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A27514 A threefold treatise of the Sabbath distinctly divided into the patriarchall, mosaicall, Christian Sabbath : for the better clearing and manifestation of the truth ... / by Richard Bernard ... Bernard, Richard, 1568-1641. 1641 (1641) Wing B2037; ESTC R34406 149,622 232

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saith it is the day in which wee should rejoyce and bee glad above all other dayes because of his resurrection by which saith S. Augustine Dies Dominicus Christianis declaratus est ex illo habere caepit festivitatem suam Argument 2. WHatsoever in holy writ is said to be the Lords denominatively The altering of the name of the day argueth the Sabbath was altered D. Prideaux pag. 29. that is he the Author and Institutor of As for instance the Lords Supper and the Lords Table because he ordeined it 1 Cor. 11. 20. 10. 21. The Sabbath of the Lord because he commanded it the Tem●le of the Lord because he appointed it the people of the Lord because he chose them the Lords messengers because he sends them Apostles of Christ because he put them into that office No instance can bee given to shew the contrary But this day is denominatively called the Lords Rev. 1. 10. and so in the first of Cor. 16. 2. as Beza noteth on the same place affirming as I have before delivered it that to explaine the first day he had read in uno vetusto codice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which title is very frequent in the Fathers calling it usually Diem Dominicum the Lords day not by Creation for so every day is his from the beginning nor is it so called by Destination as is the last day 1 Thes 5. 2. as then and yet now a day to come hereafter when our Lords day was then so called by an excellency as also famously at that time knowne in the Church for the Lords day as the day of their solemne assemblies Therefore it is so called by divine institution for divine worship and as it hath Jesus Christ for the Authour and Institutor of it Argument 3. IF God by resting from his work of Creation and his blessing of that seventh day made it an holy day for his solemne set worship and service Then Jesus Christ his resting from the work of redemption and his blessing of this day made it an holy day for his solemne set worship and service For there is the like excellency in the resting of God the Son and the blessing of his day as there was in the resting of God the Father and his blessing of that seventh day Christ his work of the worlds redemption and the renovation thereof the making of all things new a new heaven and a new 2 Cor. 5. 13. earth as was foretold Esa 65. 17. is equall with the Fathers work of Creation and in the rest of the one and of the other can there be no inequallity nor disproportion The Sonnes blessing likewise of this day is of no lesse excellency than the Fathers blessing of that day which blessing of his is not in the particulars expressed but the Sonnes blessing of this day is and that at large in many particulars First by his glorious resurrection by which the Lords day So S. Aug. de Civit. Dei lib. 22. cap. 30. Lt Scr. 15. de verb. Apost became sacred and consecrated to us Secondly by his severall apparitions for confirmation thereof Thirdly by his heavenly instructions Luk. 24. 25. Fourthly by the illumination of their mindes opening their understandings Luk. 24. 45. Fifthly by the inspiration of the holy Ghost Iohn 20. 22. Sixthly by the installation of the Apostles giving them power to binde and loose in heaven and in earth Iohn 20. 28. Seventhly by his mission in great dignity sending them even as his Father had sent him Iohn 20. 21. All which blessings Christ bestowed on them this day before his ascension and afterwards on this day he sent down Act. 2. his holy spirit extraordinarily after a visible manner upon his Apostles made them speak miraculously with new tongues to the amazement of the hearers and on this selfe same day he blessedly converted 3000 soules Act. 2. 41. and so began on this day his Church to be a separated visible Congregation from among both lews and Gentiles Lastly on this day he gave his heavenly Revelation to his beloved Apostle who was in the spirit upon this day to receive the vision Reve. 1. 10. Thus we see how Christ did blesse this day But God the Father by his resting from the work of creation and his blessing of that seventh day made it an holy day for his solemn set worship and service as the Scripture teacheth Gen. 2. 2. and very learned Divines do maintaine for truth Doctor Rivet cyteth 36 by name and their own words In disser de orig Sab. for it to this purpose Therefore Iesus Christ his resting from the work of redemption and his so blessing of this our day hath made it an holy day for his solemn set time of worship and service Argument 4. THat which Christ through the holy Ghost spake by way of Command to be observed that he is the Institutor of this I hope will not be denyed But Iesus Christ by the holy Ghost spake by way of Command that this day should be observed For the things appertayning to the kingdome of God he gave Commandments to his Apostles to be taught and observed Act. 1. 2 3. But the day of Christs resurrection and the worship therein performed as it was in the Apostles dayes and after as may be collected out of the Scripture and out of the writings of Justine Martyr and Tertullian is of those things which do appertaine to the kingdome of God Therefore he commanded it to be observed and so was the Institutor of it Obj. If any object and say that this day was not expressed by Commandment Ans I answer no more are any other of those Commandments which in Act. 1. 2. he is said to give nor any particulars of the things he spake which appertained to the kingdome of God And therefore we cannot seclude this day out of the Commandements given by Christ because not expressed no more than we can deny other things appertaining to the kingdome of God to be commanded because they are not expressely mentioned till it can be proved that the keeping of this day to the honour of Christ in his publicke worship is none of the things which pertaine to the kingdome of God I answer againe that albeit it is not expressed yet must it be comprehended within these Commandements For these Commandements here given Act. 1. 2. are of those which Christ would have his Disciples to teach his people that enter into the Church by Baptisme to observe Matt. 28. 18. 20. Now we finde the Church to observe this day Act. 20. 7. 1. Cor. 16. 2. The Apostle also to be an observer of it with them Act. 20. 7. prescribing duties to them on this day 1. Cor. 16. 1. 2. when they did meet together 1. Cor. 5. 4. and 11. 20. which was on the Lords day as the Syriack hath it as is before noted And the Apostle telleth the Corinthians that the things he wrote unto them were
Sabbath Likewise may we do the works of preservation which are called the works of Necessity on this day But this necessitie must have warrant from the affirmative part of some Commandement of the second Table requiring this of us and not what we think or make a matter of necessity as for instance The fifth Commandement bindeth us to obey authoritie Now if we be commanded by supream power to stand watchman on this day we are to do it Neb. 13. 22. So may we stand armed for the Kings safety 2 Kin. 11. 5 6 7. 2 Chro. 23. 4 5 8. and for our Countrey 1 Kin. 20. 29. Yea upon command we may beseidge and assault the Citie of an enemy John 6. 8 16 20. Also an offender may be attached be brought before authority and the Magistrate on this day may send him to the Goale Num. 15. 34. It s thought that Pharaoh sent the Israelites out of Egypt on the Sabbath day see Ainsw on Deut. 5. 14. The sixt Commandement chargeth me with the keeping of mine own life and the life of mine neighbour By a necessity of this Commandement its lawfull 1. To dresse food for us as our Saviour warranted his Disciples in rubbing ears of Corne to eat them Matth. 12. 1 2 3 4 7. And this is not only in necessitie of meer hunger but for necessity of state and dependance of many to be fed Neh. 5. 18. Here is spoken of daily provision Vnoquoque die per singulos dies 2. To seek the Physitian for help and for the Physitian to prepare his Physick Luk. 13. 14 15. Joh. 9. 6 11 14. Mat. 12. 10. and to cure diseases Joh. 5. 3 5 9. Luk. 13. 12 13. 14. 3 4. 6. 10. 3. To fly for safety of life 1 K. 19. 3. 8. 4. To fight for our lives if need require 1 Macha 2. 41. 5. To save the life of another Luk. 6. 9. These works and the like may we do by warrant of the Sixt Commandement on this day The Seventh Commandement requireth Chastity and comely Decency Therefore upon necessity of this Commandement it is needfull to put on rayment for common honesty to hide our nakednesse and decently to clothe our selves as all ever have done on this day so to wash and be clean to comb the head brush thy garments and the like The Eighth Commandement is in the affirmative part that we preserve our own and our neighbours estate It s hence lawfull to fodder and water Cattell Luk. 13. 15. To pull a Beast out of the pit Luk. 14. 5. To take up that which is our own if it be without and abroad to carry it home Joh. 5. 8 9 11. To quench an house on fire and other things of the like nature for in all these cases and such like the Sabbath was made for man so it giveth place and admits of such works warr●nted by the Commandements of the second Table IV. We may do works of Charity and Mercy and that which is good on the Sabbath day Luk. 6. 9. Such were all the Cures which Christ wrought on the Sabbath day which albeit they might have been done upon another day yet some coming to him to be healed other occasionally be held of him with the eye of pity he healed and cured them V. And lastly besides all these works of Piety and tending to Piety of necessity and charity there be deeds of indifferency lawfull as these To walk in the fields as Christ with his Apostles and others did Mat. 12. 1. To make a Feast and ye invite Guests to go unto it Luk. 14. 1. Thus may we see from authority of holy Scripture and warrant from Christ the Lord of the Sabbath Mat. 12. 8. what was lawfull to be done on the Jewish Sabbath day So that they had as much liberty as we have if the Jews of later times had not mistaken it and from former prophanation of the Sabbath both before the Captivity Eze. 20. 12. 16. 22. 8. 26. 23. 38. and after Neh. 13. 13. had not fallen to their Jewish and foolish superstition condemned by Christ SECTION XX. Of the rigorous strictnesse supposed to be put upon the Israelites that day THat here we may not be deceived 1. We are not to regard the writings of the Jewish Rabbies of later times infected with their own superstition upon mistakes of Scripture 2. We must have recourse to the Originall Sabbath which the fourth Commandement propoundeth and maintaineth as we may observe in the reason of the direction Now in that was no restraint unto Adam but to rest from his week dayes work dressing the Garden So now onely servile work in this directory added to the Commandement is forbidden as before I have proved in Sect. 17. 3. The instances of labour in the Old Testament were not breaches of the Sabbath nor so were judged nor can be proved to be so 4. Our Saviour Christ the wisest Expositor of his Fathers Precepts and the exactest observer of his Fathers Will alwayes in all things both by word and deed telleth us that the Law of the Commandements laid no such yoak upon them in any such rigorous strictnesse 5. We must make a difference between the Commandement it self with the words annexed uttered by God immediately upon Mount Sinai to Israel and some other precepts given concerning the Sabbath by him afterwards but mediately by Moses to the people for the one is permanent and admits of works as I have shewed but the other are transient and for some use only for a space occasionally delivered binding to more strictnesse for the time They that go about to lay upon Israel a rigorous strict rest on the Sabbath from every least work which might be done without travell or distraction do it 1. To difference them from us by our more supposed freedome and liberty as if the Israelits had been tyed by vertue of the fourth Commandement it self to a more precise strictnesse then we now are so as they might do almost nothing no not to go out of their doores on the Sabbath-day 2. Hereupon to make the Commandement Ceremoniall in this imagined strictnesse 3. And so to overthrow the Naturality of the fourth Commandement and perpetuity of it as nothing belonging now unto us And for this purpose one of late in his Treatise of the Sabbath and Lords day in Cbap. 2. of the fourth part goeth about to prove this so great strictnesse for he saith I. That none were to go out of their doores on the Sabbath day not only not to make a journey but not to go out to walk although softly And this he collecteth because that they might not go out to gather Mannah on this day Answ 1. This was not a prohibition simply to go out but only not to go out to gather Mannah for they had not sinned in walking out but they did sinne in going to seek Mannah which the Lord did not rain on that day and had forbidden th●m to
the edicts of Kings and Emperours have disanulled what Councells and Synods have decreed against and what Learned and Godly men have both written and spoken against have been before set downe to which I adde here Concilium Antisiodorense in Anno 614. a thousand yeares since at which were 45 Bishops and others of the Clergie learned men who did forbid and expell publick dancing of women Synodus Turonensis in Anno 158● prohibited on the Lords day rioting publick Feasts Galliards Dancing Clamours Morices Hunting Hawking to serve wine or victualls in Innes or victualling houses to any but strangers the playing of Prize Comedies Tragedies and other spectacles In France in the raigne of Charles the ninth and Henry the third all dancing was prohibited under paine of imprisonment For what doth dancing produce in the rude vulgars but lascivious wantonnesse and the fruit the begeting of bastards and sometime thereupon hath ensued unnaturall murthers by Mothers thereby thinking to hide the former sin Of which there be too many examples and of which one instance before of one gotten with child on the Lords day at night after dancing 4 All sports may well be judged to be forborne on the Lords day which God hath by his hand shewed his displeasure against upon the actors on this day for the reverence we owe to God in beholding his handy work by which he lessons us and giveth us instruction if it be not to observe the day better to what then if we shall make this use of it I am sure we doe not offend Thus we see what sports are on this day to be laid aside And if so I hope well the day will be better employed of many Let it not be offensive to any that I propound these Reasons to their pious considerations to leave their pastimes this day 1 The Scripture forbidding the doing of our own waies finding our owne pleasures and speaking of our owne words Esay 58. 13. By our owne he doth meane what we do please to doe or speake without warrant from him of our owne heads from our owne worldly or carnall desires for all this is properly our owne But if we doe what God commandes Heb 4. 10. Iudg. 2. 19. and what he warrants us that is not properly our owne but Gods For in the former we doe serve our selves and are our own in this we serve God and are his This scripture is the only place in holy writt which teacheth us how to keep a Sabbath spirituall unto God by teaching first what to avoide and then what we should be taken up with on this day to wit with an honourable esteeme of the day in considering whose day it is Gods holy day then what delight we take in it as a Sabbath day and count it honourable and so doe him honour shewing that we delight our selves in the Lord verse 14. This text speaketh first of nothing ☜ proper to the Jewes but what is common to us in keeping our Christian Sabbath with them And therefore the Prophet doth mention onely the Sabbath day and not their seventh day Now Christ is still Lord of the Sabbath Matt. 12. 2. Here is nothing spoken but what is durable for ever in keeping an holy day to the Lord which is First That the day be held an holy day Secondly That it be of the Lord. Thirdly That it be a rest day Fourthly That we delight in it and esteeme it honourable Fifthly That on this day we honour him not doing what we please but forsaking our selves do what he would have us to doe and so to manifest our delight to be that day in the Lord In all which I would faine know what is there that doth not belong to us in keeping our Christian Sabbath Thirdly the scope of the Prophet tendeth as well to us as to them for as in the former part of the Chapter he had laboured to reforme the abuse in their Fasts so here the abuse in their Jewish keeping of the Sabbath externally in an outward service and rest mixing withall their own wayes pleasures and speeches but did not keep it as holy to the Lord in a spirituall manner with delight to honour God as they ought to have done Doth not this tend to the reformation of keeping our Sabbath as most doe as the Jewes did theirs externally mixt with our own wayes pleasures and speeches but not internally with a spiritually delight in the Lord Therefore this Text is fitly urged by our Learned Divines for the religious observation of our Sabbath day 2 The force of the fourth Commandement is yet of continuance and bindeth us as in the former Treatise hath been proved on our Lords day and first to a rest then to the imployment of that rest to an holy use and so to keep the day holy But sports and pastimes are not to speak properly any rest nor are they any holy duties for which we rest thereby to keep the day holy to God Therefore to be forborn this day 3 It is reasonable in all equitie to give God one day wholly to him for spirituall worship and service and for the spirituall good of our own soules for ever who hath given us six whole dayes for our own service and for our outward and worldly estate concerning our bodies which be here but for a time why should wee then grudge to forbeare sports for one day denying God his own right and our poore soules their spirituall good for to satisfie the corrupt minde with corporall delights on this day 4 The libertie of sports pleasures and pastimes on this day steale away the heart from God in time of Divine Worship The thoughts of these pleasures choak the seed of the Luk. 8. 14. On the fourth Commandement word for pleasures as well as worldly cares choak them saith Saint Luke and more too saith Learned Bishop Downham for nature saith he presseth youth more to pleasure than others to their wordly profits So that the thoughts of them doe not only hinder in time of hearing but doth quite take away the heart from after-meditation private prayer and conference without which hearing for the most part becommeth fruitlesse Now if this libertie were restrayned and they set to singing of Psalmes and other Christian and heavenly recreations as Durand before calleth them they knowing whereto they should hold they would bee more attent in the Church and better exercised out of it especially if they were made to know that not to serve the Lord God with joyfulnesse and with gladnesse of heart doth not a little anger and provoke God to wrath Deut. 28. 47. 5 If sports and pastimes have any allowance from God it is either Legally or Evangelically But not Legally for the letter of the Law bindeth strictly Not Evangelically for albeit the rigour of the Law be mitigated by the Covenant of grace and wee by Christ freed from the curse thereof yet neverthelesse we are tyed in love and in
thankfulnesse to the uttermost of our power withall our hearts mindes soules and strength to serve him and to take the benefit of such times as bee set apart for his glroy and worship and to be taken up therein with spirituall delight in such service to the Lord our God For grace is more binding by the Gospel upon the regenerate than the Law can bee forceable upon naturall men If therefore the Law doth not admit of idle sports on the Sabbath then much lesse the Gospel which doth more enlarge our hearts with the love of Christ and more forceably takes us off from making any provision for the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof if in truth it be powerfully in us 6 All sports and pastimes on the Lords day are to be forborne whilst the lawfulnesse and unlawfulnesse is in question by the most judicious and greatest Divines at home and abroad and the same not decided for lawfull by any of the Fathers Councells or Synods but rather held unlaw●ull for in such a case to forbeare is safe without sin but if any one shall sport play or use pastimes on this day must either side with the one sort or with the other and yet unresolved because the controversie stands undetermined by some indifferent Umpire or he doth presume of his own knowledge to be able to judge in such a doubtfull case to lead his conscience to doe such things which is both too high a conceit and very dangerous or else is daringly over-bold in love to sports and pastimes to follow his pleasure and will whilst his conscience must needs remaine in suspence and doubting which is no little sinne Rom. 14. 23. and is no small signe that such a one is a lover of pleasure more than a lover of God in that he dareth to attempt the wounding of conscience and the breaking off of his sweet peace between God and him by so short a time of carnall delights For acts in doubtfull cases cannot be without sinne and to sport with sinne is folly which without pardon is the soules deadly wound and destruction of the whole man 7 Nothing is more warrantable to be done on this day and on this our day under the Gospel than was on their day under the Law understanding the Law in its originall and set apart from the accessory precepts added thereto and durable only for a time But under the Law no sports or pastimes for corporall pleasure were allowed on their Sabbath day and therefore to be forborne on this day For concerning sports on their Sabbath wee read not in any place of the old Testament either for allowance or practice thereof Indeed we read in Exod. 32. 6. 18 19. of eating drinking and rising up to play singing and dancing but it was upon a day made for the service of the golden Calfe and honour thereof but condemned by S. Paul 1 Cor. 10. 7. and greivously punished by the command of Moses Exod. 32. 28. we also read but when there was no King in Israel Iudg. 17. 1. 18. 1. 19. 1. 21. 25. and when every one did that which seemed good in his owne eyes that the daughters of Shilo on a Festivall day of the Lord came out in dances Quod erat saith Peter Martyr on this place Die Festo abuti Neither doe wee read that it was a mixt dancing of men and women together as our dances pleaded for commonly be contrary to all the instances in holy writ We may also heare what that learned Bishop White telleth us how the Rabbins out of the Page 138. Talmud affirme that it was permitted yong people to recreate and sport themselves upon some part of the Sabbath with running leaping or dancing provided that it bee in honour of the Sabbath Note this well then not for meere ☜ corporall recreation as our youths use their sports But what credit can be given to these late Rabbins For it is well knowne that the Jewes in the time of the Fathers became prophaners of their Sabbaths by revelling and the like as learned Doctor Prideaux witnesseth and therefore their example not to be imitated or regarded 8 Needlessely to doe on the Lords day what may if out propably hazard sinning and so the provoking of God to anger is a great presumption that the hearts of such are not possessed with that holy feare which maketh men ever jealous of their doings lest peradventure they should at any time offend God But for such to sport on the Lords day as have vigour strength and health to expresse the bodies activity in their pleasurable delights for of such the controversie only is it is needlesse whether you respect their bodies or their mindes and spirits And therefore of such are sports to bee forborne this day 1 They are not needfull for the body If the body hath lost any strength by weekly labour stirring sports and pastimes which are commonly performed with violent motion cannot repaire the lost strength First they are not the ordinary meanes appointed by God for recovery thereof but wholsome food quiet rest moderate sleep good physick and the like as the cause shall require Secondly sports and pastimes are commonly so violently pursued as mens bodies grow thereby the more weary and so in stead of repayring decay their strength Thirdly for ordinary and common refreshment for the reviving of the body to returne with more lightsomenesse and alacrity to work God hath given the painfull labourer rest and sleep in the night for every dayes labour a nights rest for six dayes six nights as in his wisdome he thought fit and sufficient according to that in the Psal 104. 22. 23. Man works on the day and rests at Evening But now for bodily strength if weakned by labour in the weeke before to refresh it for the weeke following a man hath first the Saturday night then the whole Sunday from servile labour and lastly Sunday night two nights and a day for corporall rest so that to an healthy body apt for labour recreations sports and pastimes this day are needlesse for if every nights rest in the week day can by Gods blessing preserve strength recover the decay of it and make it apt for new labour then much more two nights and a day if we pray for a blessing thereon Fourthly The persons addicted to sporting may be reduced to three sorts either to industriously-painfull or to slack-handed idle and lazy in worke or to the holy day persons such as either have little or nothing to doe living idlely like Droanes in an Hive upon the sweat of other mens brows inordinate livers not worthy to eat These last neede no recreations but rather a whip for correction The second sort are either rich mens children 2 Thess 3. not wearied with worke whose labour is rather a loytering than painfull diligence or slouthfull servants sports and pastimes to these two rather increase in them idlenesse than a will to work for these