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A69228 A discourse of the Sabbath and the Lords Day Wherein the difference both in their institution and their due observation is briefly handled. By Christopher Dow, B.D. Dow, Christopher, B.D. 1636 (1636) STC 7088; ESTC S110113 45,823 80

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He alone could change the day of the Sabbath that was Lord of it that is Christ So that according to him Christ was the Author of this change and that either mediately by his Apostles whom he assisted by his Spirit in the Institution of it no lesse then he did in the doctrine which they taught or else as hee holds to bee most probable immediately and in his owne person and the probability of this he labours to prove by divers Arguments wherein hee doth as one hath well observed in the like case as if one should demand a Legacy by force and vertue of some written Testament wherein there being no such thing specified he pleades that there it must needs be and bringeth arguments from the love and good will which alwayes the Testator bore him imagining that these or the like proofes will evince a Testament to have that in it which other men by reading can no where finde Certainely it is a bold and a strange course for men to adventure to argue that God must needs have done the thing which they imagine was to bee done whereas in matters that concerne the actions of God the most dutifull and safe way on our part is to search what God hath done and with meekeresse to admire that rather then to dispute what he in congruity of reason ought to doe Hee might therefore have spared all the reasons he brings and in stead thereof to have alledged one place out of the New Testament which doth command the change of the Day especially seeing he denies it and that for many reasons by him there urged to bee an unwritten Tradition which seeing hee doth not nor indeede can doe what doth he else by all his arguments but endeavour to lay an aspersion of imperfection upon the Scriptures and of neglect in Christ himselfe of that office which as the great Prophet of his Church belonged to him As if unlesse hee had beene as carefull to appoint the observation of this day as Moses was to appoint the old Sabbath hee could not absit verbo blasphemia be as faithfull in the house of God as Moses was But farre be such blasphemous thoughts from us farre be it from us to measure the faithfulnesse of our blessed Saviour by our phansies or to judge him unfaithfull because he did omit that which our shallow conceits judge necessary and fit for him to doe Wee know that the high Priest of our profession Christ Iesus was faithfull to him that appointed him as also Moses was faithfull in all his house And this faithfulnesse of his was by him sufficiently demonstrated in that hee fully declared the will of his Father to the world in all things to be beleeved and done and shewed how and what worship Christians must give unto God though the circumstances of that worship as Time and Place in as much as concerned the particular designing of either hee left to be determined by the Church whom he promised to be with to the end of the world And as he cannot be said to be lesse faithfull in the house of God then Moses or Salomon who provided the one a Tabernacle the other a Temple because he did not appoint set places for Gods worship so neither can hee be justly taxed for not appointing the set times for the same these two circumstances of time and place being of equall necessity and use and joyned together by God himselfe Lev. 19. 30. Yee shall keepe my Sabbaths and reverence my Sanctuarie I am the Lord. Neither is the difference of Places more taken away now under the Gospel then of Times But as the true worshippers of God are not tyed to worship either in Ierusalem or any other peculiar place but may worship him in spirit and truth in all places lifting up pure hands so neither are they tyed to any speciall time or day but may pray continually and at all times And therefore they who are so indifferent for the place that they can be content to account a Wood a Parlor or a Barne place good enough for Christians to meete in for the performance of Gods publick worship have no reason to complaine for want of a set day or time for the same purpose The truth is that that peculiar blessing which God once bestowed upon the Sabbath of the Temple thereby differenced them from all others is enlarged to all times places and any day and place may by the Church be dedicated and set apart for Gods worship and being so dedicated set apart they inherit that holinesse which was once peculiar unto the in relation to the duties then there performed to God who in regard of the abundance of grace vouchsafed now in the time of the Gospell may be said to be more present at such times and in such places then heretofore in those of his own assigning But it was not necessary that Christ himself or his Apostles from him should by expresse precept particularly designe either of these if any think such precept to be necessary let them shew the place of Scripture where such precept is to be found or else confesse the Scripture to be deficient in things necessary and so forsake their colours of reformation and passe over into the Campe of the Romanists If they be ashamed of this let them learne and confesse That however it be necessary that some time be dedicated to Gods service yet the determination to this or that particular day is not necessary to be defined by Scripture which they may perhaps the more easily be brought to see if they consider that in this it is no otherwise then it is with other things of equall necessity with this in the generall as the Sacraments Fasting and Prayer it selfe which yet for the particular when and how often they are to be used is not any where in Scripture defined nor necessary so to be But some who will have the Lords day so called because Christ himselfe instituted it say That the Apostles by the authority of that Spirit that alway assisted them in their ministeriall office did alter the day and themselves kept and ordained it to be kept in all Churches as may appeare 1. Cor. 16. 1. Where he saith Every first day of the weeke when yee meete together c. But certainly it is most evident even to a vulgar consideration that no such thing doth appeare out of that place For what doth Saint Paul say there That hee would have Christians meete every first day of the weeke to serve God No surely there is not a word of meeting in the text but what is foysted in to deceive the credulous Reader That which S. Paul saith is That on that day hee would have every one lay by him in store as God hath prospered him This implies neither the meeting together of the Church on that day nor the performance of any religious duty but onely a repositing or laying up
far to be extended is not on all hands agreed upon Some there are who when they come to define this liberty they pin it up within so narow a room that it proves either none at all or to no purpose Amesius saith There is nothing can be brought out of Scripture cōcerning the strist observatiō of the Sabath which was commanded to the Iewes which doth not in the same manner belong to all Christians except the kindling of fires and the dressing of ordinary dyet And these he thinkes it probable too that the Iewes might ordinarily doe on their Sabbath though upon speciall occasions they were forbidden them so that he seemes to retract that liberty which before he granted them But others doe freely grant these and some few like them as making of beds carrying of burthens to wit on speciall and urgent occasions and these they allow by this name of workes of Christian liberty Egregiam vero libertatem A great liberty no doubt and worthy that precious blood by which it was purchased But two things may here be demanded First how it will appeare that Christians have this liberty And here for ought I can see we must be contented to take their own authority for Scripture they alledge none to purpose Those two places which are cited by Elton on this occasion speak no such thing besides that which is there sayd whatever it be proves no peculiar liberty belonging to Christians which the Iewes had not For in them our Saviour justifies his Disciples from transgressing the Sabbath which was then in force but doth not shew what might be done afterward when by his death the Sabbath should be abrogated If they alledge that our Saviour bad the sicke man on the Sabbath to take up his bed which may seeme to have some reference to making of beds or carrying of burthens It may be answered that our Saviour doth not there shew what might ordinarily be done but by his authority gives a speciall dispensation to the sicke man to take up his bed c. without which dispensation the man could not have beene excused from breaking the Sabbath So that here is no certainty according to their principles for any thing to be done which the Jewes might not doe but that men must for all their pretended liberty either Iudaize or else adventure for this small liberty with a doubting conscience Secondly It may also be demanded How wee shall know that onely this liberty is allowed Christians This also we must take upon their credit For reason or Scripture they alledge none at all And if they without either reason or Scripture shall take upon them to give lawes to the Church of God and prescribe bounds to Christian liberty I see no cause why wee may not upon solid grounds of Scripture and reason assert that liberty which of right belongs to us as purchased by the all precious blood of our deare and Blessed Saviour And this will appeare if we consider what rest or cessation from labours is on this day required First then for that it is a day of Gods publique and solemne worship to bee performed by the whole Church which cannot as hath beene shewed be performed unlesse there bee a vacation from ordinary and common worked a vacation therefore and resting from these as they are impediments to Gods service is on that day required as necessary Yet not so necessary no not in the times of publique assemblyes but that the workes which necessity imposeth upon men and rarer occasions in mens particular affaires subject to manifest detriment unlesse they be presently followed may with very good conscience draw men aside sometime frō the ordinary rule considering the favourable dispensation which our Saviour grounds upon this Axiome The Sabbbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath Which rule if it held for the Iews on their Sabbath is certainely no lesse in force at this day for Christians In the use of which notwithstanding some cautions must bee observed As first that men pretend not necessity or charity when it is covetousnesse or a carelesse neglect or contempt of Gods publique worship upon which ground no doubt it was that the Emperor Leo repealed that liberty which by Constantine was granted to Husbandmen and the Counsell of Matiscon forbids men to frame a necessary to themselves of yoking their Oxen therein allowing both a just dispensation in necessity forbidding the unjust pretence of necessity where none is Secondly men must take heed that they do not by their negligence or improvidence and forgetfulness draw a necessity upon themselves in which regard the word Remember which God prefixed to the fourth Commandement is yet in force to exact our care and mindfulnesse so to provide before hand that the dutyes to which this day is consecrated bee not by our default omitted or hindered Thirdly that being necessarily hindered or forced to omit the solemne publique dutyes of the Day we do as much as may be by private devotions meditations make supply of that defect Againe such is the reverence that is due to the solemne publique dutyes of devotion that they require not onely a surcease from other workes thoughts for the time of their performance but also a decent preparation before-hand that wee looke to our feete when we enter into the house of God put off our shooes before we stand upon holy ground that so our thoughts and affections which are naturally bent upon the world and not easily withdrawne from it may be raysed to a disposition befitting so sacred an employment In which respect it is convenient if not necessary that til the publike service of God be ended men intangle not themselves with unnecessary businesses or give themselves to sportings or recreations whereby their mindes should be hindered from the right preparing of themselves or due performance of those holydutyes Lastly it is good and commendable to spend the rest of that day in holy meditations private prayer reading and calling to minde what wee have read or heard These workes as they are at all times profitable and beseeming Christians so on that day they are most seasonable and suitable to those publique actions of Devotion which are the proper worke of the Day Thus S. Augustine exhorteth his Auditors on this day to sequester themselves from worldly businesses that they may be employed in these works and the Councill of Matiscon yea and our owne Church Canons prescribe the spending of this day and other holy-dayes devoted to Gods service in these and the like religious imployments And therefore they who thus spend the Lords day if it be done without superstition or judging other mens liberty cannot therefore justly be condemned Now by this it is easie to judge of our liberty First then here is a liberty in case of necessity though thereby the solemne dutyes of Gods worship bee hindered Secondly a liberty in
or that so accounting it they held themselves bound to consecrate that more then any other to the worship of God The Gentiles as Eusebius at large declares came to the knowledge of it from the Iewes and did in that as in other things become their Imitators and receive it into their manners Or upon some other ground or superstition they might account the number of seaven to be sacred as because by that number the Planets which they honoured as their chiefest Deities were terminated for which cause we know by their names they intituled their dayes But what ever were the motive as it is without all question that the Gentiles as well as the Iewes held the number of seaven in great veneration accounting it the number of perfection and full of mysteries So it is as unquestionable that by the light of nature they knew not that that part of our time was to be separated to Gods service And therefore Zanchius speakes more inconsiderately then beseemes his learning when hee saith That Nature teacheth all men to consecrate one day of seaven to the externall worship of God Which others and among them Amesius better considering acknowledge to be onely of positive right and morall not in regard of nature but of discipline as comming under that ranke of morall Precepts which neede instruction to helpe naturall reason to know and judge of them Now albeit Calvine who in this as in other things wants not his followers thinks the seaventh day not to be so stood on as that he would tye the Christian world precisely to that Yet there are many grave and judicious Divines both Ancient and Moderne that judge the institution of one Day in seaven to be so farre morall as that it doth binde the Church perpetually and immutably Thus among the Ancients Saint Chrysostome upon those words And God blessed the seaventh day and hallowed it Genes 2. 3. Here saith hee from the beginning God intimates to us this Doctrine instructing us to separate and lay aside one day in the compasse of every weeke for spirituall exercises And among our moderne Writers that admired Hooker saith That wee are bound to account the sanctificatiō of one day in seven a duty which Gods immutable law doth exact for ever Thus hee with many others whose judgements I honour yet dare not herein wholly subscribe to them neither For the Law exacting the observation of one day in seaven being onely positive as must needs be granted cannot containe in it selfe any perpetuall obligation For all Lawes of that nature though made by God himselfe admit mutation at least when the matter concerning which or the condition of the Persons to whom they were given is changed Now the Day concerning which this Precept was given together with the State of the Church to which it was given being changed I see no reason why the proportion of one in seaven should be simply and in it selfe immutable Yet thus much I willingly grant them that some time to be set apart for Gods worship being absolutely of the Law of nature that proportion of time which God himselfe made choyce of for his owne People is the fittest that can be imagined and Nature informed by God cannot but acknowledge His wisedome and goodnesse in this choyce in that hee hath so attempered it that neither the long space betweene can make us forget our duty to him nor the quicke returne of it hinder our providing for the necessities of nature And hereupon the Church of Christ hath taken it as an obligation belonging to them and that as it is in our Church Homily Gods will and commandement was to have a solemne time and standing day in the weeke wherein the people should come together and have in remembrance his wonderfull Benefits and render him thanks for them as appertaineth to loving kinde and obedient people Thus farre then this Commandement extends to us Christians as well as to the Jewes in as much as to consecrate some part of our time to God is morall and a seaventh part though not morall yet fitly chosen and appointed by God and observed by the Church of Christ not as simply immutable yet as most worthy to be retayned For the third particular The particular seventh day there mentioned that is the seaventh day from the Creation This cannot be said to be Morall any way but is ceremoniall and temporary and expired with the dissolution of the Iewish Church And this is generally confessed by all whom the heresie of Iudaisme hath not infected and the mutation of the Day approved by the practise of the Christian world ever since the Apostles times is a sufficient disclaime to the morality of it For one of these three must needs hence be inferred Eyther that that which is morall may bee changed or that the Church of Christ hath now for this sixteen hundred years erred in the change of it orlastly that the particular day prescribed to the Jews was Ceremoniall and not perpetuall The first no man will say that vnderstands the nature of morall precepts and their dependance upon the Law of nature which is one and the same with all men every where and in all ages and in that regard immutable And he deserves not the name of a Christian that dares affirme the second It remaines therefore that we pitch upon the third confesse that herein that Commandement was Ceremoniall not perpetuall But besides the practice of the Church we have the warrant of the Apostle S. Paul who ranks the Sabbath among the shadows of things to come whereof the body is Christ Now the body had they are the words of the late learned Bishop of Winchester the shadowes vanish that which was to come when it is come to what end any figure of it it ceaseth too So that to hold the shadow of the Sabbath is to continue is to hold that Christ the body is not yet come Neyther can the force of this place be avoyded by saying that the Iewes had other Sabbaths that were there meant as the Sabbaths of weekes and the first and last dayes of their great feasts which were called Sabbaths For the Apostle speakes indefinitely of the Sabbath dayes hath not there left any ground to rayse any distinction upon or to shew that he aymed onely at them more then this That he speakes there in the plurall number will not helpe this shift but rather crosse it it helpes it not because we know it is usuall in the new Testament to use that number when the Sabbath in question is spoken of it crosseth it rather in that being in the plurall number it may rather seeme to comprehend all their Sabbaths whatsoever they were and so to be far from excluding this The place then is cleare and alone sufficient to prove the point in hand To which I will onely adde that the reason drawn from the example of God who rested upon the
houres for the dayly sacrifices the building of Synagogues throughout the land to heare the word of God and to pray in when they came not up to Ierusaleme the Feast of the Dedication which was solemnised even by our Saviour and yet never spoken of in the Law and many more which the Church without any particular command onely following the light of reason in her discretion judged meete And certainly the Church of Christ hath not now lesse power or priviledge then the Jewish Church then had to which it is no way inferiour but farre superiour in regard of the measure of grace and the presence of the spirit of Christ by which it is assisted as in other things so in ordaining Lawes for the edification of the Church Now least any should thinke it a matter of indifferencie to obey or disobey the Orders of the Church which are thus constituted without the expresse command of God in Scripture and that the transgressions of such Constitutions are no sinnes I will close this point with that which worthy Hooker from whom I have borrowed the greatest part of this last discourse hath judiciously and fully delivered to this purpose Vnto Lawes thus made saith he and received by a whole Church they which live within the bosome of that Church must not thinke it a matter indifferent either to yeeld or not to yeeld obedience Is it a small offence to despise the Church of God My sonne keepe thy Fathers commandement saith Salomon and forget not thy mothers instruction binde them both alwayes about thine heart It doth not stand with the duty which wee owe to our Heavenly Father that to the Ordinance of our Mother the Church we should shew ourselves disobedient Let us not say we keepe the commandements of the one when wee breake the Law of the other for unlesse we observe both wee obey neither Yea that which is more the Lawes thus made God himselfe doth in such sort authorize that to despise them is to despise in them Him Thus hee with much more to the same purpose Which I therefore thought good to adde that no man might think that while I ascribe it to its true Originall I goe about to impaire the authority of it or to withdraw any thing from the due observance of it And thus I have done with this second Question viz. When and by whom the Sunday or Lords Day was instituted These things thus discussed and cleared it may now seeme superfluous to enquire into the liberty that wee Christians have how farre it may justly be extended in regard of ordinary labours upon the Sunday For if it be granted that the strict rest on the Sabbath was Ceremoniall and abrogated with the Day and that the Day which we keepe is not by vertue of the fourth Commandement but by the custome or Constitution of the Church It wil not be hard for any to conclude that Christians are not bound to rest on that day from all works further then the duties of the day and they who enjoyned it require Yet for more full satisfaction I will adde some-what more particularly concerning those two Questions that remaine To enquire then first What works the lewes might doe or their Sabbath This wil easily be dispatcht in as much as herein the Scripture is very plaine and little or no difference of opinion among Divines Yet will it not be altogether needlesse in regard that the liberty we now have under the Gospell when it is compared with theirs under the Law will the better appeare Now these workes are fitly reduced under three heads The first of which are Workes of necessity such as could not well be deferred or prevented Of which sort are reckoned divers which how ever Pharisaicall superstition had prevailed with the people to scruple at yet were never in the intention of the Law-giver prohibited them as may appeare by the doctrine practise of our Saviour who was both wayes the best expositor of the Law and who both wayes came not to destroy but to fulfill it And among those thus allowed by our Saviour we finde the providing of foode in the case of hunger the watering and by the like reason the foddering of cattell the saving them from imminent danger Whence by analogie and congruity of reason wee may conclude the lawfulnesse of many more things of the like nature as that of Mattathias and his company resolving to fight upon the Sabbath to save their lives So the quenching of an house on fire the saving of corne and other necessary substance from perishing and the like To which wee may adde workes communis honestatis as the decent attiring of our selves and all other workes which necessity of nature hath imposed upon men and thereby allowed as fit to be done The second sort of workes permitted them were workes of mercie and charity as to visite the sicke heale the diseased and the like which wee finde approved by our Saviours often practise and together with those before-mentioned justified by that axiome of his The Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath that is according to Erasmus's Glosse it is fit that the observation of the Sabbath should give place to mans benefit and not that man should perish for the Sabbath as also by that of the Prophet by him cited God will have mercy and not Sacrifice that is rather have the miseries of men relceved then the letter of the Law observed The third and last sort of works were workes of piety belonging to the service of God as to reade the Law to teach the people to circumcise children to offer Sacrifice with their attendants as to make fires for them to slay and prepare the beasts for these workes though servile in themselves being directed to the service of God were sacred and no way violating the Sabbaths rest So our Saviour testifies that notwithstanding these workes done by the Priests in the Temple yet the Priests were blamelesse and not transgressours of the Law And the Jewes had it among their traditions that in the Temple there was no Sabbath Intimating that the Sabbaths rest must give place to those things which were to be done by the Priest in the Temple for the service of God Having seene what might be done on the Sabbath let us now see whether and what liberty Christians now have on the Sunday and how farre that liberty is to be extended which is the last part of our Inquirie And here though some few transported with a heedlesse zeale of maintayning the dignity of this day have not strucke to affirme that the Iewes had as much liberty as we have that we are as much restrained as they were Yet the most even of the strictest and most precise exactors of the Sundayes rest doe grant a liberty which Christians now have more then the Iewes had But what liberty this is wherein it consists how
doe not so strictly observe the outward ceremoniall rest as they were bound to doe Secondly I say that our Church is so farre from abridging God of one day in seven that it gives more as having appointed and consecrated divers Holy dayes to the same solemne and publike worship of God which is enjoyned to bee performed upon the Lords Day For these though they may admit some difference in regard of their accidentall dignity in as much as those benefits commemorated in them are greater or lesser yet in regard of their essentials they are equall as being all of them dedicated to the honour of the same God in memory of some great and speciall benefits vouchsafed to the Church and therefore doe goe pari passu in our Canons and in our ancient Statutes which require the same observance of both under the same penalty And therefore those who stand so much for a whole Day of seven to be consecrated to God if the worship of God were all they affected might see that there is a compensation made for the defect which they so much complaine of in our observation on the Lords Day and they themselves might doe well to take advantage by a religious observation of these dayes to make up their failings on the Lords Day But this they are so farre from that they account the observation of these dayes a breach of the fourth Commandement and thinke it a sin to make more Holy dayes then one in seven In which regard it cannot be judged altogether impertinent if I here take occasion to vindicate the practise of our Church from their unjust censures And in the first place I may returne their own Argument upon them and say Is it not reason that God should now under the Gospel have more set dayes to commemorate his benefits then one in seven as well as under the Law Vnder the Law we know they had beside their weekly Sabbaths the Passeover Pentecost and the Feast of Tabernacles and not onely those which had Gods expresse command for their Institution but the Feast of Purim and of the Dedication which as I have before shewed were ordained by the Church without any expresse command of God and observed by our Saviour himselfe whose example alone if any thing is sufficient to exempt us from scrupling at the like now in the time of the Gospel Secondly if they will not runne cleane counter to their owne principles and deny the morality of the fourth Commandement altogether they must acknowledge thus much at least to bee moral That there ought to be a certaine part of our time given to God and some dayes set apart for his publique worship Now these being left undetermined in the word of God if it bee not in the power of the Church to determine them I wonder how that precept should be observed And if the Churchupon this ground have reason and power to appoint any one Day why not more seeing her power is not limited or restrained within any other bounds but those generalls of decency and order which I presume no man will say are transgressed in the ordination of those Holy dayes which are observed among us Thirdly to this that such times are in the generall commanded by God wee may adde two things more which being well considered will abundantly discharge the observation of such dayes from superstition and those are First that the duties therein required are no other then such as according to the word of God ought to bee performed by all Christians For what else is required on those dayes but the solemne prayers and prayses of God in the Church joyned with the hearing of his Word and a speciall commemoration of his benefits which as on those dayes were received And which of all these is not required in the word of God And if it bee lawfull yea commanded that wee should performe those duties at all times and upon all occasions they cannot at any time whensoever they are performed justly bee termed superstitious or which must follow by consequence unlawfull 2. The other thing to bee considered is That the grounds and occasions of the Churches determination of these duties unto those speciall dayes which wee observe are such as deserve no lesse As being reall great and generall benefits vouchsafed by God unto his Church First they are true and reall not imaginary fictions founded upon the fained actions or falle martyrdomes of titular Saints such as are many in the Romish Church Secondly they are great not ordinary or common benefits and therefore require a more then ordinary acknowledgement Thirdly they are generall the good whereof redounds not to a few but to the whole body of the Church and so if our acknowledgement bee answerable it must be publike and solemne performed joyntly by all those that are partakers of the benefits Now if wee shall runne thorough the whole Kalender take an impartiall view of all our Holy dayes wee shall not find so much as one among them all of which thus much may not truely bee affirmed For they may almost bee ranked under two heads First such memorable steps in the story of our blessed Saviour as by which the great worke of our redemption advanced unto its happy accomplishment Secondly the memorialls of that goodnesse and glory which he afterwards manifested to the world by his holy Apostles Evangelists and Martyrs whom he honoured so much as to make them founders of that Kingdome which cost him his dearest blood to count them worthy to suffer death for his sake Concerning the former I suppose there is none but will say in the words of the Psalmist as our vulgar translation reades them The mercifull and gratious Lord hath so done his marvellous workes that they ought to be had in remembrance And what better meanes can be devised then the appointing of set solemne dayes for their commemoration I cannot see And this was the Churches aime in appointing these dayes So S. Austine We saith he dedicate and consecrate to God the memory of his benefits in solemne feasts and set dayes least in the revolution of times ingratefull forgetfulnesse should creepe upon us The like may be said of the latter For if our Saviour appeared so glorious in them and by them conveighed so great and generall blessings to his Church what reason can bee alleadged why the Church may not retaine an annuall honourable memoriall of them to the glory of him whose instruments they were The Psalmist tells us that the righteous shall bee had in everlasting remembrance And the Wiseman That the memory of the just shall be blessed And therefore to have some dayes in which the memories of those who were in their generations most famous for righteousnesse may with blessing be perpetuated is but their due and agreeable to his will who hath granted them that honour so that we may justly solemnize the dayes wherein those barning and shining lights first
institution of the Lords day But I have too long digressed yet not without cause in as much as they who seeme so zealous for the giving to God his due time refuse notwithstanding to give him that which the regular piety of the Ancient and our owne Mother Church hath ever upon so sound reason consecrated to him I returne now to answere another objection which they frame against the extending of our Christian liberty to the use of recreations on the Lords day The liberty of Christians say they ought to be spirituall and not in carnall and common things and therefore cannot bee extended to patronize recreations or ordinary labours on the Sunday but that they are as unlawfull on that day as ever they were on the Sabbath To this I answere that Christian liberty as it respects the things from which we are freed is not meerely spirituall but extends it selfe to carnall and common things also for thereby wee are freed not onely from the guilt and condemnation of sinne and the raigning power of it which are things spivituall but also from the servitude of the Ceremoniall Law which among other respects which it had was as a Schoole-Master or Tutour whereby the Church in her nonage or infancie was to bee kept under the Elements of the world as the Apostle calls them that is tyed to the observation of dayes and moneths and yeares and meates and drinks which being in themselves indifferent were yet forbidden the Church of those times that their bondage under these might nourish in them the hope and expectation of the promised Messias in whom they were to have deliverance and so lead or rather drive them to beleeve in Him Now when the fulnesse of time was come and that Christ was exhibited the Church being then no longer under age is not subject to those observances but for any tye of that Law of Moses now upon it enjoyes the free use and exercise of these things as indifferent As then there were many things which in themselves and to us now are indifferent prohibited to the Jewes so as they might not eate of all meates though otherwise wholsome they might not weare all kinde of garments though usefull and profitable c. So there were some workes in themselves not sinfull nor at other times unlawfull prohibited to be done at some speciall times in regard of the peculiar observance then due to those times which now when those times cease to be observed can by no meanes bee accounted sinfull or unlawfull Granting therefore that ordinary labours and all bodily recreations were on the Sabbath unlawfull yet being in themselves not sinfull and so under the Gospell indifferent they cannot be so upon our Sunday I answere further that I know no reason why honest recreations moderate feasting and such like expressions of rejoycing may not fitly be counted a part of the externall observance and sanctification of this day in as much as it is solemnized in memory of the resurrection of our Blessed Saviour and so our redemption fully wrought to which we may with S. Augustine apply that of the Psalmist This is the Day which the Lord hath made wee will rejoyce and be glad in it And as on the day of his Passion and other dayes appointed for solemne humiliation we expresse the sorrow of our hearts by our mourning and neglected attire by Fasting and abridging our selves of those delights which use to refresh our natures at which times The voyce of the Vyoll and of the Harpe the voyce of the Bridegroome and the voyce of the Bride are unseasonable so on the day of his resurrection to expresse our joy and rejoycing by our arraying our selves in our best attire by Feasting and other acts of cheerefulnesse is most agreeable to the solemnity of that Day Of which we may say in the words of Nehemiah and Ezra This Day is holy unto the Lord your God mourne not nor weepe but eate of the fat and drinke of the sweet and send portions to them for whom nothing is prepared for this Day is holy unto the Lord. And however some men will have every fasting day a Sabbath and every Lords Day a fasting day not allowing either the dressing or liberall use of Gods creatures and therefore judging it inconvenient to celebrate marriages on that day yet the Church of God in better times condemned Fasting on the Lords Day as unlawfull and most incongruous and disagreeable to the use of that Day which was ordained as a Festivall and day of mirth and rejoycing For which end also the Church in her most ancient times had on that Day their Agapae or Love-feasts as for the refreshing of the poore and for the nourishing of mutuall love and amity so also for the unanimous expression of joy in all sober mirth and in the free though temperate use of Gods creatures Upon which ground doubtlesse wee may conclude the lawfulnesse of the use of such recreations feastings and other testifications of rejoycing upon the Lords Day as are in themselves honest and are so used as they prove no hinderances to the service of God which is the proper worke of the Day Besides even the Iewes themselves though out of superstition they did for the most part overdoe this Precept of the Sabbath abstaining from those things which they might have done without any violation of Gods commandement yet accounted their Sabbath a Feast not a Fast a day of rejoycing and not of sorrow or humiliation and judged it not unlawfull to make Feasts upon that Day as is evident by that Feast made upon the Sabbath by a chiefe Pharisee one of their strictest Sabbatarians whereat our Saviour himselfe who was no Sabbath-breaker vouchsafed his presence among many others that were invited And Paulus Burgensis himselfe a Iew reports that the Iewes held themselves bound to eate three meales that day which on other dayes they used not And Syranus another of the same Nation saith That the Hebrew Doctors held that the word Remember was prefixed to this Commandement that if they had any pretious garment or any other thing of price They should remember to keepe it till the Sabbath to give it at first a Sabbath-dayes wearing I am not of their minde but thinke that word prefixed for higher and more important reasons yet I verily beleeve that their conceit did speak their usuall custome of apparelling themselves in their most costly and best garments as best befitting the joy of that high Festivall which as one hath well observed hath this singular priviledge to be a day of rest and holinesse of delight and Feasting unto the world and therefore saith hee This day is not described by evening and morning as were the other six which consisted of light and darknesse but this is all day or light figuring out our perpetuall joyes And no question but that Day which was the memoriall of Gods resting from his worke when he rejoyced in