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A03146 The history of the Sabbath In two bookes. By Pet. Heylyn. Heylyn, Peter, 1600-1662. 1636 (1636) STC 13274; ESTC S104023 323,918 504

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rest from looking after their daily bread But what need Philo be produced when wee have such an ample testimony from the word it selfe For it is manifest in the story that when the people on the sixt day had gathered twice as much Mannah as they used to doe Exod. 16. 5. according as the Lord had directed by his servant Moses they understood not what they did Vers. 22. at least why they did it The Rulers of the Congregation as the Text informes us came and told Moses of it and he as God before had taught him acquainted them Vers. 23. that on the morrow should be the rest of the holy Sabbath unto the Lord and that they were to keepe the over-plus untill the morning Nay so farre were the people from knowing any thing of the Sabbath or of Gods rest upon that day that though the Prophet had thus preached unto them of a Sabbaths rest the people gave small credit to him For it is said that some of the people went out to gather on the seventh day Vers. 27. which was the seventh day after or the second Sabbath as some think notwithstanding all that had been spoken and that the Mannah stanke not as on other dayes So that this resting of the people was the first sanctifying of the Sabbath mentioned in the Scriptures and Gods great care to make provision for his people on the day before the blessing he bestowed upon it And this is that which Solomon Iarehi tels us as before we noted Benedixit e● i.e. in Manna● quia omnibus diebus septimanae descendit Om●r pro singuli● C● 1. n. 2. sexto pani● duplex sanctificavit eum i.e. in Mannah quia non descendit omnino Nay generally the Hebrew Doctours doe affirme the same assuring us that the Commandement of the Sabbath is the foundation and ground of all the rest De ●est Iud●or c. 3. as being given before them all at the fall of Mannah Vnd● dicunt Hebraei sabbatum fundamentum esse aliorum praeceptorum quod ante alia praecepta hoc datum sit quando Mannah acc●perunt So Hospinia● tels us Therefore the Sabbath was not given before in their own confession This hapned on the two and twentieth day of the second moneth after their comming out of Egypt and of the World● Creation Anno 2044. the people being then in the Wildernesse of Sin which was their seventh station 2 The seventh day after being the nine and twentieth of the second moneth is thought by some I know not upon what authority to bee that day whereon some of the people distrusting all that Moses said went out to gather Mannah as on other dayes Num. 33. but whether they were then in the Wildernesse of Sin or were incamped in Dophkath Alush or Rephidim which were their next removes that the Scriptures say not Most likely that they were in the last station considering the great businesses there performed the fight with Amalek and the new ordering of the Government by Iethroes counsaile and that upon the third day of the third moneth which was Thursday following they were advanced so farre as to the Wilde●nesse of Sinai I say the third day of the third moneth For where the Text hath it Exod. 19. 1. In the third moneth when the children of Israel were gone forth out of Egypt the same day came they into the wildernesse of Sinai by the same ● is meant the same day of the moneth which was the third day being Thursday after our Accompt Exod. 19. v. 3. 10 11. The morrow after went Moses up unto the Lord and had commandement from him to sanctifie the people that day and to morrow and to make them ready against the third day God meaning on that day to come downe in the eyes of all the people in Mount Sinai and to make knowne his will unto them That day being come Vers. 17. which was the Saturday or Sabbath the people were brought out of the Campe to meet with God and placed by Moses at the nether part of the Mountaine Moses ascending first to God and descending after to the people to charge them that they did not passe their bounds before appointed It seemes the Sabbaths rest was not so established Vers. 21. but that the people had been likely to take the pains to climbe the Mountain and to behold the wonders which were done upon it had they not had a speciall charge unto the contrary Things ordered thus it pleased the Lord to publish and proclaime his Law unto the peopl● in thunder smoake and lightnings and the noyse of a Trumpet using therein the Ministery of his holy Angels which Law we call the Decalogue or the ten Commandements and containes in it the whole morall Law or the Law of nature This had before been naturally imprinted in the mindes of men however that in tract of time the character thereof had been much defaced so dimmed and darkened that Gods own people stood in need of a new impression and therefore was proclaimed in this solemne manner that so the letter of the Law might leave the cleerer stampe in their affections A law which in it selfe was generall and universall Rom. 2. 1 4. equally appertaining both to Iew and Gentile the Gentiles whcih know not the law doing by nature the things contained in the Law as Saint Paul hath told us but as at this time published on Mount Sinai and as delivered to the people by the hand of Moses they obliged onely those of the house of Israel Zanchius hath so resolved it amongst the Protestants not to say anything of the Schoole-men who affirme the same ut Politi●ae ceremoniales sic etiam morales leges quae Decalogi nomine significantur De Redempti l. 1. c. 11. Th. 1. quatenus per Mosen traditae fuerunt Israeliti● ad no● Christi●●● ni●il pertinent c. As neither the Iudiciall nor the Ceremoniall so nor the Morall Law contained in the Docalogue doth any way conc●●●● us Christians as given by Moses to the Iewes but onely so farre forth as it is consonant to the law of nature which bindes all alike and after was confirmed and ratified by Christ our King His reason is because that if the Decalogue as given by Moses to the Iewes did concerne the Gentiles the Gentiles had been bound by the fourth Commandement to observe the Sabbath in as strict a manner as the Iewes Cum verò constet ad hujus diei sanctification 〈◊〉 nunquam fuisse Gentes obligatas c. Since therfore it is manifest that the Gentiles never were obliged to observe the Sabbath it followeth that they neither were nor possibly could be bound to any of the residue as given by Moses to the Iewes Wee may conclude from hence that had the fourth Commandement been meerly morall it had no lesse concerned the Gentiles then it did the Israelites 3 For that the fourth Commandement is
from mine own wardrope at least have had recourse to many other learned men who have written of it For that the difference of time is varied according to the difference of longitudes in divers places of the earth may be made manifest to every mans understanding out of these two principles First if the earth is sphaericall and secondly that the Sunne doth compasse it about it twenty foure houres From hence it comes to passe that places situate Eastward see the Sunne sooner then those do that are placed Westward And that with such a different proportion of time that unto every houre of the Sunnes motion there is assigned a certaine number of miles upon the Earth every fifteen degrees which is the distance of the Meridians being computed to make one houre and every fifteene miles upon the earth correspondent to one minute of that houre By this wee may perceive how soone the noon-tide hapneth in one City before another For if one City stands Eastward of another the space of three of the aforesaid Meridians which is 2700. miles it is apparant that it will enjoy the noon-tyde no lesse then three houres before the other and consequently in 10800. miles which is halfe the compasse of the earth there will be found no lesse then twelve houres difference in the rising and setting of the Sunne as also in the noon and midnight The reason of which difference of times is as before we said the difference of longitudes wherein to every houre Cosmographers have allotted fifteene degrees in the Suns diurnall motion so that fifteen degrees being multiplied by twenty foure houres which is the naturall day the product will be 360 which is the number of degrees in the whole circle Now in these times wherein the sonnes of Noah dispersed themselves in case the Sabbath was to have been kept as simply morall it must needs follow that the morall Law is subject unto manifold mutations and uncertainties which must not be granted For spreading as they did over all the earth some farther some at shorter distance and thereby chang●ng Longitudes with their habitations they must of meet necessity alter the difference of times and daies and so could keepe no day together Nor could their issue since their time observe exactly and precisely the self-same day by reason of the manifold transportation of Colonies and transmigration of Nations from one Region to another whereby the times must of necessity be supposed to vary The Authour of the Practice of Pietie though he plead hard for the moralitie of the Sabbath cannot but confesse that in respect of the diversitie of the Meridians and the unequall rising and setting of the Sunne every day varieth in some places a quarter in some halfe in others an whole day therefore the Iewish Sabbath cannot saith he be precisely kept in the same instant of time every where in the World Certainly if it cannot now then it never could and then it will be found that some at least of Noahs posterity and all that have from them descend●d either did keep at all no Sabbath or not upon the day appointed which comes all to one Or else it needs must follow that God imposed a Law upon his people which in it selfe without relation to the frailty ne dum to the iniquity of poore man could not in possibility have been observed Yea such a Law as could not generally have been kept had Adam still continued in his perfect innocence 3 To make this matter yet more plaine It is a Corollary or conclusion in Geographie that if two men doe take a journey from the self-same place round about the earth the one Eastward the other Westward and meet in the same place againe it will appeare that hee which hath gone East hath gotten and that the other going Westward hath lost a day in their accompt The reason is because hee that from any place assigned doth travaile Eastward moving continually against the proper motion of the Sunne will shorten somewhat of his day taking so much from it as his journey in proportion of distance from the place assigned hath first opposed and so anticipated in that time the diurnall motion of the Sunne So daily gaining something from the length of day it will amount in the whole circuit of the Earth to twenty foure houres which are a perfect naturall day The other going Westward and seconding the course of the S●nne by his own journey will by the same reason ad●● as much proportionably unto his day as the other lost and in the end will lose a day in his accompt For demonstration of the which suppose of these two Travellers that the former for every fifteen miles should take away one minute from the length of the day and the latter adde as much unto it in the like proportion of his journey Now by the Golden Rule if every fifteene miles substract or adde one minute in the length of the day then must 21600. miles which is the compasse of the Earth adde or substract 1440 minutes which make up twenty foure houres a just naturall day To bring this matter home unto the businesse now in hand suppose we that a Turk a Iew a Christian should dwell together at Hierusalem whereof the one doth keep his Sabbath on the Friday the other on the Saturday and the thi●d sanctifieth the Sunday then that upon the Saturday the Turke begin his journey Westward and the Christian Eastward so as both of them compassing the World do meet again in the same place the Iew continuing where they left him It will fall out that the Turke by going Westward having lost a day and the Christian going Eastward having got a day one and the self-same day will be a Friday to the Turke a ●aturday unto the Iew and a Sunday to the Christian in case they calculate the time exactly from their departure to their returne To prove this further yet by a matter of fact The Hollanders in their Discovery of Fretū le Maire Anno 1615. 1615. found by comparing their accompt at their comming home that they had cleerly lost a day for they had trauailed Westward in that tedious Voyage that which was Munday to the one being the Sunday to the other And now what should these people do when they were returnd If they are bound by nature and the morall Law to sanctifie precisely one day in seven they must then sanctifie a day a part from their other Countrymen and like a crew of Schismaticks divide themselves from the whole body of the Church or to keepe order and comply with other men must of necessity be forced to go against the law of nature or the morall law which ought not to be violated for any by-respect-whatever But to return unto Noahs sonnes whom this case concernes It might for ought we know be theirs in this dispersion in this removing up and downe and from place to place What shall we thinke of those that planted
should withdraw himself from his daily labour Some were commanded to employ themselves in the publick structures others in bringing in materialls for such mighty buildings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Antiqu. Iud. lib. 2. c. 5. never enjoying any rest either night or day that in the end they were e●en spent and tired with continuall travaile Iosep●● go●● a little further and tels us this that the Egyptians did not onely tire the Israelites with continuall labour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but that the Israelites endevoured to performe more then was expected Assuredly in such a wofull state as this they had nor leave nor leisure to observe the Sabbath Apud Ry●at in Decalog And lastly Rabbi Maimony makes the matter yet more absolute who saith it for a truth that when they were in Egypt neque quiescere vel sabbatum agere potuerunt they neither could have time to rest nor to keepe the Sabbath seeing they were not then at their owne disposing So he ad Deut. 5. 15. 9 Indeed it easily may be beleeved that the people kept no Sabbath in the Land of Egypt seeing they could not be permitted in all that time of their abode there to offer sa●rifice which was the easier duty of the two and would lesse have tooke them from their labours Those that accused the Israelites to have been wanton lazy and I know not what because they did desire to spend one onely day in religious Exercises what would they not have done had they desisted every seventh day from the works imposed upon them Doubtlesse they had beene carried to the house of Correction if not worse handled I say in all that time they were not permitted to offer sacrifice in that Country and therefore when they purposed to escape from thence Exod. 8. they made a suite to Pharaoh that he would suffer them to go three dayes journey into the wildernesse to offer sacrifice there to the Lord their God Rather then so Pharaoh was willing to permit them for that once to sacrifice unto the Lord in the land of Egypt and what said Moses thereunto It is not meet saith he so to doe For we shall sacrifice the abhomination of the Egyptians to the Lord our God before their eyes and they will stone us 〈◊〉 26. His reason was because the Gods of the Egyptians were Buls and Rammes and Sheep and Oxen as Lyra notes upon that place talia verò animalia ab Hebraeis erant immola●da quod non permisissent Aegypti● in terra sua And certainly the Egyptians would not endure to see their Gods knocked down before their faces If any then demand wherein the Piety and Religion of Gods people did consist especially wee must needs answere that it was in the integrity and hon●sty of their conversation and that they worshipped God onely in the spirit and truth Adv. haeres l. 1. h●● ● Nothing to make it knowne that they were Gods people 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but onely that they feared the Lord and were circumcised as Epiphanius hath resolved it nothing but that they did acknowledge one onely God exercised themselves in justice in modesty in patience and long suffering both towards one another and amongst the Egyptians framing their lives agreeably to the will of God and the law of nature Therefore we may conclude with safety that hitherto no Sabbath had been kept in all the World from the creation of our first Father Adam to this very time which was above 2500. yeares no nor commanded to be kept amongst them in their generations 10 I say there was none kept no nor none commanded for had it been cōmanded sure it had been kept It was not all the pride of Pharaoh or subtle tyranny of his subjects that could have made them violate that sacred day had it bin commended to them from the Lord. The miseries which they after suffered under Antiochus rather then that they would prophane the Sabbath and those calamities which they chose to fall upon them by the hands of the Romans rather then make resistance upon that day when lawfully they might have done it are proofes sufficient that neither force nor feare could now have wrought upon them not to keepe the same had such a duty been commanded Questionlesse Ioseph for his part that did preferre a lothsome prison before the unchast imbraces of his Masters wife would no lesse carefully have kept the Sabbath then he did his chastity had there been any Sabbath then to have been observed either as dedicated by nature or prescribed by Law And certainly either the Sabbath was not reckoned all this while a● any part or branch of the Law of nature or else it findes hard measure in the Booke of God that there should be particular proofes how punctually the rest of the morall Law was observed and practised amongst the Patriarches and not one word or Item that concernes the observation of the Sabbath Now that the whole Law was written in the hearts of the Fathers and that they had some knowledge of all the other Commandements and did live accordingly the Scripture doth sufficiently declare unto us First for the first * Gen. 17. 1. I am God all-sufficient walke before me and be thou perfect So said God to Abraham Then Iacobs going up from * 25 2. Bethel to clense his house from Idolatry is proofe enough that they were acquainted with the second The pious care they had not to take the Name of the Lord their God in vaine appeares at full in the religious making of their Oath●s * 2● 27 c. Abraham with Abimelech and * 31. 51. Iacob with Laban Next for the fifth Comman●ement what duties children owe their parents the practice of * 24 67 Isaac and * 28. 〈◊〉 Iacob doth declare abundantly in being ruled by them in the choice of their wives and readily obeying all their directions So for the sin of murder the history of Iacobs * 34 26 30 children and the grieved Fathers curse upon them for the slaughter of the Sichemites together with Gods precept given to * 9. 6. Noah against shedding bloud shew us that both it was forbidden and condemned being done The * 39 8. continency of Ioseph before remembred and the punishment threatned to * 70. ● Abimelech for keeping Sarah Abraham● wife the * 31. ●0 quarrelling of Laban for his stolne Idols and * 44. 4. Iosephs pursuite after his brethren for the silver cup that was suppo●ed to be purloyned are 〈◊〉 sufficient that adultery and theft were 〈◊〉 unlawf●●l And last of all Abi●elech● reprehension of * ●0 9. Abraham and * ●6 ●0 Isaa● for bearing false witnesse in the deniall of their wives shew plainly that they had the knowledge of that Law also The like may also be affi●med of their 〈…〉 the wives and good● or ●ny thing th●t was their Neighbours For though the history cannot tell us
either to heale the impotent or relieve the sick or feed the hungrie but he confutes them in them all both by his Acts and by his disputations Whatever ●e maintain'd by argument he made good by practise Did they accuse his followers of gathering corne upon the Sabbath being then an hungred he le ts them know what David did in the same extremitie Their eating or their gathering on the Sabbath day take you which you will was not more blameable nay not so blameable by the law as David's eating of the shewbread which plainly was not to be eate by any but the Priest alone The ●ures he did upon the Sabbath what were they more then which themselves did daily do in laying salves unto those Infants whom on the Sabbath day they had circumcised His bidding of the impotent man to take up his bed and get him gone which seemed so odious in their eyes was it so great a toyle as to walke round the walls of Hiericho and beare the Arke upon their shoulders or any greater burden to their idle backs then to lift up the ●xe and set him free out of that dangerous ditch into the which the hasty ●east might fall aswell upon the Sabbath as the other dayes Should men take care of oxen and not God of man Not so The Sabbath was not made for a lazie idoll which all the Nations of the world should fall downe and worship but for the ease and comfort of the labouring man that he might have some time to refresh his spirits Sabbatum propter hominem factum est the Sabbath saith our Saviour was made for man man was not made to serve the Sabbath Nor had God so irrevocablie spoke the word touching the sanctifying of the Sabbath that he had left himselfe no power to repeale that Law in case he saw the purpose of the Law perverted the Sonne of man even he that was the Sonne both of God and Man being Lord also of the Sabbath Nay it is rightly marked by some that Christ our Saviour did more works of charitie on the Sabbath day then all dayes else Zanchius obserues it out of Irenaeus In Mandat ● Saepius multo Christum in die Sabbati praestitisse opera charitatis quam in aliis diebus and his note is good Not that there was some urgent and extreme necessitie either the Cures to be performed that day or the man to perish For if we looke into the story of our Saviours actions we finde no such matter It 's true that the Centurions sonne and Peters mother in law were even sicke to death and there might be some reason in it why he should haste unto their Cures on the Sabbath day But on the other side the man that had the withered hand Matth. 13. and the woman with her fluxe of bloud eighteene yeares together Luk. 13. he that was troubled with the dropsie Luk. 14. and the poore wretch which was afflicted with the palsie Ioh. 5. in none of these was found any such necessity but that the cure might have beene respited to another day What then Shall it be thought our Saviour came to destroy the Law No. God forbid Himselfe hath told us that he came to fulfill it rather He came to let them understand the right meaning of it that for the residue of time wherein it was to be in force they might no longer be misled by the Scribes and Pharisees and such blinde guides as did abuse them Thus have I briefly summed together what I finde scattered in the writings of the ancient Fathers which who desires to finde at large may looke into Ire●aeus li. 4. ca. 19. 20. Origen in Num hom 23. Tertull. li. 4. contr Marcion Athanas. hom de Semente p. 10●1 1072. edit gr lat Victor Antioch cap. 3. in Mar●um Chrysost. hom 39. in Matth. 12. Epiphan li. 1. haeres 30. n. 32. Hierom. in Matth. 12. Ambros in cap. 3. Luk. li. 3. Augustin cont Faustum li. 16. ca. 28. lib. 19. ca 9. to descend no lower With one of which last Fathers sayings Cont. Adimant ca. 2. we conclude this list Non ergo Dominus rescindit Scripturam Vet. Test sed cogit intelligi Our Saviours purpose saith the Father was not to take away the Law but to expound it 7 Not then to take away the Law it was to last a little longer He had not yet pronounced Consummatum est that the Law was abrogated Nor might it seeme so proper for him to take away one Sabbath from us which was rest from labour untill he had provided us of another which was rest from sinne And to provide us such a Sabbath was to cost him dearer then words and arguments He healed us by his word before Now he must heale us by his stripes or else no entrance into his rest the eternall Sabbath Besides the Temple stood as yet and whilest that stood or was in hope to be rebuilt there was no end to be expected of the legall ceremonies The Sabbath and the Temple did both end together and which is more remarkable on a Sabbath day The Iews were still sicke of their old disease and would not stirre a foot on the Sabbath day beyond their compasse no though it were to save their Temple and in that their Sabbath or whatsoever else was most deare unto them Nay they were more superstitious now then they were before For whereas in the former times it had beene thought unlawfull to take armes and make warre on the Sabbath day Ios●ph de bello li. 4. ca 4. unlesse they were assaulted and their lives danger now 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it was pronounced unlawfull even to treat of peace A fine contradiction Agrippa layed this home unto them when first they entertain'd a rebellious purpose against the Romans 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Id. li. 2. c. 1● If you observe the custome of the Sabbaths and in them do nothing it will be no hard matter to bring you under for so your Ancestors found in their warres with Pompey who ever deferred his works untill that day wherein his enemies were idle and made no resistance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. If on the other side you take armes that day then you transgresse your countrey laws your selues and so I see no cause why you should rebell Where note Agrippa cals the sabbath a custome and their Countrey law which makes it evident that they thought it not any L●w of Nature Now what Agrippa said did in fine fall out the Citie being taken on the sabbath day as Ios. Scaliger computes it or the Parasc●ve of the sabbath as Rab. Ioses hath determined Most likely that it was on the sabbath day it selfe For Dion speaking of this warre and of this taking of the Citie Lib 65. conclud●s it thus Lib 65. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hierusalem saith he was taken on the Saturday which the Iews most reverence till this day Thus
perfect harmonie and agreement which is betweene this Church and the purest times It is our constant prayer to almighty God aswell that he would strengthen such as do stand and confirme the weake as to raise up those men which are fallen into sinne and errour As are our prayers such should be also our endeavours as universall to all sorts of men as charitable to them in their severall cases and distresses Happy those men who do aright discharge their duties both in their prayers and their performance The blessing of our labours we must leave to him who is all in all without whom all Pauls planting and Apollos watering will yeeld poore increase In which of these three states soever thou art good Christian Reader let me be seech thee kindly to accept his pains which for thy sake were undertaken that so be might in some poore measure be an instrument to strengthen or confirme or raise thee as thy case requires This is the most that I desire and lesse then this thou couldst not do did I not desire it And so fare thee well THE HISTORY OF THE SABBATH The second Booke CHAP. I. That there is nothing found in Scripture touching the keeping of the LORDS DAY 1 The Sabbath not intended for a perpetuall ordinance 2 Preparatives unto the dissolution of the Sabbath by our Saviour Christ. 3 The Lords day not enjoyned in the place thereof either by Christ or his Apostles but instituted by the authority of the Church 4 Our Saviours resurrection on the first day of the weeke and apparitions on the same make it not a Sabbath 5 The comming downe of the Holy Ghost upon the first day of the weeke makes it not a Sabbath 6 The first day of the weeke not made a Sabbath more than ●thers by Saint Peter Saint Paul or any other of the Apostles 7 Saint Paul frequents the Synagogue on the Iewish Sabbath and upon what reasons 8 What was concluded against the Sabbath in the Councell holden in Hieru●alem 9 The preaching of Saint Paul at Troas upon the first day of the weeke no árgument that then that day was set apart by the Apostles for religious exercises 10 Collections on the first day of the week 1. Cor. 16. conclude as little for that purpose 11 Those places of Saint Paul Galat. 4. 10. Coloss. 2. 16. doe prove invincibly that there is no Sabbath to be looked for 12 The first day of the week not called the Lords day untill the end of this first age and what that title addes unto it 1 WEe shewed you in the former book what did occurre about the Sabbath from the Creation of the World to the destruction of the Temple which comprehended the full time of 4000 years and upwards in the opinion of the most and best Chronologers Now for five parts of eight of the time computed from the Creation to the Law being in all 2540 yeares and somwhat more there was no Sabbath knowne at all And for the fifteene hundred being the remainder it was not so observed by the Iewes themselves as if it had been any part of the Law of Nature but sometimes kept and sometimes broken either according as mens private businesses or the affaires of the republicke would give way unto it Never such conscience made thereof as of adultery murder blasphemy or idolatrie no not when as the Scribes and Pharisees had most made it burdensome there being many casus reservati wherein they could dispense with the fourth Commandement though not with any of the other Had they beene all alike equally natural moral as it is conceived they had been all alike observed all alike immutable no jot nor syllable of that law which was ingraft by nature in the soule of man being to fall unto the ground Luk 16. 17. till heaven and earth shall passe away and decay together till the whole frame of Nature for preservation of the which that Law was given be dissolved for ever The Abrogation of the Sabbath which before we spake of shews plainly that it was no part of the Morall law or Law of Nature there being no law naturall Contr. Marc. l. 2 which is not perpetuall Tertullian takes it for confest or at least makes it plaine and evident Temporale fuisse mandatum quod quand●que cessaret that it was onely a temporarie constitution which was in time to have an end c. 16. And after him Procopius Gaz●eus in his notes on Exodus layes downe two severall sorts of laws whereof some were to be perpetuall and some were not of which last sort were Circumcision and the Sabbath Quae d●raverunt usque in adventum Christi which lasted till our Saviours comming and he being come I● Col. 2 16. went out insensiblie of themselues For as S. Ambrose rightly tels us Absente imperatore imag● ejus habet autoritatem praesente non habet c. What time the Emperour is absent we give some honour to his State or representation but none at all when he is present And so saith he the Sabbaths and new-moones and the other festivals before our Saviours comming had a time of honour during the which they were observed but he being present once they became neglected But he●eof wee have spoke more fully in our former booke 2 Neglected not at once and upon the sudden but leasurely and by degrees There were preparatives unto the sabbath as before we shewed before it was proclaimed as a Law by Moses and there were some preparatives required before that law of Moses was to be repealed These we shall easiliest discover if we shall please to looke on our Saviours actions who gave the first hint unto his disciples for the abolishing of the sabbath amongst other ceremonies It 's true that he did frequently repaire unto the synagogues on the sabbath dayes and on those dayes did frequently both reade and expound the Law unto the people Luk. 4. 16. And he came to Nazareth saith the Text where he had beene brought up and as his custome was he went into the Synagogue on the sabbath day and stood up to reade It was his custome so to do both when he lived a private life to frequent the Synagogue that other men might do the like by his good example and after when he undertooke the ministerie to expound the Law unto them there that they might be the better by his good instructions Yet did not be conceive that teaching or expounding the word of God was annexed onely to the Synagogue or to the sabbath That most divine and heavenly Sermon which takes up three whole Chapters of S. Matthews Gospell was questionlesse a weeke dayes worke and so were most of those delivered to us in S. Iohn as also that which he did preach unto them from the ship-side and divers others Nay the text tells us Luk 8. 1. that he went through every Citie and Village preaching and shewing the glad tydings of God Too great a
day meetings Non tamen numerum septennarium ita se morari ut ejus servituti ecclesias astringeret yet stood not he so much for the number of seven as to confine the Church unto it If Calvin elsewhere be of another minde and speake of keeping holy one day in seven as a matter necessary which some say he doth either they must accuse him of much inconstancy and forgetfulnesse or else interpret him In decalog with Ryvell as speaking of an ecclesiasticall custome not to be neglected non de necessitate legis divinae and not of any obligation layed upon us by the law of God Neither is he the onely one that hath so determined Simler hath sayd it more expressely Quod dies una cultui divine consecretur ex lege naturae est quod autom haec sit septima In Exod. 20. non octava nona aut decima juris est divini sed ceremonialis That one day should be set apart for Gods publicke worship is the law of nature but that this day should bee the seventh and not the eighth ninth or tenth was of divine appointment but as ceremoniall Loc. 55. Aretius also in his common pla●es distinguished betweene the substance of the Sabbath and the time thereof the substance of it which was rest and the workes of piety being in all times to continue tempus autem ut septimo die observetur hoe non fu●t necessarium in ecclesia Christi but for the time to keepe it on the seventh day alwayes that was not necessary in the Church of Christ. So also Frankisc Gomarus that great undertaker against Arminius Cap. 5. n. 8. in a booke written purposely de origine institutione Sabbati affirmes for certaine that it can neither be made good by the law of nature or text of Scripture or any solid argument drawne from thence unum è septem diebus ex vi praecepti quarti ad cultum dei necessario observandum that by the fourth Commandement one day in seven is of necessity to be dedicated to Gods service And Ryvet as profest an enemy of the Remonstrants In Exod. 20. p. 190. though for the antiquity of the Sabbath he differeth from the sayd Gomarus yet hee agreeth with him in this not onely making the observance of one day in seven to be meerely positive as in our first part we observed but layes it downe for the received opinion of most of the Reformed Divines unum ex septem diebus non esse necessari● eligendum ex vi praecepti ad sacros conventus celebrandos the very same with what Gomarus affirmed before In Examin Conc Tred So lastly for the Lutheran Churches Chemnitius makes it part of our Christian liberty quod nec ●int alligati nec debeant alligari ad certorum vel dierum vel temporum observationes opinione necessitatis in Novo Testamento c. That men are neither bound nor ought to bee unto the observation of any dayes or times as matters necessary under the Gospel of our Saviour though otherwise he account it for a barbarous folly not to observe that day with all due solemnitie which hath for so long time beene kept by the Church of God Therefore in his opinion also the keeping of one day in seven is neither any morall part of the fourth Commandement 〈…〉 or parcell of the law of nature As for the subtile shift of Amesius finding that keeping holy of one day in seven is positive indeed sed immutabilis plane institutionis but such a positive Law as is absolutely immutable doth as much oblige as those which in themselues are plainly naturall and morall it may then serve when there is nothing else to helpe us For that a positive law should be immutable in it selfe and in its owne nature be as universally binding as the morall law is such a peece of learning and of contradiction as never was put up to shew in these latter times But hee had learnt his ●●rry in England here and durst not broach it but by halues amongst the Hollanders 7 For the next Thesis that the Lords day is not founded on divine Commandement but the authoritie of the Church it is a point so universally resolved on as no one thing more and first we will begin with Caluin who tels us how it was not without good reason that those of old appointed the Lords Day as we call it to supply the place of the Iewish Sabbath 〈◊〉 l. 2. c. 8. ● 3. Non sine delectu daminicum quem vocamus diem veteres in locum sabbati subr●garunt as his words there are Where none I hope will think that hee would give our Saviour Christ or his Apostles such a short come off as to include them in the name of Veteres onely which makes it plaine that he conceived it not to be their appointment In Math. 12. Bucer resolues the point more cleerly communi christianorum consensu Dominicum diem publicis Ecclesie conventibus ac requieti publicae dicatu●● esse ipso statim Apostolorum tempore and saith that in the Apostles times the Lords day by the common consent of Christiau people was dedicated unto publick rest In 〈◊〉 and the assembli●s of the Church And Peter Martyr upon a question asked why the ●ld seventh day was not kept in the Christian Church makes answere that upon that day and on all the rest wee ought to rest from our owne works the works of sinne Sed quod is magis quam ille eligatur ad 〈◊〉 Deicultum libern● fui● Ecclesis per Christum ut 〈◊〉 consuleret quod ex re magis judicaret 〈◊〉 illa pessime judicavit c. That this was rather chose then that for Gods publick service that saith he Christ left totally unto the liberty of the Church to do therein what should seeme most expedient and that the Church did very well in that she did preferre the memory of the resurrection before the memory of the creation These two I have the rather thus joyned together as being sent for into England i● King Edwards time and placed by the Protectour in our Vniversities the better to establish 〈◊〉 at that time begun and doubt we not but that they taught the self same doctrine if at the least they touched at all upon that point with that now extant in their writings at the same time with the lived Bullinger Gu●ltor In Apoc. 1 two great learned men Of these the first informes us hunc 〈◊〉 loco sabbati in memoriam resurgentis Domini delegisse sibi Ecclesia● that in memoriall of our Saviours resurrection the Churches set apart this day in the Sabbaths steed whereon to hold their solemne and religious meeting● And after Sponte receper●●● Eccle●i● illam diem non legimus cam ullibi praeceptam that of their owne accord and by their own authoritie the Church made choice thereof for the use afore●aid In Act. Ap. 〈◊〉 131.
unto the Plea which you oft have made I verily perswade my selfe that you will quickely finde your errour and that withall you will discover how to abet a new and dangerous Doctrine you have deserted the whole practise of the Christian Church which for the space of 1600. yeeres hath been embraced and followed by all godly men These are the hopes which we project unto our selves The cause of this out undertaking was your information and the chiefe end we aime at is your reformation Your selves my Brethren and your good if I may procure it are the occasion and the recompence of these poore all prejudice which possibly you may be possessed withall either in reference to the Argument or unto the Author and 〈◊〉 per●use thi● following Story with as much ●●●●glenesse of 〈…〉 of truth and in●ocation of Gods Spirit to finde out the same as was by me used in the writing of it It is your welfare which I aime a● as before was said your restitution to your functions and reconciliation to the Church from which you are at point of falling that wee with you and you with us laying aside those jealousies and distrusts which commonly attend o● divided minds may joyne our hearts and hands together for the advancement of Gods Honour and the Churches peace And God even our owne God shall give 〈◊〉 his blessing For others which shall reade this Storie whether by you misguided or yet left entire I doe desire them to take notice that there i● none so much a stranger to good Arts and Learning whom in this case and kind of writing I dare not trust with the full cognizance of the cause herein related In points of Law when as the matter seemes to be above the wit of common persons or otherwise is so involved and intricate that there hath beene no Precedent thereof in former times it is put off to a demurrer and argued by my Lords the Iudges with their best maturitie of deliberation But in a matter of fact we put our selves upon an ordinarie Iurie not doubting if the evidence prove faire the Witnesses of faith unquestioned and the Records without suspition of imposture but they will doe their conscience and finde for Plaintiffe or Defend●nt as the cause appeares So in the businesse now in ●and that part thereof which consists most of argument and strength of disputation in the examining of those reasons which Pro or Con have been alledged are by me lef● to be discussed and weighed by them who either by their place are called or by their learning are inabled to so great a businesse But for the point of practice which is matter of fact how long it was before the Sabbath was commanded and how it was observed being once commanded how the Lords day hath stood in the Christian Church by what authority first instituted in what kinde regarded these things are offered to the judgement and consideration of the meanest Reader No man that is to be returned on the present Iury but may be able to give up his verdict touching the title now in question unlesse hee come with passion and so will not heare or else with prejudice and so will not value the evidence which is produced for his information For my part I shall deale ingenuously as the cause requires as of sworne counsell to the truth not using any of the mysteries or Arts of pleading but as the holy Fathers of the Church the learned Writers of all Ages themost renowned Divines of these latter times and finally as the publicke Monuments and Records of most Nations christned have furnished me in this enquirie What these or any of them have herein either said or done or otherwise left upon the Register for our direction I shall lay downe in order in their severall times either the times in which they lived or whereof they writ that so we may the better see the whole succession both of the doctrine and the practise of Gods Church in the present businesse And this with all integritie and sincere proceeding not making use of any Author who hath been probably suspected of fraud or forgery nor dealing otherwise in this search than as becomes a man who aimes at nothing more than Gods publike service and the conducting of Gods people in the wayes of truth This is the summe of what I had to say in this present Preface beseeching God the God of truth yea the truth it selfe to give us a right understanding and a good wi●l to doe thereafter SYLLABVS CAPITVM PART I. CHAP. I. That the Sabbath was not instituted in the beginning of the World 1 The entrance to the Worke in hand 2 That those words Gen. 2. And God blessed the seventh day c. are there delivered as by way of Anticipation 3 Anticipations in the Scripture confessed by them who denie it here 4 Anticipations of the same nature not strange in Scripture 5 No Law imposed by God on Adam touching the keeping of the Sabbath 6 The Sabbath not ingraft by nature in the soule of man 7 The greatest Advocates for the Sabbath denie it to be any part of the law of nature 8 Of the morality and perfection suppos●d 〈◊〉 be in the number of seven by some learned men 9 That Other numbers in the confession of the same learned men particularly the first third and fourth are both as morall and as perfect as the seventh 10 The like is proved of the sixth eighth and tenth and of other numbers 11 The Scriptures not more favorable to the number of seven than they are to others 12 Great caution to be used by those who love to recreate themselves in the mysteries of numbers CHAP. II. That there was no Sabbath kept from the Creation to the Flood 1 Gods rest upon the seventh day and from what he rested 2 Zanchius conceit touching the sanctifying of the first seventh day by Christ our Saviour 3 The like of Torniellus touching the sanctifying of the ●ame by the Angels in heaven 4 A generall demonstration that the Fathers before the Law did not keepe the Sabbath 5 Of Adam that hee kept not the Sabbath 6 That Abel and Seth did not keepe the Sabbath 7 Of Enos that hee kept not the Sabbath 8 That Enoch and Methusalem did not keepe the Sabbath 9 Of Noah that he kept not the Sabbath 10 The Sacrifices and devotions of the Ancients were occasionall CHAP. III. That the Sabbath was not kept from the Flood to Moses 1 The Sonnes of Noah did not keepe the Sabbath 2 The Sabbath could not have beene kept in the dispersion of Noahs sonnes had it beene commanded 3 Diversitie of Longitudes and Latitudes must of necessitie make a variation in the Sabbath 4 Melchisedech Heber Lot did not keepe the Sabbath 5 Of Abraham and his sonnes that they kept not the Sabbath 6 That Abraham did not keepe the Sabbath in the confession of the Jewes 7 Jacob nor Job no Sabbath-keepers 8 That neither Iacob
by them who deny it here 4 Anticipations of the same nature not strange in Scripture 5 No Law imposed by God on Adam touching the keeping of the Sabbath 6 The Sabbath not ingraft by nature in the soule of man 7 The greatest Advocates for the Sabbath deny it to be any part of the Law of Nature 8 Of the morality and perfection supposed to be in the number of seven by some learned men 9 That other numbers in the confession of the same learned men particularly the first third and fourth are both as morall and as perfect as the seventh 10 The like is proved of the sixth eighth and tenth and of other numbers 11 The Scripture not more favourable to the number of seven then it is to others 12 Great caution to be used by those who love to recreate themselves in the mysteries of numbers 1 I Purpose by the grace of God to write an History of the Sabbath and to make knowne what practically hath been done therein by the Church of God in all ages past from the Creation till this present Primaque ab origine mundi ad mea perpetuum deducere tempora carmen One day as David tells us teacheth another Nor can wee have a better Schoolmaster in the things of God then the continuall and most constant practice of those famous men that have gone before us An undertaking of great difficulty but of greater profit In which I will crave leave to say as doth Saint Austine in the entrance to his Book● de Civitate Magnum opus arduum sed Deus est adjutor noster Lib. 1. c. 1. Therefore most humbly begging the assistance of Gods holy Spirit to guide me in the way of truth I shall apply myselfe to so great a worke beginning with the first beginnings and so continuing my discourse successively unto these times wherein we live In which no accident of note as farre as I can discerne shall passe unobserved which may conduce to the discovery of the truth and setling of the minds of men in a point so controverted On therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the present businesse In the beginning saith the Text God created the Heaven and the Earth Gen. 2. Which being finished and all the hosts of them made perfect on the seventh day God ended his worke which ●e had made and hee rested on the seuenth day from all his worke which he had made And then it followeth And God bless●d the seventh day and sanctified it because that in it hee had rested from all his worke which God created and made Vnto this passage of the text and this point of time some have referred the institution and originall of the Sabbath taking these words to be a plain narration of a thing then done according to that very time wherein the Scripture doth report it And that the sanctifying of the seventh day therein mentioned was a Commandement given by God to our Father Adam touching the sanctifyng of that day to his publick worship Conceiving also that there is some speciall mystery and morality in the number of seven for which that day and none but that could be designed and set apart for this employment Others and those the ancienter and of more authority conceive these words to have been spoken by a Prolepsis or Anticipation and to relate unto the times wherein Moses wrote And that it was an intimation onely of the reason why God imposed upon the Iewes the sanctifying rather of the seventh day then of any other no precept to that purpose being given to Adam and to his posterity nor any mystery in that number why of it selfe it should be thought most proper for Gods publick service The perfect stating of these points will give great light to the following story And therefore wee will first crave leave to remoove these doubts before we come to matter of fact that afterwards I may proceed with the greater ●ase unto my se●f and satisfaction to the Reader The ground-worke or foundation laid the building will be raysed the surer 2 And first it is conceived by many learned men that Moses in the second of Genesis relates unto the times in the which hee lived and wrote the History of the Creation when God had now made known his holy will unto him and the Commandement of the Sabbath had by his Ministery been delivered to the house of Israel This is indeed the ancienter and more generall tendry unanimously delivered both by Iew and Christian and not so much as questioned til these later dayes And howsoever some ascribe it to Tostatus as to the first inventer of it yet is it ancienter farre then he though were it so it could not be denyed but that it had an able and a learned Author A man considering the times in which he lived and the short time of life it pleased God to give him that hardly ever had his equall I● Gen. 2. It s true Tostatus thus resolues it He makes this quaere first Num Sabbatum cum à Deo sanctificatum fuerit in primordio mundi rerum c. Whether the Sabbath being sanctified by God in the first infancy of the World had beene observed of men by the Law of nature And thereunto returns this answere quod Deus non dederit praceptum illud de observatione Sabbati in principio sed per Mosen datum esse c. That God commanded not the Sabbath to be sanctified in the beginning of the World but that it was commanded afterwards by the Law of Moses when God did publickly make known his will upon Mount Sinai And that wheras the Scripture speaketh of sanctifying the seventh day in the second of Genesis it is not to be understood as if the Lord did then appoint it for his publick worship but is to be referred unto the time wherein Moses wrote which was in the Wildernesse Et sic Moses intendebat dicere quod Deus illum diem sanctificavit sc. nobis c. And so the meaning of the Prophet will be briefly this that God did sanctifie that day that it to us to us that are his people of the house of Iacob that we might consecrate it to his service So farre Tostatus In which I must confesse that I see not any thing but what Iosephus said before him though in other words who speaking of the Worlds Creation doth conclude it thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. So that Moses saith Antiqu. l. 1. 2. that the World and all that is therein was made in six whole dayes and that upon the seventh day God took rest and ceased from his labours 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. By reason whereof wee likewise desist from travaile on that day which we call the Sabbath i. e. repose So that the institution of the Sabbath by Tostatus and the observation of it by Iosephus are both of them referred by their us and wee unto the times of Moses and the
of the Sabbath have resolved accordingly Quod dies ille solennis unus debeat esse in septimana hoc positivi juris est that 's Amesius doctrine And Ryvet also saith the same Lege de Sabbato pos●tiv●● non naturalem agnosci●us The places were both cited in the forme● Section and both doe make the Sabbath a meere positive Law But what need more be said in so cleere a case o● what needs further Witnesses be produced to give in evidence when wee have con●●tentem 〈◊〉 For Doctour Bound who first amongst us here endevoured to advance the Lords day into the place of the Iewish Sabbath and fained a pedigree of the Sabbath even from Adams infancie hath herein said enough to betray his cause and those that since have either built upon his foundation or beautified their undertakings with his collections Indeed saith he this law was given in the beginning not so much by the light of nature as the rest of the nine Commandements were but by expresse words when God sanctified it For though this be in the law of nature that some dayes should be separated to Gods worship as appeares by the practice of the Gentiles yet that it should be every seventh day 2. Ed●● p 11. 16. the Lord himselfe set down in expresse words which otherwise by the light of nature they could never have found So that by his confession there is no Sabbath to be found in the law of nature no more then by the testimony of the Fathers in any positive law or divine appointment untill the Decalogue was given by Moses 8 Nay Doctor Bound goeth further yet and robs ●is friends followers of a speciall argument For where Danaeus askes this questiō Why one of seven rather then one of eight or nine and therunto makes answer that the number of seven doth signifie perfection and perpetuitie First saith the Doctor Ib. p. 69. I doe not see that proved that there is any such mysticall signification rather than of any other And though that were granted yet doe I not find that to be any cause at all in Scripture why the seventh day should be commanded to be kept holy rather then the sixth or eighth And in the former page The speciall reason why the seventh day should be rather kept than any other is not the excellencie or perfection of that number or that there is any mystery in it or that God delighteth more in it than in any other though I confesse saith hee that much is said that way both in divine and humane Writers Much hath been said therein indeed so much 〈◊〉 we may wonder at the strange niceties of some men and the unprofitable pains they have tooke amongst them in searching out the mysteries of this number the better to advance as they conceive In Gen. 2. the reputation of the Sabbath Aug. Steuchius hath affirmed in generall that this day and number is most naturall and most agreeable to divine imployments and therefore in omni aetate inter omnes gentes habitus venerabilis sacer accounted in all times and Nations as most venerable and so have many others said since him But he that lead the way unto him and to all the rest is Philo the Iew who being a great follower of Platos tooke up his way of trading in the mysteries of severall numbers wherein he was so intricate and perplexed that numero Platonis obscurius did grow at last into a Proverbe This Philo therefore Platonizing Tu● ad Attic. l. 7. Epl. 13. first tells us of this number of seven 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that he perswades himselfe De mundi ●pificio there is not any man able sufficiently to extoll it as being farre above all the powers of Rhetoricke and that the Pythagoreans from them first Plato learnt those trifles did usually resemble it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even to Iove himselfe Then that Hippocrates doth divide the life of man into seven ages each age contayning seven full yeares to which the changes of mans constitution are all framed and fitted as also that the Beare or Arcturus as they use to call it and the constellation called the Pleiades consist of seven starres severally neither more nor lesse Hee shewes us also De legis All●g l. 1 how much nature is delighted in this number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as viz. that there are seven Planets and that the Moone quartereth every seventh day that Infants borne in the seventh moneth are usually like enough to live that there are seven severall motions of the body seven intrailes so many outward members seven holes or out-lets in the same seven sorts of excrements as also that the seventh is the criticall day in most kindes of maladies And to which purpose this and much more of the same condition every where scattered in his Writings but to devise some naturall reason for the Sabbath For so he manifests himselfe in another place Ap. Euseb. Praepar l. ● c. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Now why God chose the seventh day and established it by law for the day of rest you need not aske at all of me since both Physicians and Philosophers have so oft declared of what great power and vertue that number is as in all other things so specially on the nature and state of man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And thus saith he you have the reason of the seventh day Sabbath Indeed Philosophers and Physicians and other learned men of great name and credit have spoken much in honour of the number of seven and severally impute great power unto it in the workes of nature and severall changes of mans body Whereof ●ee C●nsorinus de die natali cap. 12. Varro in Gellius lib. 3. c. 10. Hippocrates Solon and Hermippus Beritus in the sixt Booke of Clemens of Alexandria besides divers others Nay it grew up so high in the opinion of some men that they derived it at the last 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. ab insita maj●state So Philo tels us Macrobius also saith the same De legis All●gor Apud veteres 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vocitatur quod graeco nomine testabatur venerationem debitam numero Thus he in Somnio Scipionis 9 But other men as good as they find no such mystery in this number but that the rest may keepe pace with it if not goe before it and some of those which so much magnifie the seventh have found as weighty mysteries in many of the others also In which I shall the rather enlarge my selfe that seeing the exceeding great both contradiction and ●ontention that is between them in these needl●●e curiosities we may the better finde the slightnesse of those arguments which seeme to place a great moraliti● in this number of seven as if it were by nature the most proper number for the service of God And first whereas the learned men before mentioned affixe a speciall power unto it
not of the same condition with the rest is no new invention The Fath●rs joyntly so resolue it It s true that Iren●ns tel● us how God the better to prepare us to eternall life Decalogi verba per somet ipsum omnibus fimiliter locutus est Li● 4. cap. 31. did by himselfe proclaime the Decalogue to all people equally which therefore is to be in full force amongst 〈◊〉 as having rather been inlarged then diss●lued by our S●viours comming in the flesh Which word● of Iren●us if considered rightly must be referred to that part of the fourth Commandement which indeed is Morall or else the fourth Commandement must not be reckoned as 〈◊〉 part or member of the Decalogue because it did receive no such enlargement as did the rest of the Commandements by our Saviours preaching whereof see Math. 5. 6 and 7. Chapters but a dissolution rather by his practice 〈◊〉 Try●●●●● Iustin the Martyr more expresly in his dispu●● with Trypl●● a learned Iew maintain●● the Sabbath to be onely a Mosaicall Ordinance as we shall see anon more fully and that it was imposed upon the Israelites 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because of their hard-heartedn●sse and irregularity Contra Iudaeos Tertullian also in his Treatise against the Iewes ●aith that it was not spiritale aternum mandatum sed temporale quod quandoque cessaret not a spirituall and eternall institution but a temporall onely Saint Austin yet more fully In Epistola ●d Ga●at that it is no part of the morall Law For he divides the Law of Moses into these two parts Sacraments and morall duties accounting Circumcision the new Moo●es Sabbath● and the Sacrifices to appertain unto the first ad mores autem non occides c. and these Commandements Thou shalt not kill nor commit adultery nor beare false witnesse and the rest to be contained within the second Nay more he tels us De Spiritu li● c. 114 that Moses did receive a Law to be delivered to the people writ in two Tables made of stone by the Lords own finger wherein was nothing to be found either of Circumcision or the Ie●ish Sacrifices And then he addes In illis igitur decem pr●ceptis excepta Sabbati observatione dicatur mihi quid non sit observādum à Christiano Tell me saith he what is there in the Decalogue except the observation of the Sabbath day which is not carefully to be observed of a Christian man To this wee may referre all those severall places wherein hee cals the fourth Commandement praeceptum figuratum i● umbra positum a Sacrament a shadow and a figure as Tract the third in Ioh. 1. and Tract 17. and 20. in Ioh. 5. ad Bonifac. l. 3. T. 7. contra Faust. Manich. l. 19. c. 18. the 14. Chapter of the Booke de spiritu lit before remembred and finally to go no further Qu. in Exod. l. 2. qu. 173. where he speaks most home and to the purpose Ex decem praeceptis hoc solum figurate dictum est Of all the ten Commandements this onely was delivered as a signe or figure See also what is said before out of Theodoret and Sedulius Chap. 1. n. 6. Hesychius goes yet further and will not have the fourth Commandement to be any of the ten Etsi decem mandatis insertum sit non tamen exiis esse In Levit. l. 6. ● 26. and howsoever it is placed amongst them yet it is not of them And therefore to make up the number divides the first Commandement in two as those of Rome have done the last to exclude the second But here Hesychius was deceived in taking this Commandement to be onely ceremoniall whereas it is indeed of a mixt or middle nature for so the Schoolemen and other learned Authors in these later times grounding themselues upon the Fathers have resolued it generally Morall it is as to the dutie that there must be a time appointed for the service of God and Ceremoniall as unto the Day to be one of seven and to continue that whole day and to surcease that day from all kinde of worke As morall placed amongst the ten Commandements extending unto all mankind and written naturally in our hearts by the hand of nature as ceremoniall appertaining to the Law Leviticall peculiar onely to the Iewes and to be reckoned with the rest of Moses institutes Aquinas thus 2. 2 ae qu 122. art 4. resp ad primum Tostatus thus in Exod. 20. qu. 11. So Petr. Galatinus also lib. 11. cap. 9. and Bonaventure in his Sermon on the fourth Commandement And so divers others 4 I say the fourth Commandement so farre as it is ceremoniall in limiting the Sabbath day to be one o● seven and to continue all that day and thereon to surcease from all kind of labour which three ingredients are required in the Law unto the making of a Sabbath is to be reckoned with the rest of Moses institutes and proper onely to the Iewes For proofe of this wee have the Fathers very copious And first that it was one of Moses institutes Iustin the Martyr saith expresly Dial. cum Tryph●●e 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. As Circumcision began from Abraham and as the Sabbath Sacrifices Feasts and Offerings came in by Moses so were they all to have an end And in another place of the same Discourse seeing there was no use of Circumcision until Abrahams time 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nor of the Sabbath untill Moses by the same reason there is as little use now of them as had been before So doth Eusebius tell us De Praeparat l. 7. c. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. that Moses was the first Law-giver amongst the Iewes who did appoint them to observe a certaine Sabbath in memory of Gods rest from the Worlds Creation as also divers anniversary Festivals together with the difference of clean and unclean creatures and of other Ceremonies not a few Next Athanasius lets us know that in the Book of Exodus Synopsis sacr● Scripe wee have the institution of the Passeover the sweetning of the bitter waters of Marah the sending down of Quailes and Mannah the waters issuing from the rocke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what time the Sabbath took beginning and the Law was published by Moses on Mount Sin●i Macarius a Contemporary of Athanasius doth affirme as much Hom. 35. viz. that in the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which was given by Moses it was commanded as in a figure or a shadow that every man should rest on the Sabbath day from the workes of labour In Ezech. ●0 Saint Hierome also lets us know though he name not Moses that the observation of the Sabbath amongst other Ordinances was given by God unto his people in the Wildernesse Haec praecepta justificationes observantiam Sabbati Dominus dedit in deserto which is asmuch as if he had expresly told us that it was given unto them
with the Schoolemen they tell us generally of the Sabbath that it was a Ceremony and that the fourth Commandement is of a different nature from the other nine That whereas all the other precepts of the Decalogue are simply morall the fourth which is the third in their account is partly morall partly ceremoniall Morale quidem quantum ad hoc quod homo depu●et aliquod tempus vitae suae advacandum divinis c. 2 2. qu. 122. art 4. ad 1. Morall it is in this regard that men must set apart some particular time for Gods publicke service it being naturall to man to destinate particular times to particular actions as for his dinner for his sleepe and such other actions Sedin quantum in hoc praecepto determinatur speciale tempus in signum creationis mundi sic est praeceptum ceremoniale But in as much as that there is a day appointed in the Law it selfe in token of Gods rest and the Worlds creation in that respect the Law is ceremoniall And ceremoniall too they make it in referrence to the Allegory out Saviours resting in the grave that day and in relation to the Analogicall meaning of it as it prefigureth our eternall rest in the Heaven of glories Finally they conclude of the fourth Commandement that it is placed in the Decalogue in quantum est praeceptum morale non in quantum est ceremoniale onely so farre forth as it is morall and not as ceremoniall that is that wee are bound by the fourth Commandement to destinate some time to Gods publick service which is simply morall but not the Seventh day which is plainely ceremoniall Aquinas so resolves it In ●ra● de Sabbato for all the rest● his judgement in this point if Doctor Prideaux note be true as I have no reason but to thinke so being universally embraced and followed by all the Schoolemen of what sect soever So that in him we have them all all of them consonant in this point to make up the harmony however dissonant enough in many others But that this consent may appeare the more ful perfect we will take notice of two others men famous in the Schooles and eminent for the times in which they lived First Bonaventure who lived in the same time with Aquinas and dyed the same yeare with him which was 1274. hath determined thus Intelligendum est quod prae●eptum illud habet aliquid quod est mere morale c. Serm. de dcce● precep● It is to be conceived saith he that in the fourth Commandement there is something which is simply morall some thing againe that is plainely ceremoniall and something mixt The sanctifying of a day is morall the sanctifying of a seventh day ceremoniall rest from the workes of labour being mixt of both Quod praecipit deus sanctificationem est Praeceptum morale Est in hoc praecepto aliquid ceremoniale ut figuratio diei septimae Item continetur aliquid quod est partim morale partim ceremoniale ut cessatio ab operibus Lastly To status Bishop of Avila in Spaine hath resolved the same aliquid est in eo juris naturalis aliquid legalis In Exod. 20. qu. 11. that in the fourth Commandement there is some thing naturall and something legall that it is partly mor●ll and partly ceremoniall Naturale est quod dum Deū colimus abalij sab stineamus c. Moral naturall it is that for the time we worship God doe abstaine from every thing of what kind soever which may divert our thoughts from that holy action But that wee should designe in every weeke one day unto that employment and that the whole day bee thereto appointed and that in all that day a man shall doe no manner of worke those things hee reckoneth there to be ceremoniall 2 So for the Lords day 2. 2a qu. 122. art 4. ad 4. it is thus determined by Aquinas that it depends on the authority of the Church the custome and consent of Gods faithfull servants and not on any obligation layd upon us by the fourth Commandement Diei dominicae observantia in nova lege ●uccedit observantiae sabbati non ex vi praecepti legis sed ex constitutione ecclesiae consuetudine populi Christiani What followeth thereupon Et ideo non est itae arcta prohibitio operandi in die dominica sicut in die Sabbati Therefore saith he the prohibition of doing no worke on the Lords day is not so rigorous and severe as upon the Sabbath many things being licenced on the one which were forbidden on the other as dressing meate and others of that kind and nature And not so onely but hee gives us a dispensatur facilius in nova lege an easier hope of dispensation under the Gospel in case upon necessity we meddle with prohibited labours then possibly could have beene gotten under the Law The like To status tells us though in different words save that he doth extend the prohibition as well to all the feasts of the Old Testament as all the holy dayes of the new and neither to the Sabbath nor the Lords day onely In veteri lege major fuit strictio in observatione festorum quam in nova lege In Exod. 20. qu. 13. How so In omnibus enim festivitatibus nostris quant●cunque sint c. Because saith he in all our festivalls how great soever whether they bee the Lords dayes or the feasts of Easter or any of the higher ranke it is permitted to dresse meate and to kindle fire c. As for the grounds whereon they stood he makes this difference betweene them that the Iewes Sabbath had its warrant from divine commandement but that the Lords day though it came in the place thereof is founded onely on 〈◊〉 constitution In Math. 23. qu. 148. 〈◊〉 Sabbatum ●x man 〈◊〉 cujus 〈◊〉 successit dies dominica tamen manifestum est quod observatio dici dominicae non est de jure divino 〈…〉 Canonico This is plaine enough and this he prooves because the Church hath still a power 〈◊〉 illum diem vel totaliter tollere either to change the ●ay or take it utterly away and to dispense touching the keeping of the same which possibly it neither could no● ought to doe were the Lords day of any other institution then the Churches onely They onely have the power to repeale a Law which had power to make it Qui habe● institutionem habet destitutionem as is the Bishops plea in a Quare Impedit As for the first of these two powers that by the Church the day may be transferred and abrogated Suarez hath thus distinguished in it verum id esse absolute non practice that is as I conceive his meaning that such a power is absolutely in the Church though not convenient now to be put in practise According unto that of S. Paul which probably was the ground of the distinction All things are lawfull for me but
c. as their bounden dutie doth require therefore to call men to remembrance of their dutie and to helpe their infinnitie it hath beene wholesomely provided that there should be some certaine times and dayes appointed wherein the Christians should cease from all kind of labour and apply themselves only and wholly unto the aforesaid holy works properly pertaining to true Religion c. Which workes as they may well be called Gods Service so the times especially appointed for the same are called holy dayes Not for the matter or the nature either of the time or day c. for so all dayes and times are of like holinesse but for the nature and condition of such holy workes c. whereunto such times and dayes are sanctified and hallowed that is to say separated from all prophane uses and dedicated not unto any Saint or Creature but onely unto God and his true worship Neither is it to bée thought that there is any certaine time or definite number of dayes prescribed in holy Scripture but the appointment both of the time and also of the number of dayes is left by the authoritie of Gods Word unto the libertie of Christs Church to bée determined and assigned orderly in every Countrey by the discretion of the Rulers and Ministers thereof as they shall iudge most expedient to the true setting forth of Gods glorie and edification of their people Nor is it to be thought that all this Preamble was made in reference to the holy dayes or Saints dayes onely whose being left to the authoritie of the Church was never questioned but in relation to the Lords Day also as by the Act it selfe doth at full appeare for so it followeth in the Act Bee it therefore enacted c. That all the dayes hereafter mentioned shall bee kept and commanded to be kept holy dayes and non● other that is to say all Sundayes in the yeere the Feasts of the Circumcision of our Lord Iesus Christ of the Epiphanie of the Purification with all the rest now kept and there named particularly and that none other day shall be kept and commanded to bee kept holy day and to abstaine from lawfull bodily labour Nay which is more there is a further Clause in the selfe-same Act which plainly shewes that they had no such thought of the Lords day as that it was a Sabbath or so to bee ob●erved as the Sabbath was and therefore did provide it and enact by the authoritie aforesaid That it shall be lawfull to every Husbandman Labourer Fisherman and to all and every other person and persons of what estate degree or condition he or they be upon the holy dayes aforesaid in Harvest or at any other times in the yeere when necessitie shall so require to labour ●ide fish or worke any kind of worke at their free-wills and pleasure any thing in this Act unto the contrary notwithstanding This is the totall of this Act which if examined well as it ought to bee will yeeld us all those propositions or conclusions before remembred which we collected from the writings of those three particular Martyrs Nor is it to be said that it is repealed and of no authoritie Repealed indeed it was in the first yeere of Queene Mary and stood repealed in Law though otherwise in use and practice all the long Reigne of Queene El●zabeth but in the first yeere of King Iames was revived againe Note here that in the selfe-same Parliament the Common Prayer-Book● now in use being reviewed by many godly Prelates was confirmed and authorized wherein so much of the said Act as doth concerne the names and number of the holy dayes is expressed and as it were incorporate into the same Which makes it manifest that in the purpose of the Church the Sunday was no otherwise esteemed of than another holy day 3 This Statute as before wee said was made in anno 5. 6. of Edward the sixt And in that very Parliament as before wee said the Common Prayer-Booke was confirmed which still remaines in use amongst us save that there was an alteration or addition of certaine Lessons to be used on every Sunday of the yéere 1. Eliz. cap. 2. the forme of the Letanie altered and corrected and two Sentences added in the deliverie of the Sacrament unto the Communicants Now in this Common Prayer-Booke thus confirmed in the fift and sixt yeeres of King Edward the sixt Cap. 1. it pleased those that had the altering and revising of it that the Commandements which were not in the former Liturgie allowed of in the second of the said Kings Reigne should now be added and accounted as a part of this the people being willed to say after the end of each Commandement Lord hav● mercie upon us and incline our hearts to keepe this Law Which being used accordingly as well upon the hearing of the fourth Commandement as of any others hath given some men a colour to perswade themselves that certainely it was the meaning of the Church that wee should keepe a Sabbath still though the day be changed and that wee are obliged to doe it by the fourth Commandement Assuredly they who so conclude conclude against the meaning of the Booke and of them that made it Against the meaning of the Booke for if the Booke had so intended that that ej●culation was to be understood in a literall sence according as the words are layd downe in terminis it then must be the meaning of the Booke that wee should pray unto the Lord to keepe the Sabbath of the Iewes even the seventh day precisely from the Worlds Creation and keepe it in the selfe-same manner as the Iewes once did which no man I presume will say was the meaning of it For of the changing of the day there is nothing said nor nothing intimated but the whole Law laid downe in terminis as the Lord delivered it Against the meaning also of them that made it for they that made the Booke and reviewed it afterwards and caused these Passages and Prayers to be added to it Cranmer Archbishop of Canterbury Ridley Bishop of London and certaine others of the Prelates then and there assembled were the same men by whose advice and counsaile the Act before remembred about keeping holy dayes was in the selfe-same Parliament drawne up and perfected And is it possible wee should conceive so ill of those reverend persons as that they would erect a Sabbath in the one Act and beat it downe so totally in the other to tell us in the Service-Booke that wee are bound to keepe a Sabbath and that the time and day of Gods publike worship is either pointed out in the fourth Commandement or otherwise ordained by D●vine Authoritie and in the selfe-same breath to tell us that there is neither certaine time nor definite number of dayes prescribed in Scripture but all this left unto the libertie of the Church I say as formerly I said it is impossible wee should thinke so ill of such
Sabbath speculations teaching that that day onely was of Gods appointment and all the rest observed in the Church of England a remnant of the will-worship in the Church of Rome the other holy dayes in this Church established were so shrewdly shaken that till this day they are not well recovered of the blow then given Nor came this on the by or besides their purpose but as a thing that specially was intended from the first beginning from the first time that ever these Sabbath doctrines peeped into the light For Doctor Bound the first sworne servant of the Sabbath hath in his first edition thus declared himselfe P. 31. that hee sees not where the Lord hath given any authority to his Church ordinarily and perpetually to sanctifie any day except that which hee hath sanctified himselfe and makes it an especiall argument against the goodnesse of the religion in the Church of Rome P. 32. that to the seventh day they have ioyned so many other dayes and made them equall with the seventh if not superiour thereunto as well in the solemnity of divine offices as restraint from labour So that wee may perceive by this that their intent from the beginning was to cry downe the holy dayes as superstitious Popish ordinances that so their new ●ound Sabbath being placed alone and Sabbath now it must bee called might become more eminent Nor were the other though more private effects thereof of lesse dangerous nature the people being so insnared with these new devises and pressed with rigours more than Iewish that certainely they are in as bad condition as were the Israelites of old when they were Captivated and kept under by the Scribes and Pharises Some I have knowne for in this point I will say nothing without good assurance who in a furious kinde of zeale like the madde Prophetesse in the Poet have runne into the open streetes yea and searched private houses too to looke for such as spent those houres on the Lords day in lawfull pastimes which were not destinate by the Church to Gods publicke service and having sound them out scattered the company brake the instruments and if my memory faile me not the musitians which is more they thought that they were bound in conscience so to doe Others that will not suff●r either baked or rost to be made ready for their dinners on their Sabbath day lest by so doing they should eate and drinke their owne damnation according to the doctrine preached unto them Some that upon the Sabbath will not sell a pint of wine or the like Commoditie though wine was made by God not onely for mans often infirmities but to make glad his heart and refresh his spirits and therefore no lesse requisite on the Lords day then on any other Others which have refused to carrie provender to an horse on the supposed Sabbath day though our Redeemer thought it no impietie on the true Sabbath day indeed to leade poore Cattell to the water which was the motive and occasion of M. Brerewoods learned Treatise So for the female sex maid servants I have met with some two or three who though they were content to dresse their meate upon the Sabbath yet by no meanes would be perswaded either to wash their dishes or make cleane their kitchen But that which most of all affects mee is that a Gentlewoman at whose house I lay in Leicester the last Northerne Progresse Anno 1634. expressed a great desire to see the King and Queene who were then both there And when I proferd her my service to satisfie that loyall longing shee thanked mee but refused the favour because it was the Sabbath day Unto so strange a bondage are the people brought that as before I said a greater never was imposed on the ●ewes themselves what time the consciences of that people were pinned most closely on the sleeves of the Scribes and Pharises 9 But to goe forwards in my storie it came to passe for all the care before remembred that having such a plausible and faire pretence as sanctifying a day unto the Lord and keeping a Commandement that had long beene silenced it got strong footing in the Kingdome as before is said the rather because many things which were indeed strong avocations from Gods publicke service were as then permitted Therefore it pleased King Iames in the first entrance of his reigne so farre to condescend unto them as to take off such things which seemed most offensive To which intent hee signified his royall pleasure by Proclamation dated at Theo●alds May 7. 160● that Whereas he had béen informed that there had béen in former times a great neglect in kéeping the Sabbath day for better observing of the same and for avoyding of all impious prophanation of it he straitely charged and commanded that no Beare-baiting Bull-baiting enterludes common playes or other like disordered or unlawfull exercises or pastimes bee frequented kept or used at any time hereafter upon any Sabbath day Not that his purpose was to debarre himselfe of lawfull pleasures on that day but to prohibit such disordered and unlawfull pastimes whereby the Common people were withdrawne from the congregation they being onely to bee reckoned for Common playes which at the instant of their Acting or representing are studyed onely for the entertainment of the Common people on the publicke Theaters Yet did not this though much content them And therefore in the conference at Hampton Court it seemed good to D. Reynolds who had beene made a partie in the cause to touch upon the prophanation of the Sabbath for so hee called it and contempt of his Majesties proclamation made for the reforming of that abuse of which hee earnestly desired a straiter course for reformation thereof to which hee found a generall and unanimous assent Nor was there an assent only and nothing done For presently in the following Convocation it pleased the Prelates there assembled to revive so much of the Queenes Injunction before remembred as to them seemed fitting and to incorporate it into the C●nons then agreed of onely a little alteration to make it more agreeable to the present times being used therein Thus then they ordered in the Canon for due celebration of Sundayes and holy dayes viz. Ca● 13. All manner of persons within the Church of England shall from henceforth celebrate and kéepe the Lords day commonly called Sunday and other holy dayes according to Gods holy will and pleasure and the orders of the Church of England prescribed in that behalfe i. e. in hearing the word of God reade and taught in private and publicke prayers in acknowledging their offenses to God and amendment of the same in reconciling themselves charitably to their neighbours where displeasure had beene in oftentimes receiving the Communion of the Body and Blood of Christ using all godly and sober conversation The residue of the said injunction touching worke in harvest it seemed fit unto them not to touch upon leaving the same to