun-set evening is a true part of the former day though it be also the beginning of a new day to the person purified by a Ceremonial institution CHAP. VI. Proving that the Day of Reconciliation was an extraordinary long Sabbath and an extraordinary long Fasting-day and therefore the beginning of this day ought not to be alleged as an exemplary Pattern neither for the beginning of any other Fasting-day nor yet for the beginning of the Lords Day THe Law saith thus in Lev. 23. 32. yee shall afflict your Souls in the ninth day of the Month in the evening from evening to evening you shal rest your Sabbath This Sabbath was singular from other Sabbaths in two regards 1 No other Sabbath was like it for the services of it 2 No other Sabbath was like it for the length of it 1 No other Sabbath was like it for the services of it For 1. All the Sacrifices of this day were commanded to be done by the High Priest only but on other Sabbaths they might be done by any other Priest as well as by the High Priest 2 There were more Burnt-offerings commanded to be offered for the publick on this Sabbath than on any other Sabbath 3 More Incense must be offered on this day than on any other day 4 There was more often sprinkling of blood on this day than on any other day 5 The High Priest did oftener wash on this day than on any other day 6 He used more sorts of Priestly garments on this day than on any other day 7 He did more often change his Garments on this day than on any other day 8 The High Priest did enter into the Holy of Holies on this day and on no day else all the yeer long and thus no day was like this Sabbath in the services of it 2 No day was like this day for the length of it neither in respect of the fast nor in respect of holy Rest of it For though it was commanded to b● observed in the tenth day of the seventh month Lev. 23. 27. yet it was also commanded to begin in the Evening of the ninth day Lev. 23. 32. This Evening of the ninth day hath a double interpretation 1 Some understand it of the sacrifice-Evening of the ninth day 2 Some understand it of the Evening at the end of the ninth day where the tenth day begins 1 In the first sense Maymony saith They began to afflict their souls in the Evening of the ninth day next before the tenth day and so they tarried in their affliction a little in the night after the tenth day In these words you see that Maymony doth not hold this fast to begin with the tenth day at the Sun-set Evening according to the date of the new day of the person purified but in the evening of the ninth day next before the tenth day And Maymony saith moreover That they must abide in their affliction a little in the night after the tenth day This early beginning and this late ending of this fasting-day doth increase the length of this day beyond the length of any other fasting-day or
grant that all Israel departed out of Egypt on the fifteenth day of Nishan Numb 33. 3. But how prove you that they began their journey at Midnight or that the fifteenth day began at Mid-night Answ The circumstances of the Text do prove it plain enough for as soon as the Egyptiaus saw all their first-born slain at Mid-night they feared lest they should be all slain and therefore they did urge the Israelites in all haste to depart and the Israelites knew all this before-hand and accordingly they prepared for their speedy departure and because of this their preparation they are said to depart out of Egypt in the night Deut. 16. 1. compared with Exod. 12. 29 31 42. The Egyptians therefore as soon as their first-born were slain at Midnight urged the Israelites in haste to depart and then also the Israelites did depart out of the doors of their houses because the morning of the fifteenth day was come but yet they could not fully depart out of Egypt untill the body of the self same day was come namely not till it was Mid-day See Ains in Exod. 12. 41. they had many businesses to do after they went out of the doors of their houses before they could fully depart for they must assemble together 600000 men befides women and children and many connexed people and cattle and before all this could be put into a fit posture for their orderly marching away it was Mid-day and yet they made extraordinary haste to bring things thus soon to passe and through their great haste they took their Dough as it was unleavened and carried it upon their shoulders ver 34. and thenceforth the fifteenth of Nishan was commanded to be remembred and to be observed as a Festivall Sabbath for ever and as the first day of the Feast of unleavened bread Exod. 13. 3. Lev. 23. 7. Deut. 16. 3. Their Journey in the night began in this order as soon as the first-born of Pharaoh and the Nobles were slain at Mid-night then in their perplexed fear they did hastily call up Moses and Aaron to depart and then they gave the Alarm to the rest and as the first of them marched through the land of Goshen the rest fell in by Troops but before they could be all marshalled to depart in fit order it was Mid-day and in this sort their march began at Mid-night and was compleated by Mid-day according to Numb 33. 3. Conclusion From all the premises which I have laid down under three Heads or Sections it follows That the time of the first darkness after the Creation of the Earth was Morning and not Evening And secondly That it began at that time which the God of Nature made Mid-night at last namely as soon as all the parts of the Naturall day were formed and framed together CHAP. IV. Proving That the Jewes Custom in beginning their weekly Sabbath at the Sun-set Evening was occasioned by their Ceremonial Custom namely Because the persons that were ceremonially purified from their ceremonial Defilements were commanded to begin their new day of cleanness then and hence it follows first That that accidental beginning of the Day must not be accounted for the true beginning of the Natural Day And Secondly Hence it follows That it is not the right time for us Christians to begin our Lords Day at the Sun-set Evening as the Jews did by their ceremonial Custom onely SECT 1. THe Jews were often guilty of sundry degrees of sins of uncleanness against the Ceremonial Law besides their sins against the Moral Law as you may find them noted and distinguished by Mr. Ainsworth in Lev. 11. 24 25 32. and in Lev. 12. 6. and in Lev. 22. 7. compared with Numb 9. 10. and with Lev. 13. 6. and see also Lev. 14. 9 17. and Num. 5. 2 3. and Numb 19. 2 7 11. Secondly Answerable thereunto the Ceremonial Law did ordain several degrees of purification from these several degrees of ceremonial uncleanness as you may find them noted also by Ainsworth in Lev. 5. 2. Lev. 14. 9 15. Lev. 15. 14. Num. 5. 7. Num. 19. 18. Gen. 35. 2. and in Exod. 19. Thirdly Not onely the manner how but also the time when they must cleanse themselves was ordained and appointed by the Ceremonial Law Some kind of defilements might be clensed in one day but the greatest degrees of their Ceremonial defilements required not only one but many dayes for their cleansing but all were commanded to begin their cleansing in the Evening in two degrees of time according to the two parts of the Evening for the natural Evening hath two equal parts as I have shewed in Chap. 2. and shall further shew it in the next Chapter In the first Evening which doth always begin at Mid-day they must baptize or wash themselves The Jews were cleansed from their ceremonial defilements 1. By washing in the afternoon And 2. By the Suns setting upon them after their baptizing In the second Evening which doth alwaies begin at Sun-set they did begin to date the day of their cleanness For by the setting of the Sun upon them after their washing two things were effected First Their cleanness by their former washing was confirmed or made perfect And secondly As soon as their cleanness was made perfect they began the day of their cleanness Object 1. Might not the unclean person baptize himself from his Ceremonial defilements in the latter evening after Sun-set as well as in the time of the first Evening before Sun-set Ans He might not because God had appointed the time of the two Evenings for two distinct degrees of their cleansing The first Evening from Mid-day to Sun-set was allotted to them for the washing or baptizing themselves from their ceremonial sins and this was onely as a preparation to the day of their cleanness And this I will labor to make evident several waies 1. Moses in Deut. 23. 11. doth command the unclean person to bath himself in water at the looking forth of the Evening So the Hebrew phrase is but it may be demanded what time is that that is meant by the looking forth of the Evening Answ I have shewed you in chap. 2. and in chap. 5. that the Evening doth first begin at the first declining of the Sun at Mid-day and that it looks forth towards his setting in the west from the very first declining of the Sun from Mid-day untill it depart from that Horizon and to this sense I have expounded the shadows of the Evening to look forth in Jer. 6 4. See Chap. 2. In like sort it is said of Isaack that he went out into the fields to meditate at the looking forth of the Evening Gen. 24. 63. In those daies they had no private upper Rooms to meditate in because they lived in Tents and therefore they used to sequester themselves by going out into the fields to meditate where they had Groves of Trees for shade and refreshing and thither the godly used to go to
meditate or to study divine mysteries in the heat of the day at the first looking forth of the Evening See Ains in Psa 55. 18. In like sort they used to bathe or baptize themselves from their Ceremonial defilements at the looking forth of the Evening and then also the water was well warmed by the Sun and so made the more fit for bathing I grant also that it was lawfull for them to bathe themselves from their Ceremonial defilements all the time that the Sun looked forth by his shadowes towards the West till it was ready to depart out of that Horizon But this is to be marked that none were commanded to baptize themselves in any part of the morning onely the Priests were commanded to wash their hands and their feet every morning although they were clean before See Ains in Exod. 30. 19 20. neither were they commanded to baptize themselves after Sun-set for except they were baptized before Sun-set they could not begin the day of their cleannesse at Sun-set according to command 2 It is evident that the appointed season for baptizing themselves from all their Ceremonial defilements was in the time of the first Evening by the Example of Bathshebaes baptizing herself The Text saith it was in the Evening when David arose from his bed and walked upon the Roof of the Kings house then he saw a woman washing her self and the woman was very beautiful to look upon 2 Sam. 11. 2. This Evening when David arose from his bed cannot be understood of the latter Sun-set Evening for then for want of Sun-light he could not have discerned her beauty from the Roof of his house but it must be understood of the afternoon Evening for in those hot Countries they used to sleep in the afternoon upon some Bed or Pallat as Ishbosheth did 2 Sam. 4. 5. from whence he arose and walked upon the flat Roof of his house and thence he beheld the beauty of Bathsheba as she was baptizing her self hence it may be gathered that the unclean persons did use to baptize themselves from their Ceremonial defilements in the afternoon Evening 3 It is also evident that they baptized themselves in the after-noon Evening from their Ceremonial defilements by a famous example in Josh 7. for when the Lords wrath was gone out against them in that the men of Ai slew about thirty six of Israel because that Achan had stoln the excommunicate thing then said the Lord to Joshua at the Even-tide Vp and sanctifie the people and say Sanctifie your selves against to morrow Josh 7. 6 13 14 15. and how else must they sanctifie themselves for the Lords presence at his Ark on the morrow but by washing themselves from their Ceremonial defilements for there were scarse any but they were defiled by one accident or other and none might come before the Lords Ark in their Ceremonial defilements upon pain of being cut off and before Joshua could make proclamation through the Camp for their purification and for their solemn meeting to seek the Lord for mercy on the morrow it would require a good space of time therefore this Evening cannot be understood of the Sun-set Evening but of the noon-tide Evening as I have explained the matter more at large in Chap. 2. 4 All Israel were warned when ever they came before the Lords presence in his Tabernacle to be cleansed from their Ceremonial defilements especially at their three solemn feasts but they were not tyed to the observation of their Ceremonial baptizing when they resorted to their Synagogues on their weekly Sabbath daies for in those places both the clean and the unclean might meet together in Gods worship as I have opened the matter in my discourse of the Jews Synagogues Discipline But under pain of the Lords displeasure none might approach to the Lords Sanctuary without their legal purificatīons as it is manifest by the example of Gods displeasure against some of Ephraim Manasses when they came to the Passeover in the daies of Hezekiah with out their purifications but as soon as Hezekiah perceived their error which doubtless the consciences of the visited persons made them to acknowledge he prayed to the Lord for them the Lord was intreated and healed the people 2 Chron. 30. 19 20. and for the better avoiding of this error afterwards it was observed as a custom among the Jews to go out of the Country up to Jerusalem before the Feast of Passeover to purifie themselves Joh. 7. 55. which purification was effected by two degrees of cleanness First By baptizing themselves in the first Evening And secondly By the Sun-setting upon them after their baptizing as I have formerly proved the matter for none might approach the Sanctuary until they could declare their purification to the Priests that were the Porters 2 Chron. 23. 19. as Paul did Act. 21. 26. And the Lord did so much approve of their Ceremonial purity both by their actual baptizing and by their abstinence from unclean meats and from all other things else that might defile them That for that very obedience he doth cal the whole Nation All Israel are called men of Holiness in regard of their ceremonial purity Men of holiness Exod. 22. 31. for all the Nation in general were very careful to maintain this kind of holiness And the Hebrew Doctors say that if any man of the common people did but say I am clean to keep the sin-water he was to be trusted for there is no man of Israel too vild for it See Ains in Num. 19. 9. that is to say no man of Israel was too vild for it if he were but Ceremonially clean and in this sense all Israel were holy namely to the purifying of their flesh for the Law is not of Faith Gal. 3. 12. a man might keep the Law to the purifying of his flesh though they wanted saving-Faith to apply the blood of Christ for the cleansing of their consciences from the guilt of sin And thus much touching the first degree of time in which they must perform the first degree of their Ceremonial cleannesse SECT 2. I Come now to speak of the second degree of time wherein their Ceremonial cleanness was perfected and that was as soon as the Sun was set upon them after their Ceremonial baptizing and from that time also they began to date the new day of their cleanness First I prove that God ordained the Sun-set Evening to be the time of perfecting the cleanness of the baptized person ere he None were compleatly purified by being baptized til the Sun was set upon them could begin the day of his cleanness by Deut. 23. 10 11. There Moses saith thus to all Israel If there be in thee a man that is not clean by reason of an accident in the night then he shall go out of the Camp and he shall hath himself in water at the looking forth of the Evening and what then was he now made clean as soon as ever
Synagogues for there the clean and the unclean might meet together every Sabbath or seventh Day as I have observed in Chap. 4. but in case they had been defiled by any accident whatsoever at Sun-set they could not have eaten of their festival Sabbath-supper for all Israel were admonished to be clean at every solemn Feast saith Maymony Obj. 11. Why doth John call the first day of the Feast of unleavened Bread a high Sabbath Joh. 19. 31. Ans All the seven solemn Festival Sabbaths in Levit. 23. 7. are called High Feasts by the Geneva in Eze. 45. 17. But secondly this first day of the Feast of unleavened Bread was the very first of all those seven Sabbaths it was the day in which the Lord brought them out of Aegypt with a high hand and therefore the Lord did in a special manner charge them to remember this day for ever Exod. 13. 3. this Day and the weekly Sabbath have the word remember prefixed before them more than any other Sabbaths and in this regard the Hebrew Doctors in Deuteroproton and in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 do call Pascha day a great Sabbath but they do not give this high title to the proper Passeover day for that was no Sabbath it was but half Holy-day and therefore Moses doth not reckon it into the number of the Festival Sabbaths in Gen. 23. but they mean it of the first day of the Feast of unleavened Bread this day they called a great Sabbath and Pascha Day because in it they did festivally eat the remainder of their Peace-offerings which they had offered with the Lamb-Passeover on the fourteenth day But though they held this day to be a great Festival Sabbath and shewed great reverence to it now in their request to Pilate because it was their preparation time to their Festival Supper yet in the morning they held it lawful to judge Causes of Life and Death as we may see they did in our Saviours case and after Sun-set they held it lawful not only to bury but also to imbalm the Dead as the godly persons did to our Saviour See Ains in Lev. 23. 56. but they did not hold any of this work lawful to be done on their weekly Sabbath Luk. 23. 56. Obj. 12. Why doth John use the term Sabbath twice over in John 19. 31. doth he speak but of one kinde or of two sorts of Sabbaths Ans John speaks but of one high Festival Sabbath only now it was their immediate preparation to their high Festival Sabbath-Supper and therefore having satisfied their malice on Christ they besought Pilate that their leggs might be broken and that they might be taken down for that Sabbath was a high Sabbath I grant also that the weekly Sabbath was now begun according to the date of the person purified but not the seventh Day it self for this high Festival Sabbath was now in its full force and in its solemn Feast Secondly The time of Christs Burial is noted by Luke to bee The time of Christs burial was at Star-light when the said Festival Sabbath did begin to lighten Luk. 23. 54 so doth Mr. Broughton and Mr. Weames read it and so doth the Syriac read it in this phrase the Evangelist Luke doth plainly Thalmudize his words run thus That day was the preparation and the Sabbath began to lighten two things are observable 1. Luke saith this day was the preparation namely to their festival Supper 2. He describes the exact time when Christ was inclosed in the heart of the earth it was when this High Sabbath began to lighten namely in the first place with the Evening Star and that was a perspicuous mark of the near time of their Festival Supper but they did not begin their Festival Supper till three Stars appeared as I have noted in chap. 4. and Luke doth relate to this custom of theirs in shewing that the time of Christs Burial was when the Sabbath began to lighten but I beleeve the chief Priests did deferre the time of their feasting now somewhat longer than at other times because they had some businesse to do with Pilate before they could intend their Festival Supper for they went to Pilate to intreat him that the Sepulchre might be made sure until the third day because this Deceiver said that he would rise again the third day Mat. 27. 62 63. This request of their 's no doubt did occasion their delay to begin their High Sabbath Supper till more than three Stars appeared in the Skie this night Obj. 12. You say the Priests went to Pilate to intreat him to make sure the Sepulchre before they kept their Festival Supper but it is out of doubt I think that they did not go to Pilate till the next morning for Matthew calls the time of their going to Pilate the next day that followed their preparation Mat. 27. 62. Ans Ignorance of the Iewish Customs makes many misconstructions the next day began at Sun-set as I have sufficiently explained the matter in Chap. 4. Sect. 2. and this day followed their Preparation to their Festival Supper for their preparation in the after-noon was either by washing away of some light defilements or else it was their preparation of holy flesh by offering sacrifices c. But Matthews meaning lyes fair and round thus The next day after their preparation which began at the Sun-set evening they assembled unto Pilate to make the fore-said request Hence note that they did not go to Pilate to make this request till the next day namely not till after Sun-set and then also they had commission to make him sure by appointing such a Watch and all this they did after it was Star-light Their Satanical policy would not suffer them to stay so long as until the next morning for then Pilate would have said to them Why did you neglect to set a Watch about his Sepulcre over night as soon as he was buried for if his Disciples had had any minde to steale him away they would have done it in the first part of the night and doubtlesse when the Souldiers came to the chief Priests to tell them what had happened the chief Priests would have said that his Disciples stole him away before they began their watch but the chief Priests could not plead that excuse because they went presently to the sepulchre and made it sure sealing the stone and setting a watch Matth. 27. 66. Hence it follows that they went to Pilate in the beginning of their next Ceremonial day namely presently after Sun-set before they began their Festival Supper 2 Pilates answer to their request implies that they came over-night for Pilate saith You have a Watch go make it sure as you know Hence it follows that they came to Pilate when Watches were wont to be set but if they had not come to him til the next morning then in reason he would have said Get Warders and make it sure Hence it follows that the next day in which
which it was offered Lev. 6. 26. as other Sacrifices were Lev. 7. 15 18. and yet the Priests could not eat the holy flesh of this publick Sin-offering till after Sun-set for the fas● of this day was not fully ended till after Sun-set and therefore also they might not begin to Cook that holy flesh untill the Fast was fully ended Hence it follows that the same day did still continue till after Sun-set yea untill it was Mid-night 2 The Priests had another work to do within the limits of this tenth day namely they must burn all the fats and peeces of all the publick Evening-sacrifices of this day which were many and some of their Evening-sacrifices were also offered neer unto Sun-set and therefore this work and duty of burning would require not only the more diligence but also the more time to finish this sweet savor upon the Lords Altar in its own proper day as I have noted the commanded season thereof more at large in Lev. 6. 9. 3 It appears that some of the works which appertained to the morning-sacrifice of this tenth day must begin at Mid-night and that some of the works which must be done about the Evening-sacrifice were such as could not be ended untill the Mid-night after For the first work that must be done on this day in preparation to the Morning-sacrifice was the taking away the ashes from the Altar and these ashes they must begin to take away at Mid-night as Maymony saith See Ains in Lev. 6. 10. And in an other place he saith they took away the ashes at Mid-night and ordered the wood c. and at the break of day they began to kill the daily Morning-sacrifice See Ains in Lev. 16. 4. In like sort they could not finish the burning of all the Evening-sacrifices of this day till Mid-night as I have shewed above from Lev. 6. 9. and yet over and above this full day from Mid-night to Mid-night they began their strict Fast and their strict Rest in the Evening of the ninth day which did increase the length of this day to be an extraordinary long Fasting-Sabbath Hence I conclude That the beginning of this day cannot be alleged as an exemplary pattern neither for the beginning of any other Fasting-day nor yet for the beginning of our Lords day as it is intended by those that allege it for the beginning and ending of the Jews weekly Sabbath from Even to Even CHAP. VII Answering their Opinion more particularly that hold the Lords day to begin at Evening And four Objections are Answered Object 1. IT is objected that our Lords day is come in the place of the Jewish Sabbath which began at Evening and for the proof of this they allege the Example of Nehemiah he is said to shut up the Gates of Jerusalem when it began to be dark before the Sabbath Neh. 13. 19. they expound the word Before and the word Dark in favour of their opinion thus 1. The word Before the Sabbath they say doth mean just before the face or present beginning of the Sabbath 2. The word Dark they say doth mean when it was full Twilight namely when the darknesse in the Skie was somewhat more than the light in the Skie for as long as the light in the Skie is more than darknesse they say the Sun is the cause of it and hence they conclude that the Sun cannot be said to be set till the darknesse in the Skie be more in quantity than the light in the Skie and this they make to be the punctual time of the Sun-set evening when the Jews Sabbath began namely when a Man could not see to read or a Woman to sew Ans This exposition of the beginning of the Sun-set evening and of the beginning of the Sabbath is a new-found devise I have already shewed the vanity of it in Chapter 4. in my answer to Obj. 2. That the Sun-set evening is truly come as soon as ever the Body of the Sun is gone out of fight and that Darknesse is then begun because the shining of the Sun is gone from off the face of the earth and Darknesse is said to begin at the going down of the Sun in Gen. 15. 17. and then the Jews began to set their Night-watches and then the purified person began the date of the day of his cleanenesse and therefore if the Sabbath it self did begin in the evening at all it began then namely according to the date of the day of the purified person which began as soon as ever the Body of the Sun was gone out of sight as I have shewed in chap. 4. and then if Nehemiah did not set a Watch at the Gates of Jerusalem till the darknesse in the Skie was more than the light in the Skie he did not that which was sufficient to preserve the Holy rest of the Holy Sabbath especially seeing they began to make some preparation to the observation of the Sabbath from the time of the Evening Sacrifice before as I have observed from the Hebrew Doctors But I perceive that such as hold the Sabbath it self to begin in Such as hold the Sabbath to begin ●t the Sun set evening can never prove that Christ lay three days in his Grave the evening are necessitated to seek out such odde expositions as this of the time of the Sun-set evening because else they see that they can never prove that Christ lay three days inclosed in the heart of the earth Mat. 12. 40. and they know that Christ rose from the Dead on the first day of the Week Joh. 20. 19. Hence it follows that he must be inclosed in the heart of the earth in the very self-same Friday in which he was Crucified for the first day of the Week in which he arose from the Dead is called the third Day after 1 Cor. 15. 4. and in these respects it is of necessary consequence to describe the precise time both of his Burial and also of his Resurrection or else a doubting Conscience cannot be rightly established in the truth of his three days lying in the Grave But such as hold the Sabbath to begin at the Sun-set evening can never prove it unlesse they can prove that Christ was inclosed in the heart of the earth some distinct time before Sun-set but Luke saith that the time of Christs Burial was when it began to be Star-light Luk. 23. 54. that is not possible to be done for Luke saith that the Sabbath began to lighten with Star-light when he was inclosed in his Grave Luk. 23. 54. Master Broughton Mr. Weames and the Syriac do render the Translation so and the Seventy use the same Greek word in Job 25. 5. for the light of the Moon and it may as well be used for the light of the Stars for they are called Stars of light Gen. 1. 14 16. Psal 148. 3. Let all the circumstances of time about the burial of Christ bee cast up and laid together and then it will put
to Paul for his conversion that he might send him among the Gentiles that sate in darknesse to open their eyes and to turn them from darknesse to light and from the power of Satan to God Act. 22. 6 14. Act. 26. 13 18. and he made the word of God to abound through a great part of the world even from Jerusalem to Illiricum Rom. 15. 19. In this evening time of the world the Gospel did shine in its ful strength for now Christ and his twelve Apostles and seventy Disciples and divers other Prophets and Teachers did confirme their doctrine with signs and wonders to the conversion of many ten thousand soules that formerly sate in darknesse under the power of Satan 6 Gnereb is put for the last end of a thing as in Isa 24. 11. The mirth of the land is Gnereb that is to say ceased or ended And in this sense Matthew puts the evening of the Sabbaths in the plurall number for the end of the weeke Mat. 28. 1. for the Jews used to date all the days of the week from the Sabbath day in this order the first of the Sabbath the second of the Sabbath and so on till the week ended with the Sabbath it selfe In like sort they did sometimes call the whole week the Sabbath and the seven weekes to Penticost they called seven Sabbaths Levit. 23. 15. and the Pharisee said I fast twice in the Sabbath Luk. 18. 12. or twice in the week now if the Evening had been the beginning of the Natural day then all these allusions from Gnereb to the last times or to the last end of a thing had been very improper and very absurd 7 Gnereb by the figure Synecdoche is often put for any particular hour in the afternoon or in the beginning of the night for the Jews were to transact many Civil and many Religious actions in the severall houres of Gnereb the Evening and in that respect any of those houres may be called Gnereb the Evening But at first when Moses did conjoyn and set together all the parts and parcels of the first natural day No question but he did use Gnereb in its full and proper sense for the conjunction of the latter half of the Artificial day with the first half of the night as the even and equal part of time to Boker the morning and that is the thing which I mainly aime at in all my discourse upon Gnereb SECT 2. It is further evident that Gnereb must be taken for such a connexion of things as doth still preserve the Species distinct because Gnarbaiim in the duall number is put for the connexion of any two things without confounding their species But especially it is Eleven times over put for the two parts of the Naturall Evening I Find upon search that Gnereb the Evening is eleven times over called Gnarbaiim in the duall number because the God of Nature had from the first day divided the natural Evening into two parts which are rightly called the two Evenings by many Translators These two Evenings were famously known to all the Jewes in Egypt for when Moses commanded them to kill the Passeover between the two Evenings Exod. 12. 6. he did not explain what he meant by the two Evenings he did not make any circumstantiall description of them which had been necessary if they had not been familiarly acquainted with the several limits of them but he doth onely barely name them as a thing that was familiarly known to them Five times over the Lord commanded them to sacrifise all their Passeovers between the two Evenings Exod. 12. 6. Levit. 23. 5. Numb 9. 3 5 11. and four times over the Lord commanded them to sacrifise the daily Evening sacrifice between the two Evenings Exod. 29. 39 41. Num. 28. 4 8. Solomon Jarchi describes the two Evenings thus from the sixt hour which is at Mid-day and upwards it is called between the two Evenings for that the Sun declineth towards his going down c. between the Evening of the Day and the Evening of the Night The Evening of the Day is from the beginning of the seventh houre and the Evening of the Night is when the night begins See Ains in Num. 9. 3. And Aben Ezra on Exod. 12. saith There is the Evening of the Sun and the Evening of the Night when the shining of the Sun is gone from off the Earth And Rab. David in Perek A●oth ch 5. saith There is the Evening of the Suns declining and the Evening of the Suns setting His meaning is according to other Hebrew Doctors namely that the Evening of the Suns declining begins at the first declining of the Sun at Mid-day and that the Evening of the Suns setting doth begin then And Buxtorfius in his Hebrew Lexicon upon the word Gnarbaiim doth cite other Hebrew Canons to this very purpose But I shall refer you to Chap. 5. for a further description of the two Evenings where I explaine the Passeover Evening I have already cited nine places of Scripture where the term of two Evenings is cited in the Hebrew text and now I will cite two places more The Priests were commanded to light up their Lamps between the two Evenings Exod. 30. 8. and the Quailes came between the two Evenings Exod. 16. 12. Also I find one clear example of the two Evenings in the New Testament in one and the same day It is said in Matth. 14. 15. When it was evening the Disciples came to him and said the time is now past that is to say it is now past dinner time send the multitude away But Christ did not send them away untill he had first made them dine and after they had well dined then he sent them away After this Evening Christ went up into a mountain to pray and then it is said againe When the Evening was come hee was there alone ver 23. This Evening in ver 23. is another Evening besides that in vers 15. and between these two Evenings Christ did a long action for he fed many thousands plentifully And thus I have proved by a Jury of twelve Witnesses that the naturall Evening is divided into two Evenings and I have set out the limits of the first Evening by the testimony of the Hebrew Doctors from Mid-day till Sun-set and the latter Evening begins at Sun-set and ends at mid-night and both these Evenings are called Gnarbaiim in the duall number that is say the Twy-party Evening for so Gnarbaiim in the duall number must be understood as it appears by the like form of speech where the Scripture setteth out the twy-party connexture of other things as for example Ramath in mount Ephraim 1 Sam. 1. 19. is called Ramothaim in the dual number 1 Sam. 1. 1. some Translators render it the two Ramaths in mount Ephraim but indeed they are deceived for there is but one Ramath in Mount Ephraim and that Ramath is called Ramothaim in the dual number because it had two parts and
12. 5 11 12 14 18. and in respect hereof the Hebrew Doctors say He that killeth holy things out of the Court of the Sanctuary if he do it presumptuously he is guilty of cutting off See Ains in Lev. 17. 2 5 8 9. nay though a Priest did kill a Sacrifice in the Temple it self yet it might become unlawful if the blood thereof were but carried out of the Temple before it was sprinkled upon the Altar for thus saith Maymony The blood of the holy things that goeth out of the Court becommeth unlawful for Sacrifice yea though they bring it in again and sprinkle it upon the Altar yet it is not acceptable See Ains in Lev. 1. 5. If the Jewes had thought it as lawful for them to kill the Passeover in a private house ever since the destruction of the Temple as they did at the first Passeover in Egypt then doubtlesse they would not have omitted to sacrifice the Passeover now in all the places of their dispersion but ever since their Temple was destroyed they have been without the Passeover and without all other Sacrifices for the space of sixteen hundred yeers together And thus speaketh Mr. Broughton from the Hebrew Doctors He that shall kill the Pascha ever since Jesus Christ conquered Canaan in a private house had been held an open enemy to the truth of God And Maymony saith That now they can have no sacrifice because they can have no Temple neither can they kill the Paschal Lamb but instead thereof they onely use Vnleavened bread with bitter herbs and wine in their private houses See Ains in Exod. 12. 8. Hence it follows that seeing all the Passeovers must be brought to one publick place that it would require a longer space to kill one after another than they needed in Egypt where every house might kill their Lamb at one hour Fourthly In respect of the place of sprinkling it must be all All Passeovers were sacrifices therefore the blood of them all must be sprinkled on the Lords Altar done at one Altar and therefore it would require a longer time than they needed in Egypt for there every first-born might sprinkle the blood upon the door-posts of his own private house at one hour together but the sprinkling of the blood of all the Passeovers in Canaan could not be done in so short a space because all must be done at one Altar one after another Lev. 1. 5. for all Passeovers were Sacrifices Exod. 12. 27. Exod. 23. 18. Exod. 34. 25. and no Levites but the Priests onely must sprinkle the blood of all Passeovers and of all Sacrifices upon the Lords Altar 2 Chron. 30. 16. 2 Chron. 35. 11. And because the Lord did appropriate the blood of all Sacrifices Blood was the Lords peculiar portion therefore he prohibited the Jews to eat blood and also some sorts of fat to himself as his peculiar right to make attonement for mens souls therefore in that respect he did straitly prohibit the Jews that they should not eat any blood See Ains in Lev. 3. 17. Lev. 7. 2 14 26 27. Lev. 17. 6 10 11 12. Deut. 12. 27. and for this very reason also he forbad them to eat such parts of the fat as he did challenge for his own Altar and in this respect also he did challenge the fat of their Passeovers as much as of any other Sacrifice all which he commanded to be burned upon his Altar for a sweet savour of Attonement as the former Scriptures do testifie Now from the consideration of these four Circumstances it follows that all the Passeovers in Canaan could not be sacrificed in so short a time as about the time of Sun-set and therefore this phrase about the going down of the Sun in Deut. 16. 6. must not be understood of the very time of Sun-set but of the whole time of the Suns declining from Mid-day till it went down out of that Horizon Object 3. Though the Jews might not kill their Passeovers in Canaan in their private houses as they did in Egypt yet they might kill them at more Altars than one for the Lord was pleased to allow several Altars for Sacrifices in several places and by this means all the Passeovers in Canaan might be killed and the blood sprinkled just about the time of Sun-set Ans I grant that the Lord was pleased to permit the use of many Altars and High-places in the dayes of Samuel for there The Lord permitted many private Altars in the dayes of Samuel but he allowed but one publick Altar for the general Feasts of the twelve Tribes and for the Passeover day and for the daily Morning and Evening Sacrifice was an Altar at Gilgal 1 Sam. 10. 8. 1 Sam. 11. 15. Secondly There was an Altar at Bethel 1 Sam. 10. 3. 5. Thirdly At Mizpeh 1 Sam. 7. 9. Judg. 21. 1 4. Fourthly At Ramah 1 Sam. 7. 17. and there were several Altars also in the dayes of Elijah for he complained to God that Jezabel had broken down his Altars But notwithstanding all this no Passeover might be killed at any of these Altars for the Passeover in Canaan was commanded to be observed as a general Feast but these Altars were private Altars onely raised by Gods allowance by some particular person upon some special occasion and were after permited to be used by some adjacent Tribe or persons and in that respect these Altars were made but of earth or stone that was unhewn But the Altar that God commanded to be erected as the general publick Altar of all the twelve Tribes was made of brasse at the cost of the twelve Tribes and this was placed at first in the Lords Tabernacle in the Wildernesse afterwards this Tabernacle together with the brazen Altar was placed by Joshua and the whole Congregation in Shilo in the Tribe of Ephraim Josh 18. 1. and there it continued for the place of the general Assembly of all the twelve Tribes for three hundred and fifty yeers till the death of Eli but after the Philistims had taken the Lords Aark 1 Sam. 4. 10 11. and slain the most valiant men of Ephraim in that battel Psal 78. 9. God was wroth with Shilo and forsook it Psal 78. 60. for by that great destruction of all the valiant men of Ephraim Shilo was now become too weak a place to guard the holy Tabernacle and the holy Altar and therefore it was by the Lords advice removed to Gibbeon 2 Chron. 1. 3 4 5. which was a Royal City and a place of great strength Josh 10. 2. lying in the Tribe of Benjamin and it was allotted to the Priests Josh 21. 17. and the Gibbeonites the ancient inhabitants were given to the Priests to cut wood and draw water for the house of the Lord Josh 9. 21 23. 27. and afterwards in Solomons dayes they were called Nethinims 1 Chron. 9. 2. And from henceforth this place was called the chief High-place because the Lords Tabernacle and the Lords Altar were