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A37049 A practical exposition of the X. Commandements with a resolution of several momentous questions and cases of conscience. Durham, James, 1622-1658. 1675 (1675) Wing D2822; ESTC R19881 403,531 522

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that they differenced the first day of the week from other days and one day 〈◊〉 special is called The Lord's-day which other days of the week are not 2. If all times be a-like simply and all making difference be there reproved then could there be no time set apart to be observed by men to the marring of that indifferency and if so then hath the Christian Church been still in a palpable gross sin for if the keeping of a day by vertue of God's Command marr that indifferency much more will the keeping of a day by mans command and so there could never be a Sabbath 3. We must therefore understand these places not as casting all days and times simply but ceremonial and Jewish days or days invented by men because the scope of the places runneth that way viz. against the bringing in of ceremonial worship as necessary which while some weak ones not yet sufficiently informed did still practise as Rom. 14. the Apostle would not have them hastily condemned in Days more than Meats yet is there still a difference betwixt Bread and Wine in the Sacrament of the Supper and other meats which this discourse of the Apostle taketh not away so is it in days And in these Epistles to the Galathians and Colossians he speaketh of days and not as would seem of the weekly Sabbath which is ordinarily called a day as taking in all the extraordinary Feasts of the Jews which is the more probable because the c ●remonial Law was pressed on them as still necessary by false Teachers or he speaketh of mere Jewish days and so of the Seventh day which they kept for it 's of such observation of days as was sinful and brake them off from Grace and the Gospel as other ceremonies did that he speaketh of but that cannot be said of all days or of keeping one day of seven Therefore this cannot be meaned there 3. Obj. The fourth Command precisely commandeth the Seventh day from the Creation to be kept but that is not moral therefore neither is the Command so Answ. This Objection goeth upon that mistake as if the very Seventh day were still commanded in it as the main sub ●tance of it which our next discourse on the true scope and meaning of the Command will clear so that if a Seventh day and not that Seventh day be commanded as the main substance of that Command that Objection falleth 2. There is a difference to be put betwixt the mandatory part of the Command and what is further added for pressing the observation of it or for ex ●plaining its meaning The precept strictly is Rememb ●r the Sabbath day to keep it holy It saith Remember the Sabbath or the Holy rest what-ever day it shall be on and so it is said in the close that He Rested the Seventh Day but that He Blessed the Sabbath Drawing it still from the Seventh precisely to the Sabbath Even as in the Second Command This is 1. commanded in special that no Image be made then 2. This in ●eneral that all Gods Commandement concerning His Worship even such as were Ceremonial for the time should be observed with what-ever others should be given So here this Fourth commandeth expresly One of the Seven because the Recurrency of that time is bounded and generally what-ever Seventh the Lord shall be pleased to pitch on We have said the more on this because it doth not only clear the true Scope of the Command but sheweth the necessity of the Observation of that time which the Lord hath ●anctified for himself 3. We should put a difference also betwixt Ceremonial and Mutable All the Judicial Laws are Mutable and the Decalogue it self in respect of it's Curse and as it was a Covenant giving Life is Actually changed and abolished Yet is not for that to be reputed Ceremonial and not Obligatory Though all Ceremonials be Mutable yet all Mutables are not Ceremonial Besides this change is not in the matter Why may not therefore the Seventh Day in Order which was observed from the Creation to the Resurrection of Christ be chainged to the First Day of the Week which is a Seventh Day in Number still without abolishing the Morality of the Fourth Command Amongst other things in this Command there is more express mention of the whole Families joyning in this Duty than is in other Commands Therefore it being a concerning-Duty to us and a special thing included in the Command we shall speak to that Point concerning Family Worship before we speak of the Second General proposed about the Particular Mor ●lity of this Command and the meaning of the Words of it that ye may see that it is no invention of Men when ye are called to it and when it is pressed upon you We shall here 1. shew you that This Command holdeth forth a Family or Domestic ● Worship 2. We shall confirm it more largely from other Scriptures and Grounds of Reason 3. We shall shew wherein it consisteth in particular and on whom it mainly lyeth to be discharged 4. We shall shew the Advantages of Conscientious discharging of it and the Prejudices of neglecting it with the Aggravations of that Sin That there is such a thing as Family-Worship included in this Command will be clear by considering 1. What Worship to ●od in general is 2. What Family-Worship is 3. What this Command requireth 1. By VVorship is understood some Tribute payed by the Reason ●ble Creature to God as the Great and Soveraign Lord Creator wh ●ther it be immediately and directly payed and performed to Him as Prayer and Praise or for Him and at His Command and for His Honour as Preaching Hearing and receiving of Sacraments which are VVorship when Rightly gone about In a word we call that VVorship more ●tr ●ctly and properly which is a Duty of the First Table and cometh in as commanded in it for the Honour of God and not for our own or others External Profit which though commanded in the Second Table cannot be so properly called VVorship much-less Immediate-Worship Thus Teaching others the Duties of Piety may be Worship when Teaching the Duties of any other ordinary calling is not 2. We call that Family-VVorship which is to be performed by such and such Relations or by all the Constituent Members of the Family joyntly And so it differeth 1. From Secret or Solitary VVorship which one performeth alone to and before God 2. From Publick Worship which one performeth by Joyning in a Congregation of many Families together 3. From that Worship performed occasionally in Mutual Fellowship amongst Believers or Professours of divers Families For 1. That may not be Ordinary as this nor so frequent 2. That is free to this or that Believer as they shall choose or as occasions do cast them to be together This is not at Choice but is necessary as to the same persons 3. This is performed by Vertue of Domestick Relations and not of Christian only 4. This may have
they will be both found to be a Seventh day and a day of rest and therefore to be remembred and to be sanctified this would resolve into the same thing on the matter yet we conceive it safest to assert that in this command God hath set apart a Seventh day to himself which is to be sanctified by us by our application of it to holy uses but doth not by it expresly directly and primarily bind to the Seventh day but secondarily and by consequence to wit as it was otherwayes before declared by him and so it bindeth now that same way to the sanctifying of the First day of the week as being now revealed by God just as in the former instances or examples we touched upon That a Seventh day whatever it be which is chosen of God and not the Seventh day in order is to be sanctified by vertue of this command as injoyning that as the substance and matter of it may be made out by these Arguments Arg. 1. That which is the substance of this command is moral and bindeth perpetually as we have formerly proved for if its substance be not moral then it self is not so either but that a Seventh day should be sanctified hath been maintained in the Church by the Apostles in their retaining the First day of the week while the Seventh hath been laid by and never used therefore it was not the Seventh but a Seventh day which was primarily commanded in this command so that no particular day is instituted here more then any positive service is prescribed in the second command yet the observation of what was prescribed or should be prescribed was included Even so it is here in reference to that day and as we may inferr that the second command injoyned not such and such ordinances primarily because they are abolished and that such as were negative or prohibited as not making of Images are moral because they are continued and Images are to be rejected just so may we conclude that a Sev ●nth day here was primarily commanded and is moral because it it is continued and that the Seventh was not so commanded because it is rejected and laid aside This Argument especially made out in the designation of the Lords day will prove this for if that Seventh day was the substance of this command then either it is to be continued as moral which were against the current of the New Testament wherein as Christ hath set forth different ordinances so a different chief solemn time for worship or we must say that this fourth command belongeth not to us at all the contrary whereof we have made out It must then follow that it was not the Seventh day but a Seventh day which this command respecteth which therefore belongeth to us as it did to the Jews as well as any other command and particularly the second command doth Arg. 2. If God hath put a difference some way betwixt the Sabbath commanded here and the day of his own rest the Seventh day then it would seem it 's not that day which it commanded But he hath put a difference first in the mandatory part Remember what not the Seventh day but the Sabbath day or day of rest 2. In the blessing it is not said he blessed the Seventh day but the Sabbath therefore is that difference so palpable as being specially intended whereas if the scope of the comm ●nd were only the Seventh day it had been much more clear to have set it down otherwayes and no other probable reason of the difference can be given Arg. 3. Either a Seventh day is commanded primarily and then the Seventh but secondarily and consequentially or the Seventh was commanded the Jews primarily and one of Seven but consequentially for both were commanded to them and the first to wit the Seventh as being in use before But it cannot be said that the Seventh day was primarily commanded and one of Seven consequentially only because the general is first commanded and then the particular as when God required Tithes of Increase and Cattle by the command of Tithes he first required the proportion and then what particular proportion as to order he himself should carve out to them and so consequently came in the tenth Beast which passed under the rod by a particular command Levit. 27.32 33. because there God determined but if that tenth had not been set down the general command had but determined upon the tenth of Cattle as of Sheaves or bolls of Corn even so it is as to the day the command requireth one of Seven primarily but that it is this Seventh followeth from another determination Arg. 4. If the moral grounds and reasons which press this command do most directly respect a Seventh day and not the Seventh then it 's not the Seventh day but a Seventh day which is primarily commanded in it for the reasons bear out especially what is moral in it and principally intended but the moral reasons pressing it plead more strongly and directly for a Seventh day and but indirectly for the Seventh day as it was then instituted Ergo c. That the reasons do directly press a Seventh day and in a manner stick closely to it may thus be made out 1. ●f the reasons equally press on us the First day and the observation of it supposing it now to be observed according to Divine warrant then they do not primarily press the Seventh but the reasons equally press on us the First day Ergo c. the major is clear for the same thing cannot press two different dayes primarily nor equally that the reasons concern us as well as them upon the supposition aforesaid may thus appear 1. They are universal and do not belong to that people more then any other for the concession of Six dayes is to all and Gods example of resting concerneth all 2. If the breaking of that command be equally sinful to us with them and strike against the equity of the command and Gods example in us as well as in them then these reasons concern us also and us as well as them Now that they do so and agredge the sin of prophaning our Lords day as they did the sin of prophaning their Sabbath we must either grant or we must deny that they concern us at all Beside the weight of a challenge from the conscience by vertue of them will put a tender heart out of question of it seeing God giveth us Six dayes to our selves as he did to them and his example proposed to us ought to be respected by us as well as by them and the same general equity is in both 3. If the reasons be a sufficient ground of allowance to us for Six working dayes together even the last Six of the week as they were to them for the first Six then they determine not the Seventh day to be the day of rest primarily but a Seventh following these Six of labour but they do allow us warrantably to work
to none other it being a peculiar piece of worship to him who hath divided time betwixt his worship and our work And although men should keep the day and alter the worship yet this is a taking of that which was once abused and never enjoyned for to apply it to God and wanteth not offence even as the retaining of other things in worship which have been abused and are not necessary is offensive 2. No man can institute any day even to the true God as a part of worship so as to bind consciences to it or to equal it with this day That is a part of Gods royal prerogative and a thing peculiar to him to sanctifie and bless a day 3. Even those dayes which are pretended to be set apart to and for God and yet not as a part of worship cannot be imposed in a constant and ordinary way as Anniversary dayes and feasts are because by an ordinary rule God hath given to man Six dayes for work except in extraordinary cases he shall please to call for some part of them again 4. Yet extraordinarily upon occasions of Humiliation or of Joy and Thanksgiving dayes for that time may be set apart for God without wronging this concession even as in extraordinary times we may work and not rest on the Sabbath day though ordinarily we may not This proportioning of time therefore is for the ordinary rule but yet admitteth of the exception of extraordinary cases 3. We gather that Masters and Parents ought to have a special oversight of their own Children and Families in the worshipping of God and that especially in reference to the sanctifying of this day and that there is a special communion in worshipping of God amongst the several relations of a Family 4. We gather that Magistrates and all who have power over others ought to see to the restraining of Vice and to the performing of outward duties particularly such as relate to the sanctification of the Sabbath as well as to abstain from and to do such and such things themselves in their own persons in and by these over whom they have power and that it 's no less scandalous and sinful for a Magistrate not to see that sin be crushed that the Sabbath be sanctified and the Ordinances of Religion be entertained and received and reverenced in and by those over whom he hath charge then if he committed such sins himself then if he discountenanced the Ordinances and brake the Sabbath himself or suffered his own family or himself to be without the worship of God Why because these are within his gates and he is to account for them He is to rule for God and their good which is mainly spiritual he is to be a terrour to evil doers as well as to be an incouragement to them that do well and men are according to their places and parts to be forth-coming for God and the good of others And yet this cannot be called a constraining or forcing of Consciences for a Magistrate or Master thus to restrain these who are under them it 's but the using of that power vvhich God hath committed to them to make men to do their duty and to abstain from dishonouring God and the punishing of them if they do other ways in vvhich respect he beareth not the Sword in vain The 2. and main reason followeth v. 11. wherein this command is three way ● pressed also 1. By Gods example who during the sp ●ce of six days wrought though he might as easily have made all in one day and rested the Seventh and not before the Seventh on which he wrought none even so it becometh men to do seeing he intended this for their imitation and for that end doth propose it here Gods rest on the Seventh is not absolute and in every respect for John 5 17. he worketh hitherto that is in the works of Providence sustaining preserving and governing the Creatures made by him and their Actions but all things needful for the perfecting of the world vvere then made and finished Whence by the way vve may gather that not only all Creatures vvere made Angels even these that since turned Devils c. but that they vvere made within the Six days of Creation vvhen Heaven Earth Sea and all that was in them was made Therefore all our works that are necessary to be done in the six working days vvould be done and ended that we may rest on the Sabbath as he did The 2. way is by his blessing of it God blessed the Sabbath day which is to be understood not simply in respect of the day vvhich is not properly capable of blessing but in respect of the true observers of it he blesseth it to them and he blesseth them in it which may be in these three 1. That the rest of that day shall not prejudg them in their weeks work but that their labour shall be therefore blessed so that they shall miss nothing by observing that day as the Lord blessed the Seventh year whereon they rested and yet notwithstanding they vvere as vvell provided as vvhen they laboured Lev. 25.20 21 22 And it 's like that if vve vvill compare such as make Conscience to sanctifie the Sabbath with others who think and seem to gain by breaking of it this will be found at the years end to be verified 2. That the Lord hath set a part that day for a Spiritual blessing and the Communication of it to his people so the Bread and Wine are blessed in the Sacrament of the Lords Supper to be a mean of conveying Spiritual blessings to the worthy receivers Is. 56. and Psal. 92.3 That God vvill abundantly manifest his gracious presence and multiply his spiritual blessings that day upon it's due observers more then on other days vvherein he is also sought as there is this day a double worship both in respect of the Duty and of the day vvhereon it 's done so there shall be a double blessing beyond what is on other days in vvhich respect even prayers in and towards the Temple while it stood by divine appoin ●m ●nt as a separate place from others had a blessing beyond prayers in other places and thus Christ blessed the loaves and the few small fishes John 6. vvhen he made them by multiplication on the matter to feed far beyond their ordinary proportionableness so service on this day groweth in it's blessing hence vve may see an usual connexion betwixt Vniversal thriving in Religion Grace and Piety and suit ●ble obedience to this command in the tender sanctification of the Sabbath and withall a reason why so few make progress in godliness even little keeping holy the Sabbath as they ought The 3. way is by his hallowing it wherefore he hallowed it or sanctified it that is per modum destinandi or by vvay of appointing of it for holy uses and separating it from other days as is said The inference wherefore as to the hallowing pointeth at the reason or
gross violations of this Command and study to be more affected even when narratively ye are telling somthing wherein his Name is mentioned than otherwise 4. Tremble at this sin and sutably resent it when ye hear it in others be affected with it and labour to make them so that ye may thus train your selves to an abominating of that evil 5. Let it never pass in your selves especially without some special grave animadversion Look back on all your life and see if ye can remember when and where ye were gro ●●y guilty reflect on your worship and observe omissions and defects at left in respect of what ye might have been at and learn to loath your selves for these and to be in bitterness for them especially if the escapes have been more late and recent let them not sleep with you lest ye be hardned and the Sentence stand in force unrepealed against you what will ye sleep and this Word stand in the Bible on record as a Registred Decree against you 6. Seek for much of the Spirit for none can call Jesus Lord but by the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 12.3 7. Frequently and seriously put up that Petition to the Lord Hallowed be thy Name Matth. 6.9 The other word of Use is for what is past I am sure if we could speak of it and hear it rightly there is here that which might make us all to tremble and evidence convincingly to us our hazard and the necessity of Repentance and flying to Christ Tell me Hearers believe ye this Truth that there is such hazard from this guilt tell me if ye remember what we spoke in the opening of it is there any of you that lyeth not under the stroak of it If so what will ye do flye ye must to Christ or lye still and can there be any secure lying still for but one hour under God's Curse drawn out O ye Atheists that never trembled at the Name of the Lord and that can take a mouthful of it in your common discourse and ye who make it your by-word and mock or jest ye whom no Oaths can bind and all ye Hypocrits who turn the pretended honouring of the Name of the Lord and the sanctifying of him in his Ordinances into a real prophaning of it let me give you these two charges under certification of a third 1. I charge you to Repent of this sin to flye to Christ for obtaining pardon haste haste haste the Curse is at the door when the Sentence is past already O sleep not till this be removed 2. I charge you to abstain from it in your several Relations all ye Parents Masters Magistrates Church-Officers School-masters and Teachers I charge you to endeavour to prevent this sin in your selves and others It is sad that the Children of many are brought up in it the most part live in it our Streets are more full of it than the Streets of Heathens Advert to this charge every soul Or 3. I charge you to appear before this great and dreadful God who will not accompt any such guiltless and to Answer to Him for it The Fourth Commandment Exod. 20. v. 8 9 10 11. Remember the Sabbath-day to keep it Holy Six days shalt thou labour and do all thy Work but the Seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God in it thou shalt not do any Work Thou nor thy Son nor thy Daughter thy Man-servant nor thy Maid-servant nor thy Cattel nor thy Stranger that is within thy Gates for in Six days the Lord made Heaven and Earth the Sea and all that in them is and rested the Seventh day wherefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath and Hallowed it THe Lord in his infinite Wisdom and Goodness hath so far consulted mans Infirmity as to sum up his Duty in these Ten Commands called Ten Words that thereby his darkness and dulness by sin might be helped by an easie abbreviation The first Command therefore containeth mans duty to God in immediate Worship requiring that the only true God should be worship'd The 2d stinteth and limiteth men to that worship alone which he perseribeth The 3d. Commandeth Reverencing of him in all his Ordinances and a reverent manner of going about them This Fourth pointeth out the Time which most solemnly the Lord will have set a-part for his Worship that so He who is both Lord of us and of our time may shew what share he has reserved as a Tribute due to himself who hath liberally vouchsafed on us the rest which time is not to be understood exclusively as if he would have only that spent in worship there being no exclusive determination of exercise of worship or duration of them in Scripture that is to say that they shall be so long and so often and no longer nor oftner but that he will precisely have this time as an acknowledgment from us even as when he gave Adam the use of all the Trees in the Garden he reserved one so when he giveth Six days to us he keepeth a Seventh for himself This Command is placed in a manner betwixt the two Tables because it is a transition as it were from the one to the other and containeth in it duties of immediate Service to God and of Charity towards men and so in some sort serveth to reconcile if we may speak so the two Tables and to knit them together that so their harmony may be the more clearly seen It is also more largely and fully set down for plurality and variety of expressions and words than any other in either of the Tables yet hath it notwithstanding been in all times in a special manner assaulted and set upon and endeavours used to overturn it Satan ayming somtimes to darken the meaning of it somtimes to loose from the strict tye of observing it and that not only by old Sabbatarians Anti-sabbatarians and corrupt School-men but even by those whom God hath made Orthodox in the main And especially by a Generation in these days who having a hatred at all Ordinances and at all the Commands of the Decalogue yet do especially vent it against this Command because in it is contained a main foundation of Godliness As it is wonderfully great presumption for men to assault and set upon God's Authority even where he hath strengthned himself as it were most by more full explication and more large and particular pressing of duty and forbidding of the contrary sin as he hath done in this Command more than in any of all the rest So it will be necessary before we can speak to the practical part of piety comprehended in it concerning the sanctification of the Christian Sabbath or Lord's day either in the negative or positive part of it to speak doctrinally for clearing of the precept to these three 1. Whether this Command be moral and do oblige us in its Letter as other Commands do 2. What is the particular morality of it and the literal meaning of the words 3. How our
first Gen. 2. beginneth ● with the very first seventh after the Creation then it is spoken of Exod. 16. before the Law was given then Ezod 20. it is contained expresly in the Law and that by a particular and special Command in the first Table thereof and is often after repeated Exod. 31. and Levit. 23. v. 3. where it is set down as the first Feast before all the extraordinary ones which preference can be for no other reason but because of its perpetuity yea it is made a rule or pattern by which the extraordinary Sabbaths or Feasts in their sanctification are to be regulate again it is repeated Deut. 5. with the rest of the Commands and in the Historical part of Scripture as Nehemiah 9.13 it is also mentioned in the Psalms the 92. Psal. being peculiarly intituled a Psalm or Song for the Sabbath day The Prophets again do not forget it see Isa. 56.58 Jer. 17. and Ezek 20.22 In the New-Testament the sanctifying of a day or Sabbath is mentioned in the Evangelists Math. 24.20 Luk. 23.56 Act. 13.14 15 21. 20.7 in the Epistles as 1 Cor. 16. and in the Revel chap. 1. v. 10. As if all had purposely concurred for making out the concernment and perpetuity of this duty 2. Consider how weightily seriously and pressingly the Scripture speaketh of it first it is spoken of Gen. 2. as backed with a reason 2. Through the Law the sanctification of it in particular is described 3. It is spoken of as a mercy and singular priviledge that God gave to his people Exod. 16.29 Neh. 9.14 Ezek. 20.12.4 Many promises containing many blessings are made to the conscientious and right keepers of it Isa. 56.58.5 The breach of it is severely threatned and plagued Numb 15. Neh. 13. Jer. 17. Ezek. 20.6 Many examples of the Godly their care in keeping it are set down see Nehem. 13. Luk. 23.56 Act. 20.7 Revel 1.10 7 The duties of it are particularly set down as Hearing Praying Reading delighting in God works of mercy c. 8. It is in the Old Testament claimed by God as his own day not ours My Holy day Isa. 58.13 and Nehem. 9.14 it is acknowledged knowledged by the People to be His whole they say Thine holy Sabbath which property is asserted of that Holy day as being Gods besides other dayes Rev. 1.10 And this is asserted also in this same Command where it is called the Sabbath of the Lord in opposition to or contradistinction from the other six dayes all which seemeth to speak out something more than Temporary in this Duty of setting a Seventh day apart for God for we speak not yet of the particular day 3. Look to it in all times and states of the Church and ye will find it remarkably Characterized with a special Observation As 1. In innocency it 's instituted set apart from others and blessed and Heb. 4. It is called the rest from the beginning of the World 2. Before the Law was given the Sanctification of it was intimated as necess ●ry 3. In the giving of the Law it is remembred and a Command given to us for remembring it 4. After the Law it is urged by the Prophets Isaiah and Jeremiah and kept by the Godly Psal. 92. 5. In the time or after the time of the Captivity the breach of it is reproved Ezek. 20. And its Observation restored by Godly Nehemiah Hitherto there is no difficulty the pinch will lye in this If the Scriptures speak of it as belonging to the days of the Gospel In which for making of it out 1. We have these hints Acts 20.7 1 Cor. 16.2 Where Christians going about the Moral Duties of the Sabbath is especially observed to be upon one day peculiarly 2. That Title of the direct appropriating of a Day to the Lord Rev. 1.10 Which places will fall in to be considered particularly when we come to the last question Besides these we may produce three places to prove a Sabbath as belonging to the New Testament though not the very Day used or observed for the Sabbath in the Old and this will be enough to make out the Assertion two of them are Prophesies the third of them is in the Gospel The first Prophesie is in the 66. Chap. of Esaiah v. 23. The second is in Ezekiel's Description of the New Temple Chap. 43.44 45 46 c. Where 1. It is clear that these places relate to the Dayes of the Gospel as none can deny but they do so eminently 2. It is clear that though they Prophesie of the Services of the Gospel under the names of Sacrifices c. proper to the Old-Testament-Administration and of the Sanctified and set-apart time of the Gospel under the Name of Sabbath which then was determined and whereto men were then bound by the fourth Command as they were to Sacrifices by the second yet these Prophesies infer not by vertue of the fourth Command the very same Day to be under the Gospel which was under the Law more than the same Services by vertue of the second which none will deny to be in force notwithstanding of the change of Services and there is as little reason to deny the fourth to be still in force as to its substance notwithstanding of the change of the particular Day Yet Thirdly it is clear that from the mentioning of these Services this will follow that there should be set and fixed Ordinances and a way of Worship in the New-Testament as well as in the Old and that there should be a solemn chief set-time for the Sabbath which men ought to sanctifie and that they should no more admit any other times nor so set apart into a parity with it than they were to admit any Service or Worship not allowed by God or that was contrary to the second Command for if any thing be clear in them this is clear that they speak first of Services then of solemn times and Sabbaths and of the one after the other which must certainly infer that both external Services and a solemn chief time for them do belong to the New-Testament Hence it is that many Divines from that Prophesie of Ezekiel do draw conclusions for fundry things out of those places as 1. Concerning the necessity and continuance of a standing Ministry and though Ministers now be neither Priests nor Levites yet ● say they it followeth clearly that there will be a Mini ●try because such are spoken of there 2. Concerning the necessity of and a Warrant for Church Discipline and separating not only Doctrinally but Disciplinarily the Precious from the Vile and debarring of those who are Morally unclean from the Ordinances because these things say they are Typified in the substance by the Porters being set to keep the Doors and by the charge given to the Priests 3. Anent the continuance of a Church and of the Ordinances of Word Sacraments c. And the Congregating of Christians to attend these though there shall
and pressed The 1. is Remember the Sabbath day to sanctifie it or keep it holy For the opening up and winning at the clear meaning whereof we would consider three words The first is what it is to remember or as it is infinitively set down remembring to remember this is prefixed and would look rather like the inferring of something commanded already then the new instituting of a command and so indeed it seemeth to suppose a day formerly institute and set apart for God as was hinted before which by this Command his people are put to mind It doth beside import these four with a respect as it were to four times 1. A constant and continued Duty at all times and in all dayes that is that we would remember that God has set apart a seventh day for himself and therefore every day we would remember to cast our Affairs so as they may not be impediments to us in the sanctifying of that day and we would endeavour alwaies to keep our hearts in such a frame a ● we may not be discomposed when that day shall come and this affirmative part of this command bindeth semper or alway and its negative ad semper on other dayes as well as on the Sabbath 2. It importeth a timely preparing for the Sabbath when it is a coming or when it draweth near this remembring it calleth for something to be done in reference to it before it come a man by this is obliged to endeavour to have a frame of heart that he may be ready to meet the Sabbath and enter kindly to the Duties of it when it ●hall come otherwayes if it come on him while he is in his common or course frame and not fitted for it it will say he has not been remembring it before it came 3. Remembring importeth an intenseness and seriousness in going about the Duties of the day when it cometh and that it should be with all carefulness sanctified and that men should be mindful of the duties called for lest their hearts div ●rt from them or slacken bensil and grow formal in them whereby mens inclination to forget this duty or to be superficial in it is much hinted at this word we take to be moral being a mean ●or furthering the great Duty aimed at of sanctifying the Lords day or Sabbath coming 4. Remembring may import this that the Sabbath even when it is past should not be soon forgotten but that we should look on the Sabbath past to remember it lest by loosing the fruits of it vvhen it is by we make our selves guilty of prophaning it The next word is the day of the Sabbath By Sabbath here is meaned rest as it is exponed by the Apostle Heb 4. and that not every Rest but a Holy Rest from our own Works that there may be access to positive Sanctifying of that day for the Sanctifying of that day is the end and this is but a mean and necessary supposed help without which the day cannot be sanctifyed in Holy Duties holy Duties and our own Works being for the time inconsistent besides that Rest on this day is not only called for as ceasing from our ordinary affairs in the time of Worship is called for on any other day but more especially and solemnly in respect of the day it self for at other times our duties require a time for them and therefore that time cannot be employed in another ordinary Work and in Worship also but here the Lord requireth time and rest to be sanctified and therefore we are to perform holy Duties in that time because it is to be sanctified other times and rests are drawn after worship this time and rest draweth Worship necessarily after it hence it was that only the Jews feasts were called Sabbaths I mean religious Sabbaths not civil or politick as their years were because they included a rest upon Destination to an holy Use. That which is mainly questionable here is concerning the day expressed in this Command concerning which may be asked 1. What sort of day or the quamdiu 2. How often or the quoties 3. What day of the seven or the quando 4. When we are to reckon its beginning For Answer to the first we say There are two sorts of dayes mentioned in the Scripture one is Artificial of twelve hours so the Jews divided their day making their hours longer or shorter as the day was long or short but they kept up the number of their hours alway the other is a natural day which is a seventh part of the Week and containeth twenty four hours taking in so much time as interveneth betwixt the Suns begining to ascend after midnight the nocturnal Solstice till it pass the Meridional altitude which is the Suns Vertical point for that day till it come to that same very point of Midnight again which is the Suns natural course every twenty four hours comprehending both the artificial day which is from midnight to midday and the artificial night also which is from midday to midnight again The day mentioned here is the natural day because it 's a seventh day proportionable to each of the six dayes given unto us and they with the seventh making up the Week it must contain as many hours as any of the rest doth but the six dayes wherein God made Heaven and Earth c. are natural days therefore the seventh to wit the day of rest must be so also Let us only for further clearing and for directing our own Practise speak here a word or two more 1. We say it is a whole natural day that is as it 's usually employed by us on any of the six Dayes for our own Works that as we spend so much time in our ordinary Callings on other dayes so would we employ so much in Gods Worship secret private and publick on that day what proportion of time we use to give or may and should give ordinarily to our Callings on other dayes we would give as much to God and his Worship to our Souls and our spiritual state on the Lords day or Sabbath Therefore 2. there is not to be understood here a rigid pressing of all these hours to be spent in Duties of immediate Worship but our Working and Waking time having a respect to our infirmities and also to our Duties lest under pretext of infirmity we incroach upon Gods day and give him less then we give to our selves or should and may give him And so in Scripture they accompted what is betwixt rising and going to bed as still the Work of one day or one dayes Work for as God in conceding six dayes to us hath yet so done it as there may be a Reserve of particular times for Worship called for from us to him every day for keeping up our Communion with him so on the seventh day doth the Lord allow so much conveniency of sleep and other refreshing as may be subservient for the main end of the day these being Works
Six dayes even the last Six of the week Ergo they do not determine the Seventh day primarily the connexion of the major seemeth to be very clear For first these must stand and fall together if the concession to call it so concern us in the Six working dayes so must the reservation of a Seventh 2. As the concession concerneth us in the Six working dayes so must the prohibition of work on a Seventh of rest for the one determineth the other if the concession be for Six in number so must the prohibition be for a Seventh in number but if the concession be of Six in order then it is the Seventh that is to be reserved and if the Seventh be related to in the prohibition of work then the concession must look to the first Six dayes which it doth not as we have shewed And therefore 3. seeing the Six dayes concession looketh to Six in number so many thou mayest or shalt work together and no more the prohibition must also respect the number to wit a Seventh and not the Seventh day the minor will be clear to the Judicious considerer by a particular application of the reasons of the fourth command Further if the concession respect not the number but the order as it must if the prohibition of work on the Seventh respect the order and not the number then 1. what warrant have we for our Six work dayes if it be not here where is it for sure we cannot take Gods time without his order and warrant 2. and more especially then could not we by vertue of this command plead allowance for working Six dayes different from the first Six if so we would not be astricted by the command to sanctifie one seeing the one inferreth and determineth the other and they must go together which were absurd Yet again it may be made out that the reasons press a Seventh and not the Seventh by considering the words and force of the consequence in both The first reason is Six dayes shalt thou labour but the Seventh is the Lords 1. It sayeth not take the first Six but of Seven take Six to labour and give the Lord the Seventh for he has reserved it to himself 2. The same equity is in the inference for a Seventh that is for the Seventh if not more he has given thee Six therefore give thou him a Seventh will conclude more formally then give him the Seventh a Seventh is the seventh part of time as well as the Seventh which is the equity the command goeth on 3. Had the command intended to inferr the Seventh primarily it would have been more clearly expressed thus he hath given thee the first six therefore give thou him the Seventh The second reason from Gods example inferreth the same he wrought Six and rested the Seventh do thou so likewise and so these that work Six and rest a Seventh as we now do follow Gods example as well as they that wrought Six and rested the Seventh did Arg. 5. If the positive part of the command must be expounded by the negative contra then it concerneth one of Seven and not the Seventh But the first is true 1. The positive part commandeth a day without respect to its order therefore the negative doth so 2. The negative is to be resolved thus ye shall not work above Six not thus ye shall not work above the first Six as the event cleareth 3. If it be not the first Six but Six that is in the concession then it is not the Seventh but a Seventh that is in the inhibition but the first is clear Ergo c. Arg. 6. If this command for the substance of it concern us as being moral and bind us to the First day and the sanctifying of it equally as it obliged the Jews to the Seventh then it 's one day of Seven and not the Seventh which is intended primarily by it But it bindeth us to the First Ergo That it 's moral and bindeth us now is cleared Thus 1. it either bindeth to this day or to nothing therefore it primarily granteth Six and not the ●irst Six for labour and by clear consequence intendeth primarily a Seventh and not the Seventh for a day of rest 2. If it be a sin against th ●s command to break the Lords day or Christian Sabbath and prophane it then it obligeth us to it and that directly ●or indirectly and by consequence the breach of the Sabbath is a sin ag ●inst any or all of the three former commands 3. If the prophaning of the Sabbath be forbidden on this ground because it is the Lords as it is in this command then prophaning of the Lords day is equally forbidden in it because it 's the Lords and is now appropriated to him according to his own will 4. The Testimony of mens Consciences and the constant challenges of all when tender as being guilty of breaking this command whenever they prophane the Lords day do convincingly hold forth that this command concerneth us and are as so many witnesses of it and consequently prove that it is not the Seventh day but a Seventh day whether instituted or to be instituted by God which is the substance of it and primarily commanded in it for it 's never counted a breach of this command to neglect to sanctifie the Seventh day neither do the Consciences of well-informed Christi ●ns challenge for that though they do most bitterly for the other as is said In sum suppose now the first day being instituted that the command were to sanctifie the Sabbath we would understand it of the First day because it 's already instituted and the s ●me reasons will inforce it even so the Seventh day came in then because it was formerly instituted beside the Sabbatisme signifieth not this or that day but what day soever shall be by God solemnly set or is set apart for holy rest and the comm ●nd will run for our observing the Lords day supposing its institution a ● well as it did for that although it more directly tye them yet it doth so but as a reason even as the preface prefixed to all the commands and the promise affixed to the fifth concern them literally yet are binding in so far as they are moral as appeareth by the Apostles applying the last Ephes. 6.2 without relation to that particular Land or People but as applicable and common to any Land or People making conscience of obedience to Gods commands But here it may be objected 1. The Jews kept the Seventh day Answ. 1. Not by vertue of this command but by its prior institution even as they were obliged to S ●crifices and Circumcision by the second command though they were not particularly named in it 2. So we are obliged to the keeping of the First day of the week by this fourth Commandement yet it followeth not therefore this is expresly commanded in it there being indeed no particular day primarily at least instituted in it 2.
be a day whereas it is not so proper to say morning with the evening as evening now added to its morning compleateth the first day and evening now being past as the morning before God did put a period by and with the evening to the First day it being the evening that compleateth the day and divideth it from the following day and not the morning as one would say the afternoon with the forenoon maketh a compleat day and the afternoon or evening is first named because 1. the day is not compleat without it seeing it compleateth it 2. because the day cannot be extended beyond it now the first day is closed because the evening of it is come Arg. 2. What time of the day God began his rest we must begin ours but he began his in the morning of the Seventh day the Artificial night having intervened betwixt that and the Sixth which is clear for 1. Gods resting this day is more then his resting in the other nights of the Six dayes it being granted by all that he made nothing in the night 2. There had not otherwise been any intermission betwixt his labour and his rest which is yet supposed by distinguishing the dayes Again if by vertue of the command of a day to be sanctified we should begin the night or the evening before then these two or three absurdities would follow 1. Then we would confound the preparation by the word remember and the day together 2. Then we Christians might also by vertue of the concession of Six dayes for work begin to work the night before Monday as the Jews on this supposition might have begun their work the night before Sunday 3. Then we were almost no sooner to begin the sanctifying of the day then to break it off for rest and when its sanctification is closed as soon to fall to our ordinary Callings Arg. ● If by this command a whole Natural day is to be employed for duties of Worship as another day is employed in our ordinary Callings then is it to begin in the morning the antecedent will not be denied the consequent is thus made good if men account all the labour of their working time from one nights rest to another to belong to one day then must they begin in the morning or else they must account vvhat they vvork after the first evening to belong to another day but that vvay of reckoning vvas never heard of the tvvelth hour belonging to that same day vvith the first hour Again if by this command a vvhole Artificial day together that is our vvaking and vvorking time betvvixt tvvo nights ●e to be employed for Gods vvorship then its beginning must be in the morning for if the latter or follovving evening belong to this Natural day before sleeping time come on then the even before cannot belong to it for it cannot have both but by this command a vvhole vvaking day or an Artificial day is to be sanctified together and the even after it before vvaking time end as vvell as the morning Therefore it must begin in the morning and not on the evening before Further if by vertue of the concession of Six vvorking dayes vve m ●y not vvork the evening after then the day beginneth in the morning for the vveek day follovving must begin as the Sabbath did but the former is true Ergo c. These things vvill make out the minor 1. It can hardly be thought consistent vvith this command to vvork immediately when it groweth dark before folks rest 2. It 's said Luke 23. v. 56. and 24. v. 1. of the women that stayed from the grave till the first day of the week that they rested according to the commandement on the Sabbath day and early in the morning came to the Sepulchre 3. Because Christ accounteth a whole Natural day that which lasteth till men cannot work 4. Gods working dayes to say so were such he made not any thing in the evening before the First day 5. The ordinary phrase To morrow is the holy Sabbath Exod. 16.23 c. sheweth that the day present will last till to morrow come and to morrow is ever by an intervening night So if on the forbidden day men may not work till to morrow then that evening belongeth to it by this command and if on the Sixth day the Seventh be not come till to morrow that is after the night intervene then it doth not begin at even but so it is in these places and phrases Yet again it 's clear that in all the examples of ordinary Sabbaths keeping and sanctifying in Scripture they began in the morning For instance it is said Exod. 16.27 Some of the people went out to gather on the Seventh day no doubt in the morning for they knew well there was none of it to be found any day after the Suns waxing hot they might have dressed of it the night before and not been quarrelled with they being forbidden gathering of the Sabbath the proofs of the former Argument give light to this also There are yet two Arguments to be added which do especially belong to us Christians for clearing the beginning of our Lords day to be in the morning the first is taken from Christs Resurrection thus That day and that time of the day ought to be our Sabbath and the beginning of it when the Lord began to rest after finishing the work of Redemption and arose but that was the First day in the week in the morning Ergo c. This bindeth us strongly who take that day on which he arose to be our Christian Sabbath The second is taken from the History of Christs Passion and Resurrection together wherein these things to this purpose are observable 1. That he was laid in the Grave on Frydayes night being the preparation to the great Sabbath which followed 2. That the Women who rested and came not to the grave till Sunday Morning to use our known names are said to rest according to the Commandement as if coming sooner had not been resting according to it 3. That his lying in the Grave must be accounted to be some time before the Fryday ended otherwaies he could not have been three dayes in the Grave and therefore a part of Frydays night is reckoned to the first day then the whole Sabbath or Saturday is the second and lastly a part of the night to wit from twelve a clock at night belonging to the First day or Sunday standeth for the third and so he arose that morning while it was yet dark at which time or thereabouts the Women came to the Grave as soon as they could for the Sabbath and therefore their Sabbath Seventh day ended then and the first day Sabbath began We now come to the third general question concerning the change to wit the change of the Seventh day into the First day of the Week where first we shall sum up what is moral in this command and then secondly by some Propositions clear
that men at the close of the week should lay up by them as God had blessed them then to reserve it to the beginning of another week were not the First day more especially to be sanctifyed then the last and the last to be accounted but an ordinary working day The fitness then floweth from this that the first day of the week being the day of their solemn Communion with God and with one another and the day of their partaking most liberally of spiritual blessings from him that therefore they should be most readily warmed in their affections and be most liberal in their Communications to such as wanted especially if we consider the Jews to be parties for whom that Collection or Contribution was It 's the Apostles great Argument whereby he pleadeth for Charity to the poor Jews from the Christian Gentiles Rom. 15.26 27. That the Gentiles were their Debtors in temporals because they had received spiritual things from them now this argument is most fresh and powerful when believers do on the First day of the week record Gods priviledging them with his Ordinances and giving them his day in place of the Ordinances and day ● which the Jews once had and yet deriving these unto them by the Jews I say this Argument will then be most fresh to incite to that duty in particular If any say that it was accidental that the first day was chosen or named rather then another because one behoved to be named and it was alike which But 1. I demand why is it universal If it were from one Church only it might possibly have been thought so but he doth call for this Duty on that day from more Churches 2. Why doth he not recommend it but command it as having more then an indifferency in the very day And 3. Can it be by guess or accident to speak so that so many priviledges are fallen on that day And that so many things are recorded of it and astricted to it by commands which is not done of and to any other days And if one place would not suffice to prove that the First day and not the Seventh day was preferred by the Apostles as the chief day of solemn publick worship yet all these things put together must prove a preference in that day or we must say that the Penmen of Holy Scripture have been very partial who have marked many things and recorded them concerning Gods Worship on that day and have never so much as once for solemn Service named what was done on the second third fourth fifth dayes we must either say that this is inadvertently done which were blasphemy considering by what Spirit they wrote or we must say it 's done to put a preference on that day and to shew that it 's especially to be taken notice of as the most solemn day for God's worship by Christians which is the thing to be confirmed for the day that 's claimed as the Lords kept for him and singularly marked to be priviledged beyond other days must be his day but this First day is such Ergo c. Propos. 5. This change of the day whereby the Seventh is laid aside and the first substituted in its room is of divine authority and institution and not by any meer human or Ecclesiastick Constitution I conceive there is indeed no mids here betwixt a divine Institution which hath Gods warrant and authority stamped on it and for Conscience sake is to be observed as being obligatory thereof and that immediately and human or Ecclesiastick Constitutions which may reach the external m ●n but in the matters of worship cannot bind the Conscience or impose them as necessary Now that this change is not by the last but by the first we prove these ways 1. Thus if it be not human or Ecclesiastick t ●●n it must be divine but it is not human or Ecclesiastick ergo it's divine That it is not human will appear 1. If it reach the Conscience and that immediately then it 's not human but divine but it doth so 2. If no man or Church on earth have power to alter Gods day now nay nor simply or at all then it 's not human or Ecclesiastick but first none can change it as we might clear from great absurdities that would follow 2. If any Church have this power let them shew it the Old Church had it not neither the new as is cleared in the first question 2. We proceed to evince this change to be by divine institution these four ways 1. From reasons flowing from Scripture or Consequences drawn from it 1. Thus where by genuine and native Consequences drawn from Scripture any thing is so imposed as it cannot without sin be altered or neglected there is a divine institution but in the change of the Seventh day-Sabbath to the First such Consequences may be drawn from Scripture as will upon supposition of the change a strict it to the First day so as that cannot be altered or neglected without sin Ergo it 's of divine institution The question can be only of the minor which is made out from what is said in the third Proposition thus If these very grounds which plead the conveniency of the change simply do plead the conveniency of that change to the First day then by clear and unforced Consequence the first day is chosen and cannot without sin be passed by altered or neglected except we say these reasons have no weight but these very grounds will be found to plead for and to be applicable to the First day of the week a lonely and therefore beside all other days in the new world it m ●y be called the day which God specially made as it is the day of Christs rest from the work of Redemption answerable to Gods rest a ●ter the Cre ●tion c. and therefore as being most conducible to that end the First day cannot be without sin past by neglected or altered 2. Thus if the very day of Christs rest in the new world be to be rested on and sanctified as the Sabbath then the First day is to be rested on and sanctified but by Analogy from the works of Creation we may see that the First day of rest after the finishing of the work of Redemption is to be sanctified Ergo c. and Psal. 118. is very considerable to this purpose wherein there is 1. a Prophecy of Christ. 2. Of a day which God hath singularly made for us to joy in 3. That day is the day wherein the rejected stone is made the head of the corner which day is clear from Rom. 1.4 to be the resurrection day yea suppose that day there doth signifie the time of the Gospel wherein we should joy yet even that way the First day is by proportion that day eminently wherein Christs Victory was manifested and so the day wherein Christians ought especially to rejoyce The second way we may reason for the change to be by divine Institution is
they do on other days but even the very day it self doth call to it even as on a solemn day of humiliation men ought to be more affected and deeply humbled then on other days though daily they should repent and be humbled because that day is solemnly set apart for it so ought our worship to be more intense and solemn this day suitable unto it wherein we are as it were dyeted for insisting and persisting in duties of worship whereas these duties in this respect and in comparison are on other days but as starts worship is here some way the only work of that day 6. There would be more heavenliness and spiritual sence breathed after that day in the frame of the heart it would be near God and the work of the day would be delightsome and sweet the Sabbath would as it is Isaiah 58. be called a delight and we would endeavour as it is Heb. 4. to enter into his rest to pass through the outward rest into his to be within his chambers yea even in his arms as it were all that day 7. There would be that day more divineness in our Holiness to speak so a sort of Majesty by ordinary in our walk looking like the Sabbath and like the God of the Sabbath There would be an exalting in God that day we would endeavour to have our hearts in a special manner warm in the Exercise of love to him and to be much in praising of him our whole worship would more absolutely and immediately be aimed and levelled at the honour and glory of God as the end of it then on other ordinary days wherein our Prayers and other pieces of worship may more immediately respect our own Case and need but on this day Gods Honour as the end more immediately whatever our own Case be and that both in heart within and in the nature of our Exercises without this is to call the Sabbath of the Lord honourable to honour and glorifie him therein as it is Is. 58. a special Majesty being in that days worship by levelling it with extraordinary singleness at Gods praise even as his name is hallowed or sanctified in Heaven by Angels and perfected Saints Hence It 's good to give thanks unto thy Name c. beginneth that Psalm of Praise for the Sabbath-day to wit the 92. These Duties then that further his praise are more especially for that day 8. All these reach both words and thoughts nothing to the hindrance of these is to be admitted in either there are ●one of our words and thoughts that day but they would in a special manner be Gods and in it we should be spent as his and endeavour to be within view of Heaven to make some Essay of glorified Saints exercise there and to have the Sabbath as a little preludy of that everlasting Sabbath and rest in the bosom of God The Fourth way of considering this sanctification is positively to wit as to the Duties wherein the Sabbath is to be spent which are shortly all duties of immediate worship whether they be inward as meditation self-examination heart-prayer either e ●●culatory or more continued heart-sorrow for sins c. or outward as vocal prayer and singing of Psalms reading the Scriptures and other pious Books hearing the word c. or whether they be secret which may be both inward and outward or private in Families as reading of the word conserring on it repeating Sermons praying together c. or publick as joyning with the Congregation in prayers and praises hearing the vvord read and the sense given hearing of Sermons participating of the Sacraments when dispensed joyning in solemn humiliations and thanksgivings vvhen they fall necessarily or more conveniently to be on the Sabbath All vvhich and such like are proper duties for that day to vvhich liberal laying up and giving for the relief of the poor according to ability and as God blesseth every man vvould be added as a suitable duty of it though it be no duty of immediate vvorship The fifth way is to consider the sanctification of the Sabbath complexly before it come vvhen it 's come and after it's past 1. Then the night before not secluding a suitable remembrance throughout the week remember it 1. by timous leaving of vvorldly business it 's a great incroachment on the Sabbath though too too usual to continue longer at vvork the night before then any other night of the vveek as if folks vvould gain the day of rest out of Saturnsdays night and Mondays morning 2. By not suffering this little times leaving of vvork to be idly spent but being taken up vvith endeavours 1. To abstract the mind from other vvorks as vvell as the hand and to have the heart put in a lively frame 2. To mind the vvork of the day vvhich is coming and to have a sutableness to it If ye ask vvhat sutableness should vve have to it Answ. Endeavour 1. to be as if ye vvere about to meet God to tryst as if it vvere visibly vvith him and solemnly to treat and enter in marriage vvith him 2. To be like Heaven and in a special manner in some sort to imitate God as if ye vvere already entered into his rest and had rested from your ovvn vvorks 3. To be as if ye vvere to dye and to step into Eternity for this resting should mind us of that and vvas and is still specially appointed though yet no Ceremony ●o mind us of Gods separating of us from others for himself that vve may rest eternally vvith him Then 3. for furthering of this look back on the Week past and endeavour to have things clear before the Sabbath come and all by-gone quarrels removed that there may be no standing controversies against you to begin the Sabbath vvith 4. Pray vvith special solemn seriousness in reference to that day that ye may have peace for vvhat is past that ye may be in a right frame for the day that the Minister may be helped to speak as it becometh that others may be sitted to hear and joyn that the Word and other Ordinances may be richly blest of God and that the mercy of having the Ordinances may be minded vvith praise to the gracious giver of them and suitably improved 2. When the morning of that sweet and desirable day cometh after we have fallen asleep in a special manner as it were in the Lords arms the night before and left our selves there 1. We would timely begin the work and beware that either carnal thoughts get in or the time be idly slipped over but I say we would begin the work early for it 's for that end appointed and sinful thoughts will not be kept out but by filling the room otherwayes with what is spiritually profitable Shew forth Gods loving kindness in the morning saith the Psalm for the Sabbath to wit the 92. Let therefore the Meditation of somewhat of these or such like begin with us even when we are making ready 1.
somewhat of God himself whose day it is 2. of heaven and that happiness that is there 3. of the works of God who gave us and all the world ● being and who only preserveth the same 4. of Christs redemption and as closed and perfected on this day which especially should be minded that so thinking of our many and great obligations and of the misery we had been in had not that work of Redemption intervened we may begin the day with a due impression of Gods greatness and goodness of our own sinfulness weakness and misery and of this bl ●ssed remedy and out gate 2. We would address our selves to solemn prayer in secret and that at greater length then on other dayes and with insisting with special petitions relating to the day with all the seriousness we may win it 3. We would take a view of our own hearts to see how and where we left the night before and endeavour to have clearness betwixt the Lord and us as to our state and otherwayes maintained and renewed if it was or attained if it was not 4. Too much time would not be spent in adorning or busking of folks bodies or in making other provisions for them but as the whole of it would be taken up in duties of worship as we have before shewed so some part of it would be set apart for secret reading yea for secret praising thanksgiving and singing an exercise not unbecoming that day as that fore-cited Psalm for the Sabbath day sheweth 5. If thou be the Head of a Family or livest in fellowship with others then the family is gravely to be brought together and every particular member is to joyn with the rest And here also prayers and other religious duties are to be doubled according to the ceremonial doubling of Sacrifices on the seventh-day-Seventh-day-Sabbath under the Law for in secret in families and in publick there would be more that day then in other dayes 6. Care and inspection would be taken so far as men can reach that by none in the Society neither secret nor private duties be neglected nor publick duties abstained from but that each may stir up one another and more especially those whose places lead them to it to the sutable sanctification of the day in all the duties of it and withal it would be looked to that none of the family be suffered to stay at home unnecessarily from the publick worship or to be absent from the family worship 7. Timely that ye be not by haste discomposed come to publick modestly apparrelled it's a shame to see how gaudily some come to publick worship on the Lords day grave in your walk wary and circumspect in your words that they be spiritually edifying and sutable watch over your eyes that carnal or worldly looks steal you not away nor distemper your hearts but especially over your hearts that they wear not out of a spiritual frame 8. When ye come to the place of publick worship if it be a while a beginning be still watchful and the nearer ye come to it the more watchful for temptations will be very ready to divert or discompose there would be a frequent intermixture of ejaculatory prayers in reference to every thing requisite for attaining and intertaining this composedness 9. When publick worship beginneth study to be as Cornelius was Acts 10. present to joyn in prayer and praise to hear what God will say to receive it to l ●y it up in your hearts to be sutably affected with it and to resolve through grace to practice it for blessed are they only who hear the word and do it and this would be with delight aiming aright at the end of the Ordinances whatever they be whereof we spoke somewhat on the second Commandement 10. When the publick worship is as to its first diet closed let not your minds turn carnal but depart reverently from it chearing your selves in God fixing the convictions exhortations directions instructions c. in your mind as ye have met with them and be ruminating rather on these then beginning to gaze or discourse with others on subjects that are not spiritual and to edification 11. As soon as ye can win go in secret and seek to have these things fastned and riveted betwixt God and you and let that be your first work and let the little time that interveneth betwixt the diets of publick worship till you return be spent sutable to the day and the end of the duties thereof 12. When all the publick vvo ●ship is ended then ye would do according to the preceding tenth Direction ye would withal retire a while in secret and reflect on your carriage in publick and also see what good may be gotten of the d ●y and if there be any misses neglects or failings observed as if there be a diligent search there will no doubt be then be humbled seek pardon through Christ and resolve through grace to help these afterward consider what was said and like the noble Boreans Acts 17. put it to the tryal for your confirmation by your considering and examining the Scriptures cited or spoken of and endeavour yet more to have your hearts affected in secret with them 13. Then call your Families and come together after secret seeking of God and 1. be inquiring of one another what is remembred that all being put together ye may be helpful by your memories one to another 2. ye would do this not as if it were enough to tell over the vvords but that the Doctrines and their Uses may be fixed and ye affected vvith them Therefore 3. ye vvould do this vvith other duties of reading singing and spiritual conference as the occasion of it shall offer vvith prayer to God before and after being thus exercised till ye go again in secret to close the day as ye began 14. Duties of Charity vvould be done contributions made liberally according to our ability and relief sent to others as vve knovv their need vvhich also vvould be inquired after 15. Indeavour to have the heart in a right frame to close the day vvith reflecting on our carriage throughout it fearing to lye dovvn vvith guilt unpardoned and vvithout some special fruit of the duties of the day haste not to go to rest sooner that night then on other nights on design that you may be sooner at vvork the next day vvhich smelleth strong of vvearying of the Sabbath and of longing to have it at an end of vvhich the Lord complained of old Amos 8.5 study to lye dovvn vvith thoughts as you arose leavi ●g your selves in his arms vvith respect to the eternal Sabbath that is coming 3. When the Sabbath is past and the next day cometh cast not by all thoughts of it instantly but begin your vvork as having just novv ended the Sabbath fearing to let the relish of it vvear avvay and indeavouring in your carriage through the Week to retain the stamp and impression of it especially bevvare to go
of this 4. Also that he came not to destroy it which yet the Lord never did of Ceremoni ●ls but rather foretold the Abolition of them as he did of the seeking and worshiping of God in the Temple at Jerusalem c. Yea when he cleareth the Doctrine of the Sabbath from the Pharisies corrupting Traditions he doth never weaken its former Obligation nor insinuate its weakness but sheweth the true meaning thereof which from the beginning made it not only consistent with the works of Piety and mercy but exceedingly helpful to both A Second place Confirming the whole Decalogue or rather Asserting it's Authority is in the Epistle of James Jam. 2.10 He that Offendeth in One is Guilty of All Why Because He is the same God and Law-giver And no Servant nor Angel who spake them All one as well as another of them And it being clear there that he speaketh of the Decalogue called the Royal Law there being no Law instanced in nor any other that can be of a like Authority in these Laws instanced but only it nor that could be pleaded for by James on such Grounds on such a time and it being also clear That he giveth to all those Laws which the Lord spake at that time alike Authority other-wise his reasoning would not be good if any one Law or Command could be instanced to him of the Ten which the Lord spake and was abrogated and not binding it necessarily followeth that this 4th Command being one of the Ten must be of equal authority with t he rest It may be noted also That James here doth not as neither doth our Lord nor any of his Apostles when they cite the Law give New Authority to the Laws he citeth but supposeth them to have it already and maketh use of them as Confirmations of the thing he pressed which could not be if their Authority depended on or flowed from the present Citation of them Thirdly we reason further thus Either there is some Moral Duty contained in this Command and laid on by it which is not in any of the former or there is but some Ceremonial thing in it reducable to one of them For the Perfection of this Law requireth that all things needful to the Worship of God should be summed in it and the Scope thereof which is Briefly to compend all requireth there should be nothing in it that 's needless superfluous or that might have been left out Now if the matter be Moral not contained in any former Command then is the Command it self Moral seeing a Moral Substance and Matter Denominateth the Command so Yea it must be Moral other-wise some-thing Morally necessary to Gods Service such as the Determination of its chief time should be omitted It may be assumed yet further It must be Moral be it what it will to eschew a Tautology in this short Compend of Duties and that of Moral Duties too Again If it be not Moral but contain some Ceremonial thing reducible to one of the three former Commands Then 1. It might have been put amongst other Ceremonials 2. Other Ceremonials might have been put in with it Or 3. A Reason given Why all are not Reducible to some Moral Command 4. If the matter of this be Reducible to another Command then can it not be accounted a Distinct Command neither ought it here to have been given as such but sub-joyned to some other as the Servants and Beasts resting is sub-joyned to this 5. It would be shewn to what Command it 's Reducible as to the Substance of it if it be Ceremonial 6. A Reason would be given Why amongst Ten One and Only One is set down so far different from all the rest And if all these Absurdities follow the Denyal of it's Substance to be Moral then for eschewing of them we must conclude it to be Moral and so the Fourth Command is Moral Fourthly we reason thus If it be not Moral it must either be Judicial or Ceremonial for the Matter and Substance of it but it is not Judicial that is it belongeth not to External Policy and Civil Society principally and especially in that one Nation because no such Duties are Comprehended at least Primarily in any Command of the First Table but in the Second which teacheth Duties to others as this First doth ●o God Neither is it Ceremonial For All Ceremonies that are Typical have their Rise since the Fall and relate some way to Christ to-Come But this of sanctifying One Day of Seven had it's Rise in the State of Innocency and was enjoyned to Adam in Paradise before he fell and therefore cannot be called Ceremonial Properly more than the Command of a Man's leaving Father and Mother and cleaving to his Wife so that they too should be one Flesh which the Apostle Ephes. 5. maketh use of Besides if it were Ceremonial in the Substance then were it Typical and Significant of some-thing to-come which is hard to shew Then also had it not been Lawful to have retained it for Ceremonials now in their use are not only Dead but Deadly But this Morality in Substance the same with the Command which we plead for was retained by the Apostles and Primitive Church to say no more There-fore it is not Ceremonial And so this Law must needs be Moral To say That the Command is partly Moral partly Ceremonial if we respect it's Substance will not hold For 1. There is no such other Law 2. That were to make Confusion betwixt Ceremonials and Morals which it seemeth the Lord himself hath aimed and resolved to keep clearly Distinct 3. What ever be Ceremonial That which was allowed and injoyned to Adam in Paradise and wherein we may agree with Him under the Gospel cannot be Ceremonial For neither of these States are Capable of Proper Ceremonies but both agree on a Seventh Day Therefore it is not Ceremonial The Third way we make out the Morality of this Command is By particular considering of it self and here we argue thus If it be not only put into the Decalogue with the other Moral Commands but more singularly explicated and pressed even in it than they then it is certainly Moral that is perpetually Obligatory with the rest But so it is put and set down in the Decalogue and pressed even more than the rest of the Commands as on other Accounts so possibly in this because it 's Ground is Positive and Men need the more Words about it Just as in the Second Command Ergo c. Now that it is thus put and pressed apeareth these several wayes 1. It shareth of all Common Priviledges with the rest of the Command set down in the Decalogue that were all spoken yea Written by the Lord immediatly and l ●id up in the Ark. 2. It is proposed and set down in it's Form both Positively Remember the Sabbath to keep it Holy and Negatively in it thou shalt do no manner of Work c. Where-as all the other Commands are but
It may be objected But God rested the Seventh day Answ. Gods rest is not principally proposed as the reason of that Seventh day but that he rested one day after six imployed in the works of Creation It 's to inferr the number not the order otherwaies it would not concern us 2. The Seventh relateth not to the order of the dayes of the week one two three c. but it 's called the Seventh with respect to the former Six of work Thus much for the quoties and quamdiu how osten the Sabbath recurreth and what is the day It remaineth here to be inquired what is the beginning of the sancti ●ication of this day which belongeth to the quando or wherefrom we are to reckon it seeing it 's granted by all to be a natural day Now it is questioned mainly whether its beginning is to be reckoned from evening about Sun-setting or darkness to Sun-setting the next day or if it be to be reckoned from morning that is as we fix it when the Sun beginneth to ascend towards us after midnight which is morning largely taken as it 's evening largely taken when the Sun beginneth to decline after mid-day In this debate then we take morning and evening largely as they divide the whole natural day so the morning is from twelve at night to twelve in the day and the evening from twelve in the day to twelve at night And it must be so here for 1. Moses Gen. 1. divideth the natural day in morning and evening which two put together make up the whole day and these Six days made up each of them of morning and evening are natural dayes the whole week being divided in Seven of them and that reckoning from Gods example is no doubt proposed for our Imitation in this Hence the morning watch was before day and the morning Sacrifice about nine of the clock so the evening sacrifice was about three in the afternoon and the evening watch about nine at night 2. It is granted by all and is clear from this command that as we account the Six working dayes of the week so must we account the Seventh for one must begin where another endeth and if one of them begin at the evening or morning all the rest must do so likewise 3. We suppose the sanctifying of the ordinary Sabbath was from morning to evening I say of the ordinary Sabbath because for extraordinary Sabbaths as of the Passover Exod. 12. and of the Atonement Levit. 23. there were special reasons and though otherwayes they were to be sanctified as Sabbaths yet that they were to begin in the evening before was added as a special solemnity of these solemn times and therefore the example or instance of these will not be concludent here to the prejudice of what we assert but rather to the contrary seeing there is a particular excepting of them from the ordinary rule and the particular intimation of their beginning in the evening will rather confirm our assertion that the ordinary Sabbaths did begin in the morning 4. It 's not questioned if on the evening before people should be preparing for the Sabbath following we said that this is included in the word remember but if we speak of the Sabbath to begin at the evening before then it will be comprehended as a part of the very day and so it will conclude the work or observation of the day to close at the next evening We conceive especially to us Christians the day is to begin in the morning as is said and to continue till the next morning for which we reason thus Arg. 1. As other dayes begin or as dayes began at the first so must this but dayes ordinarily begin in the morning Ergo c. If the first Six of Moses's reckoning begin so then this beginneth so also but they do begin so which may be cleared from Gen. 1. where the evening and the morning make the First day after the Creation 1. If there the morning and the evening do fully divide the natural day then the morning must go before the evening every morning being for its own evening But they do divide the natural day all being comprehended under Six days Ergo c. the consequence is clear to natural sense for the forenoon which is the morning must be before the afternoon which is the evening the ascending of the Sun is sure before its declining and seeing the morning natural to speak so of the natural day is from the twelfth hour at night this must be the beginning of the day Again the question then being only whether to reckon the evening or the morning first it would seem necessary to reckon the morning first for if the evening be first that evening must either be 1. the evening of a day preceding morning seeing every evening supposeth a morning to go before it in proper speech and I suppose the History of the Creation Gen. 1. is not set down in metaphorical termes or 2. it must be an evening without a morning and that in proper speech here used is absurd and seems also to be as impossible i ● nature to wit that there should be a consequent and posterior evening or afternoon without a preceding morning or forenoon as that there should be an effect without a cause or 3. it must be the evening following its own morning and so that morning must be last preceding the first evening recorded Gen. 1. the evening and the morning were the first day which to affirm would not only be absurd but would also manifestly fasten the loss of a dayes time on the Scriptures calculation and it seemeth hard in all speech and Scripture-phrase to put the evening before its own morning seeing there must be both morning and evening in each day neither doth the Scripture speak any way of evening but when it 's drawing towards night which still supposeth the morning of that same day to be passed or else we must divide the day in the middle of the Artificial day and make the Natural day begin at twelve of the noon day which will be as much against the Scripture phrase that reckoneth still the whole Artificial day as belonging to one Natural day the Artificial day and night being the two parts of one whole natural day All the force of the opposite reason is this the evening is first named Ergo it is first Answ. Moses his scope is not to shew what part of one day is before another but to divide one day from another and to shew what goeth to make a whole day to wit an evening and a morning not a morning alone but an evening added to the morning which preceded that made the first second third day c. as one would reckon thus there is a whole day because there is both evening and morning In this account it 's most sutable to begin with the evening because it presupposeth the morning and being added to it cannot but
which we may see what need there is to watch over our selves in these things lest our liberty be turned into licentiousness and lest we grow either idle or carnal on that day Let us then consider how far this rest extendeth and under it we take in 1. The rest of the whole man outward and inward in deeds words and thoughts so is it Isai. 58.13 we should not speak our own words nor by proportion think our own thoughts nor find our own pleasures 2. It goeth through the whole day for though every minute of the day cannot be applyed to positive duties yet in no minute of it is it lawful to do another work inconsistent with the qualifications and scope aforesaid that is the negative part in it thou shalt do no work which bindeth ad semper 3. It is to be extended not only to a mans own person but to all under him children servants c. he must be answerable for it that they rest and must give them no occasion of work 4. It 's to be extended even to the least work of any fort if unnecessary as gathering sticks speaking our own words c. these are all breaches of the Sabbath 5. This rest extendeth to all actions or sorts of actions or cases which are not comprehended under the former exceptions which are permitted or are consistent with the sanctifying of the Sabbath As 1. All works which tend to our external profit pleasure satisfaction c. all works of our callings which make for the increase of outward gain and profit such whereby we ordinarily sustain our lives These Heb. 4.15 are called our own works and here it 's such works as ordinarily are wrought in the rest of the six dayes So it is doing thy own pleasure as well as vvorks Isa 58. 2. Such vvorks as tend to others external gain or profit as the great motive of them as Servants may be vvorking for their Masters profit and yet prophane the day 3. Such as are not necessary on that day as ploughing sovving reap ●ng or gathering in and that even in Seed time and Harvest and so fishing going of mills c. vvhen these are not done for the very preserving of life because they are not necessary out of that case neither is there any thing here of an extraordinary dispensation that maketh them necessary the vveather depending on an ordinary providence or ordinarily depending on providence vvhich is to be reverenced Hence though the vveather and season be rainy yet it is not lavvful to cut dovvn or gather in Corn on the Sabbath their hazard in this case being common and from an ordinary immediate providence yet suppose that a River vvere carrying avvay Corn or that Winds vvere like to blovv them into the Sea it vvere lavvful in such a case to endeavour to prevent that and preserve them because 1. that cometh by some more then ordinary dispensation of providence in the vveather and affecteth and putteth in hazard this Corn more then others 2. Because there is no probability of recovering these in an ordinary vvay though the vveather should alter but there is hope of gathering in of such as are in the fields vvithout that reach of hazard if the Lord alter the season 4. Such as are for carnal pleasure or civil ends thus playing gaming much laughing c. being our ovvn vvorks more especially our ovvn pleasure are unlavvful on that day 5. Consider that all things are prohibited vvhich marr the end of the day and are not consistent vvith the duties thereof such are buying selling c. out of the cases of pressing necessity folks cannot be spiritually taken up and vvith these also so playing and gaming is no less consistent vvith praying reading conferring c. then ploughing or such like yea is much more indisposing for it and so vve do necessarily thereby incapacitate our selves for the duties of the day 6. All things are forbidden vvhich consist not vvith this rest and the duties of vvorship called for from our selves and others thus unnecessary journeying vvalking even suppose one could or should be exercised in meditation is not resting as is required much less is gadding in companies in the street or fields to the neglect of secret and family duties In a vvord vvhatever is not religious and spiritual exercise or furthering or helping unto vvhat is so out of the excepted cases much more vvhatever is sinful scandalous or unsutable on other dayes or doth divert from or indispose for the duties of holiness and the vvorship of God on that day is inconsistent vvith this rest and so prohibited for This rest is not primarily commanded and required for it self but as conducing and subordinate unto the performing of holy duties in it therefore our rest is to be regulated so as may best contribute to that scope and vvhatever marreth that though it should not be vvork strictly but idleness carnalness or playing and gaming and sporting yet it 's a breach of this rest for 1. That is no religious duty nor 2. tending as a necessary help to it nor 3. is rest commanded that vve should play in it but that vve should sanctifie it and 4. playing or sporting cannot be called sanctifying the day othervvayes vve might have mo Sabbaths then one and the prophanest vvould love them hest 5. playing separateth not the Sabbath from other days more then vvork doeth for men play in all 6. playing is neither a religious duty it being amongst the most irreligious and prophane nor a duty of necessity for easing of vveariness vvhich doth not here come by any bodily toyl and labour but if there be any from being exercised in spiritual duties which therefore change and variety will through Gods blessing do so as the person may be born out in them nor is there any place for it except some duty be neglected therefore it 's inconsistent with this We come to the second way of considering the Sanctification required here and that is by comparing it with that strictness called for from the Jews and to which they were tyed We speak not here of Ceremonials for so their whole service might be more burdensom then ours and particularly their Sabbath-Services because they were doubled on that day but of Moral Duties and in that respect we say that the tye and obligation unto the sanctification of this day is equal and alike unto us with them which is clear in particulars for 1. It tyeth us now to as long time to wit a natural day of twenty four hours as it did them then 2. It restraineth from work and requireth holy rest now as much as then for whatever work then struck against the Letter or purpose and scope of the command and marred holy Duties doth so still 3. It requireth positive sanctification by holy Duties as preaching prayer meditation c. and alloweth not Idleness nor indulgeth time to other unnecessary works 4. It requireth as spiritual a manner and as spiritual a
end wherefore God did it to vvit that there might thereby be an excitement left to men to imitate God and that man might not only have Gods command but his example also to bind this duty on him If it be asked here vvhy God vvill have a day set apart for holy Exercises beside other days It may be answered 1. It 's meet that God be acknowledged Lord of our time by this Tribute being reserved to himself 2. Because man having but a finite understanding beside the now corruption of it cannot be intensely taken up with spiritual and heavenly things and with temporal and earthly things both at once o ● at the same instant for even Adam in innocency could not do that therefore the Lord hath graciously set apart a day for mans help in that 3. It 's to teach man that his chief end is to converse with God and to live vvith him and that he ought to care in his own affairs along the week and order things so as the Sabbath may be duly sanct ●fied vvhen it shall come in that sweet soul reposing converse with him 4. To shew man wherein his happiness consisteth it 's even in this to vvalk and converse with God and to be in his worship this i ● his rest 5. To shew the excellency of Religion and of the Works of Piety or of Gods Worship above mens Employments in earthly and worldly things It vvas a Sabbath to Adam in innocency to be abstracted from his labour for the worship of God the one is mens toyl the other is mens spiritual rest and ease far contrary to that which men in the vvorld ordinarily think and judge We see now how great and grievous a sin it is to break this command and vvith vvhat care this day should be hallowed For 1. It 's a Command of the first Table and so the breach of it is in some respect more then murther Adultery Stealing c. it 's included in the first and great Commandement 2. Amongst all the commands of the first Table yea all the commands this religious observance of the Sabbath is most forcibly pressed vvith more reasons and vvith more full and particular explication Because 1. All the commands hang some vvay on this and obedience is ordinarily given to them vvith the same readiness as this day is employed in Gods Service 2. It keepeth life as it vvere in all the rest and vvhen men are could in this so are they in all the rest 3. This tryeth men in their love to God best If indeed his company and service be more delighted in then the World And is a notable indication of the frame of the soul it maketh proof both of their state and frame as men are usually and habitually on the Sabbath so in effect are they as to these 3. No breach of any command hath more aggravations for 1. It is against reason and equity vvhen God hath given us so many and so good reasons for it 2. It 's high Ingratitude the Sabbath being a Mercy and a great Mercy indeed it is to be priviledged vvith access to converse vvith God a vvhole day of every vveek in duties of vvorship 3. It 's against Love God's Love hath instituted it and our Love should in a special manner vent it self to him on it 4. It 's cruelty against our selves for the Sabbath kept holy is backed with the promise of a special blessing and we by this sin prejudge our selves of that yea the Sabbath rightly spent is a mean both of holiness and of nearness to God of conformity to him and of communion with him it promoteth both So that it is eminently verified here that these who sin against this command ●in against and forsake their own Mercy 4. No sin doth more evidence universal untenderness and as it 's a sin in it self so it evidenceth especially when gross a very sinful and some way Atheistical frame and disposition as may be gathered from Neh. 13. Yea 5. It occasioneth and breedeth other sins it habituateth to sinning and hardneth against challenges so that men ordinarily become very gross and loose and fall in scandalous sins who neglect the sanctification of the Sabbath which is the quickner and fomenter some way of all duties and knitteth the two Tables of the Law together hence it cometh to pass that vve often hear men that have turned to be very loose gross and scandalous and some of them on Scaffolds and at Gibbets cry out of Sabbath-breaking imputing the one to the other as a main cause for by this sin men grow stout against challenges and formal in secret duties a ●d so at length sit quite up 6. No sin hath more sharp challenges for it and more sad Judgments avenging it then sins against this command have there been any men deeply challenged for sin or at death whether ordinary or violent brought to express and utter their challenges but sins against this command have been main ones The slighting of the Lords Sabbath made Jerusalem to be burnt with fire Jer. 17. last for this sin they are threatned with terrible plagues Ezek. 20.21 24. not only in temporal things v. 23. but with spiritual plagues to which they are given up v. 25.26 You know that a man was stoned for gathering of sticks on the Sabbath Numb 15. see also Exod. 16.28 and Ezek. 22.8 where the Lord accounteth Sabbath-breaking a refusing to keep his Commandements and Laws and a despising of his holy things O is it possible that a man can be well that breaketh the Sabbath or to vvhom it is not a delight If any should ask here if indeed the breaches of this command be greater sins then the br ●aches of the comm ●nds of the second Table and if so if God will be avenged on these severely For Answer premitting this one word that in comp ●ring breaches of the commands of the two Tables vve vvould compare sins of a like nature together that is sins of presumption vvith sins of presumption and sins of infirmity vvith sins of infirmity vve say that a presumptuous sin against the fourth Command if it vvere but to go unnecessarily to the door or to gather sticks is a greater sin then a presumptuous murther because it s ●riketh more immediately against God And that a sin of infirmity against the fourth command is greater then a sin of Infirmity against the sixth Yet we grant that presumptuous Murther is a greater sin then a sin of infirmity against the fourth command because presumption and high handedness in the manner of sinning in a sin little on the matter comparatively dareth God as it were and striketh immediately against him and so is an additional high aggravation of it beside vvhat it is in the nature of it And though our censures against presumptuous breaches of the Sabbath which are now as great sins as formerly as is clear from what is just now said be often more mitigated now under the