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A44280 An essay concerning the Sabbath, or, The Sabbath-days rest from controversie wherein is asserted that our Christian Sabbath, Lords-day, or Sunday is the very same day of the week which was anciently observed by the Jews and Gentiles for the solemn day of their solemn weekly worship, before Israels coming out of Ægypt and after that by gentiles : prefaced, with an introduction thereunto touching the true meaning of Gen. 2 v, 2, 3 / by N. Homes. Homes, Nathanael, 1599-1678. 1673 (1673) Wing H2564; ESTC R28681 38,857 162

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though servile Subjection came in after Sin yet if Man had not Fallen there should have been degrees of Superiority and Inferiority And there should have been distinction of Sexes and dignities c. Obj. 4 John 7.22 Christ maketh an opposition between two Laws one of Circumcision and another of the Sabbath And he saith Circumcision is kept not because Moses Instituted Circumcision but because it was from the Fathers And because Moses's Law of the Sabbath was given after the Law of Circumcision therefore it is that Infants are Circumcised upon the Sabbath and yet the Sabbath is not broken Answ The Sabbath was given after Circumcision with the rest of the Ceremonies belonging to it which Christ especially meaneth here But the Moral part was given to Adam before his Fall He maketh Opposition here but between the Ceremony of Circumcision and the Ceremony of the Sabbath The less necessary Ceremony to give place to the greater And the Jews say when a Child was to be Circumcised upon the Sabbath yet the morning Sacrifice behoved to be Offered first before the Child was Circumcised and then all the rest of the Ceremonial Worship in the Sabbath gave place to Circumcision Obj. 5 And whereas they urge us That there is no Example of the Patriarches who kept the Sabbath before the Manna was sent down Answ It may seem out of Job That they kept the Sabbath in his time which was before the Law was given It is said Job had Seven Sons N. B. and they went and Feasted in their Houses every one his day Job 1.4 And then it is subjoyned Job 1.6 That there was a day when the Sons of God came to present themselves before the Lord. Now who were the Sons of God here but Job's Children N. B. who Assembled themselves to worship God upon the Seventh day Obj. They say that these words God rested the Seventh day and Sanctified the Sabbath a●● set down 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by way 〈◊〉 Anticipation because God promised to Sanctifie that day afterwards Answ This carries no probability with it that God is said to Sanctifie it because he was purposed to Sactifie it afterwards For then he might be said to Sanctifie Moriah when he Created it because afterwards he was to build the Temple there and to Sanctifie the Pascha and the Pentecost because afterwards he was to appoint them for holy uses FINIS THE Sunday-Sabbath's Rest FROM CONTROVERSIES CHAP. I. Of the Thesis or Position Section I. THE Thesis or Position Our Sunday-Sabbath or Lords-day is the very same day of the week which was anciently observed by Jews and Gentiles for the Solemn day of their Solemn weekly Worship before Israels coming out of Aegypt and after that by the Gentiles Sect. II. The explanation of the Thesis 1. We call it Sunday 1. Because it is vulgarly so called and best known by the generality of the Nation 2. Because the Jews anciently so called it and observed it in memorial of God their Sun * Ps 84.11 Creating the World and that eminentest part thereof the Sun * Exod. ●0 11 If so long after the Creation no don 't but anciently nea●e● the Crea●ion 3. Because the Gentiles of old called it Sunday though upon an ill occasion that they on that day Worshiped the Sun But it is to our purpose to note the number of the day not the iniquity the observation not the misapplication of the day ¶ 2. We call it Sabbath 1. Because many Christians so call it and own it against all Jewish Saturday Sabbatarians 2. Because the Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sabbath signifies rest which rest for Body and Soul we have mostly on this day 3. Because in some way of proportion the time of our Sabbath day answers to that of the Jews both being a Seventh day of the week ¶ 3. We call it The Lord's day 1. Because the Scripture so calls it I was saith St. John the Disciple of Christ in the Spirit on the LORDS DAY * Rev. 1.10 meaning our Sabbath or Sunday which we call the Lord's day For surely if 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lords Supper doth sufficiently distinguish that Spiritual Supper of the Communion to all ingenuous men from all common Suppers then so doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lord's day sufficiently distinguish to all not willfully blind that special day from all other days For it follows 2ly That we call our Sabbath the Lord's day because it was the day of the Lord Christ's Resurrection from the Dead wherein he rested from his Sufferings and we thereby from our Sins and Condemnation 'T is true That the day of Christ's Resurrection is by the same Apostle called the First day of the week * Joh. 20.1 But 't is as true That this same First day was the Jews and Gentiles Sabbath for Two thousand four hundred fifty four years viz. From the Creation to the reduction of Israel our Aegypt and was the Gentiles Sabbath long after that 3ly We call it the Lord's Day because on that day in every week we solemnly worship the Lord Christ with the Gospel Worship which the Lord himself hath Instituted Sect. 3. The probation or proof of the said Thesis being made good by the orderly succeeding of the following Chapter N. B. the latter strengthning the former it may be hoped that according to the TITLE there will follow a cessation and rest of all Controversies about the Sunday Sabbath or the Lord's day either by the Quotidian or Hemerion Sabbatarians that pretend no one day but every day should be as a Sabbath Or by the Plurian Sabbatarians that would not have all days to be Sabbaths but would have more then one day in Seven Or by the Prosabbatarians that are wholy for the Jewish Sabbath Or by the Antisabbatarians that are against the Jewish Sabbath in the behalf of the Christian Sabbath Or touching the morality of th● Sabbath in general Or touching the warrantrie of Christian Lord's day Sabbath Or touching the Scruple whether to cal● the day of Solemn Worship Sunday or Sabbath day o● Lord's day CHAP. II. Of the Natural and Artificial day Sect. 1. THE Natural day of Twenty four hours as it is vulgarly called is with any people the space of time between Sun-rising and Sun-rising or between Sun-setting and Sun-setting called by the Learned the Horizontal day Sect. 2. The parts of this Natural day are two The one is the Artificial day that is the days Light The other part is by relative consequence the Artificial night that is the Nights darkness belonging to that day So that the Artificial day is the whole space between Sun-rising and Sun-setting CAP. III. Of the ancient beginning of the Natural day Sect. 1. THE Artificial day or Day-light was anciently before Israels going out of Aegypt counted the beginning or former part of the Natural day and the Night the latter part of the said natural day This appears three ways
difference between A Seventh day every day of the week being a Seventh and THE Seventh day which is the term period and boundaries of the week Sect. 3. The first main thing we have to prove is That our Sunday which we call the Lord's day was the SEVENTH DAY of the week with the Heathen Gentiles As for our proof it must be partly by reason and partly by quotation of Learned Authors both Christians and Heathens whither we must send the Reader if he believes not our breviat for neither can this little Pamphlet brook long narrations nor can our Occasions spare time to write them out at large ¶ 1. For reason thus we argue If Adam being Created the Sixth day at the close of all God's Works now entring upon his rest had not thence learned what was a Natural Day and what was a Week and how the Seventh day was the boundary thereof before he could come to know by experience what was a Moneth by the Motion of the Moon or what a Year by the Motion of the Sun he could not have told how for a long time to have measured out his Age. Doubtless therefore he learned from the Standard of Gods working Six days and resting the Seventh what was a Day a Week and the boundary thereof and thereby measured out the time of his Life and so it was kept and left upon Record for after Ages Months and Years among several Nations have much varied but never was the Week counted to be more or less then Seven days N. B. with any people ¶ 2. For Authors The ancient Beda witnesseth That the Rest on the Seventh day Semper celebrari solet was wont always to be celebrated (a) Bed in his Hexameron Likewise Philo-Judaeus maketh this bold challenge Quis Sacrum illum diem per singulas hebdomadas recurrentem non honorat (b) Phil. De vita Mosis Lib. 2. That is Who is there that doth not honour that SACRED day returning each Septinary of Seven days To the same purpose Josephus Neque est ulla Civitas Graecorum aut Barbarorum aeque ULLA GENS ad quam SEPTIMI diei in quo VACAMUS Consuetudo minime pervenerit (c) Jos contra Ap. Lib. 2. That is There is neither any City of the Greeks or of the Barbarians nor ANY NATION to whom the Custom of the Seventh day in which we REST hath not come Learned Mercer commended for such (d) Heyl. part 1. p. 5. by Dr. Heylin was of Opinion as he saith That the first Fathers being taught of God kept the Seventh day holy to 〈◊〉 (e) Chrysost Hom. 10. in Gen. Chrysostom saith Ja●●●c ab initio c. God hath insinuated into us from the very beginning of the World this Doctrin instructing us thereof in the Circle of the Week THAT ONE WHOLE DAY should be set apart and laid out for Spiritual Actions f Aug. Steuchius speaking of the Seventh day affirmeth IT TO HAVE BEEN in omni aetate inter omnes Gentes venerabilis Sacer VENERABLE and SACRED IN ALL AGES AMONG ALL NATIONS (g) Steuch on Gen. 2. And our Book of Homiles tell us That it is according to the Law of Nature to have a time as ONE DAY IN THE WEEK wherein we ought to REST from our Labours We will conclude this Paragraph with the Testimony of the most ancient Heathen Gr. Poets as Homer the ancientest Hesiod next and Callimachus and Linus who have spoken very hon●●ably of the Creation and o●●●● Seventh Day Their words are set down at large by Clemens Alexandrinus (h) Clem Strom. l. 5. Eusebeus (i) Euseb de preparat Evang. L. 13. c. 17. Rivet (k) Rivet on Gen. c. 2. in his De●●ert de Orig. Sab. Now this laudable Opinion of the Sunday now ou● Lord's Day they could not have from the Books of Moses for they were not extant in the Greek Tongue till Ptolomy procured the Seventy Translators to Translate it into Greek which was many hundreds of years after Homer aforesaid Besides whiles the Kingdom of Israel and Judah flourished the Gentiles got not a Script of the Sacred Scriptures And the Jews thought it a prophaning of Moses's Writings to communicate any of them to the Heathens And Mr. John Gregory doth prove (l) Jo. Greg. his discourse of the Sept. That before that Translation of the Septuagint the Gentiles had no light from the Books of Moses Therefore note it well it must n●●● follow N. B. That the Heathen-Gentiles had that honourable opinion and spake so laudably of the SUN DAY by very ancient successive Tradition amongst themselves Now this Seventh day of which they so well thought and spake could not be the Jews Saturday-Sabbath For the Heathen utterly disliked it N. B. and disdainfully counted it an innovation brought in by Moses and therefore the Poets would commonly have one Lash or another at it and never spoke honourably of it Therefore it must be the ancient SUNDAY before Moses's time and after that among the Heathen that was by the Heathens honoured as the Seventh-day of the Week the high day of their prime and solemn Worship every Week called by them their Sunday and by us called the Lord's day Of which more in the next ●aragraph ¶ 3. The Adversaries themselves do grant that the day of the Sun or Sunday was with the Heathen Gentiles the Seventh day and Sacred with them But it was say they the Seventh day of the Month and not the Seventh day of the Week Against which we must boldly assert the contrary viz. That the day of the Sun was the Seventh day of the Week and Sacred with the Gentiles and not the Seventh day of the Moneth To warrant this Assertion we have not only much in the Authors cited in the former Paragraph but also in Clemens Alexandrinus and Eusebeus alledging the afore named Poets to shew particularly That the Heathen Gentiles held the Seventh day of the Week Sacred with them And moreover in the Greek Calender there is no mention at all of a Seventh day of the Month. Had there been any such thing they that observe therein things of lesser consequence would have observed that much more * Scalig. De emendat temp de Calendario Attico Adde that Decree of Miltiades the last Bishop of Rome that was a Martyr who that he might make a difference between the Observation of Sunday by Christians and the Observation of the same Sunday by the Heathen decreed That all Gentiles that were turned Christians should not Fast on Sundays as other Gentiles did * Binii Concil And Plat. Divita Miltiadis For in those times Sacred days were called by the Heathen Fasts Because they abstained from feeding themselves till their Services were ended Thus of the proof of the first main thing intended in this Ninth Chapter is viz. That the Weekly day to wit the Seventh day every Week with the Gentiles which they call the day
of the Sun or Sunday was the very same day which we call THE LORD'S DAY We have already in several Sections and Paragraphs of the fore-going Chapters dropped some proofs of this But now we shall bring more particularly direct and express Testimonies to this point ¶ 1. Dr. F. White and Dr. Heylin though they were Opposers of the Morality of the Sabbath do confess That Christians of the first ages because they observed the Sunday for their Sacred Services bowing in Prayer towards the East were upbraided for Worshippers of the Sun though they neither Worshiped the Sun as the Heathen nor called the day of their Worshiping God Sunday as they called it but the Lord's day being their Sabbath or Sacred day of REST to the Lord. Therefore if Sunday had not been with the Heathen who were Sun Worshippers indeed a weekly day of solemn Worship there had been no cause of that upbraiding by the Jews or Heathen-Gentiles (a) White of the Sabbath and Heylin part 2. p. 53. But we have more approved Authors then these as it follows ¶ 2. Sozomen telleth us That Constantine Commanded Diem Dominicum quem Hebraei primum Hebdomadae appellant craeci Solis deputant a cunctis celebrari (b) Sozom. Eccles Histor L. 1. c. 8. That is Constantine commanded that the Lords day which the Jews call the First day of the week and the Greeks depute to the Sun to be celebrated of all Whence it is justly inferred That Constantine then held That the Day which the Heathen-Greeks deputed to the Sun was the very same which we call the Lord's day ¶ 3. Coeli Rhodignin tells us Nos jure optimo diem quem Mathematici Solis vocant Domino ascripsimus dicavimusque illius Cultui totum mancipavimus That is with the greatest Equity we have ascribed and Dedicated to the Lord and wholly given up to his Worship that day which the Mathematicians call THE DAY OF THE SVN (c) Coel. Rho. Antiq. L. 13. c. 22. ¶ 4. Bonaventure tells of the pious fraud that Christians acted to rob the Sun of its Idolatrous Worship and transfer the observation of that day to Christ His Words are these Secundum Gentiles dies Dominicus primus est Cum Principio illius diei incipit dominari principalis Planeta Sol propter quod vocabant eundem Diem Solis exhibebant ei venerationem Vt ergo error ille excluderetur reverentia cultus Solis Deo exhiberetur praefixa fuit Dominica Dies qua populus Christianus vacaret cultui Divino (d) Bonavent 3. Dist 37. That is According to the Heathen the LORD'S DAY is a CHIEF day when in the beginning of that day the Principle Planet the SUN begins to Rule For which cause they called it the Day of the SUN and gave Worship thereunto To the intent therefore that Error might be shut out of doors and that reverence of Worship of the Sun might be given to God The LORD'S DAY was prefixed wherein the Christian people gave themselves to Divine Worship For a close of this Chapter we add a Fifth Paragraph ¶ 5. Justin Martyr doth diverse times in his Works call the LORD'S DAY 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 THE DAY OF THE SVN as then the Gentiles or Greeks called it (e) Just Mar. Apol. 2 pro Christian 2. centur So also Tertullian sometimes calles it Diem Solis Sunday sometimes Diem Dominicum The Lord's day And in the Edicts of Constantine Valentinian Valens Gratian Honorius Arcadius Theodosius all of them Christian Princes our LORDS DAY is commonly called Dies Solis Sunday A DIAGRAM OR Representation as to the Eye of the Summe and Design of the whole Treatise preceding CHAP. X. THE PREFACE To the said DIAGRAM THE Jews as we have shewed were to begin their Sabbath at the Even next before the succeeding Morning And after the immediate Morning or Day-light preceding Levit. 23.32 Consequently the rest of the Seven days of the Week so began or else they could not measure out the Sabbath to begin as aforesaid As also the Jews Festivals and Solemnities would justle out or rob one another of their due time when diverse come together As Levit. 23.5 6 7 8. In the Fourteenth day of the First Month at Even is the Lord 's Passover On the Fifteenth of the same Month is the Feast of Vnleavened-bread c. Grotius on v. 32. of that Levittic tells us punctually the mode of this Mutation Cum dies per annum inaequales fint c. That is Seeing that days by the year are unequal and in Summer the Sun sets much more slowly or laterly as to us then in the Winter the Hebrews begin their Rest on the Sabbath six hours after the Noontyde Now for an example to the point in hand Let us consider the Measures an● Mutations of Friday Saturday and Sunday in this Diagram The Diagram or Representation According to the Jews Account 1. FRIDAY which was th● day of the Week when Christ suffered i● as to the beginning thereof put back to take its beginning at the immediate preceding Evening of that day as but now is afor● described by Grotius viz. it began at the sixth hour after th● Noon or Twelve of the Clock 2. SATVRDAY consequentially which was the day of the Wee● wherein Christ lay in his Grav● did begin at the immediate succe●ding Evening of that Day 3. SVNDAY therefore whic● was the day of the Week whe● Christ arose from the Grave b●gan at Sunday Evening And 〈◊〉 that Evening with the Day-ligh● next following make the Thir● day And so in the rest of the day of the Week proportionably Thus ye see the Jews Measure and Computation of the Week by Days by the Example of the three Days before exprest The Parallelogram what proportion the Christian Account holds with the Diagram of the Jewish According to the Lord Jesus Christ Account 1. But Christ by his Resurrection beginning the Third Day That is Sunday in the Morning which takes to it naturally the succeeding Evening to make it a compleat day calling it the Third Mat. 20.19 Mal. 9.31 10.34 Luk. 18.33 24.7 2. Now as linck after linck in a Chain Friday begins that day of 24. hours at Friday-morning SATVRDAY begins at Saturday Morning 3. SVNDAY begins at Sunday Morning And so all the Evenings re-associated with their Mornings move forward and slip into their natural places the Sun constantly measuring out a Night to every Day and naturally makes the Night the latter part of its race as if the Sun rested after its Labour in the day whilst it gives good nights rest to the labouring man And now as the close of the Diagram ye may behold Sunday-Sabbath standing by it self distinguishedly in Mode Measure and Order Thus The Jewish Sabbath doth consist 1. Of the Evening which began Six hours after the Noon At which they killed their Paschal Lamb. 2. Of the Dark-night at which time Israel went out of
ERRATUM Page 74. Sect. 7. Line 1. rea● Uncontradictably AN ESSAY Concerning the Sabbath OR THE SABBATH-DAYS REST FROM CONTROVERSIE Wherein is asserted That our CHRISTIAN SABBATH Lords-day or Sunday is the very same day of the Week which was Anciently observed by the Jews and Gentiles for the Solemn day of their Solemn weekly Worship before Israels coming out of AEGYPT and after that by the Gentiles PREFACED With an INTRODUCTION thereunto touching the true meaning of Gen. 2. v 2 3. And on the Seventh day God ended his work and rested that day and blessed and sanctified it In parvo magnum By N. Homes D. D. LONDON Printed for the Author 1673. THE EPISTLE TO THE Reader INgenious and Ingenuous Candid Reader I had thought that by this time I had been Rude donatus freed from any further attendance at the Press having toyled so much and so long in that Warfair But seeing that neither all Men nor all pretenders to Learning are yet satisfied about our Christian Sabbath some Hesitating about the time others about the number a third sort about the morality of it And others on the other hand encouraging me to set forth this Irenicon I yielded to them their desire Of which that I might not be fond as of a birth of my Brain I anticipated it by following in some degree Quintilian's advice to the Author of any Book Nonumque prematur in annum ut refrigerato inventionis amore tanquam Lector perpenderet That he should suppress his Treatise for Nine years whereby he cooling the fervor of his Affectionate love to his own invention he might peruse and weigh it rather as the Reader of it then the Author This Counsel I have followed halfe way my judgment in Opposition to fond Affection leading me thereunto Quartumque repressit in annum and supprest this Treatise this Four years and upon the same account as aforesaid viz. to prevent doting upon it But when its Lease was out it was releast and got abroad into the World more to oblige Conscience to a more serious solemnizeing the Lord's-day and to mind us of that Eternal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sabbatisme of which it is the Typical Representation A fit Subject for my old Age and all that are ancient in days Yet let no man Dream that in this Treatise I dote as if that little Learning I have had made me besides my self or that it is now too late for me to meddle with Mathematical Numbrings Measurings and Revolutions of times So that they dare say I cannot make good the Title of the Book I think I may as boldly say such Confidents endeavour to advance their nescience above anothers Knowledge yea and indeed to make rash Censoriousness to ride in Triumph over sober Consideration For they judge of things as we say unsight and unseen and so make their illiterateness ad hoc to be the measure of another mans discoveries But he only that is Learned is able duly to judge of a Man of Learning Nor doth God discover all truths at once Heb. 1.1 nor to all men alike to some more to some less One Micajah let me speak it without boasting my self but in a way of Apology for my loneliness in this Tenet I say one Micajah in 1 King 22.6 c. was in the right when Four hundred false Prophets were in the wrong And so was Elijah in the right when the Four hundred and fifty Prophets of Baal and the Four hundred Prophets of the Groves greatly erred 1 Kings 18. v. 19. c. And of latter times one Paphnutius by his Wisdom and strength of Reason turned a whole Council A memorable story Men building on false Principles are sure to erre in their Conclusions For Example The Sabbath say most is the Seventh day from the Creation which say we cannot be because no Mortal Man could ever tell where the Sun first appeared to the World N. B. whether in the East or in the West whether at Noon or at Midnight whereby to fix the Beginning and the Ending of the Natural Sabbath-day that is The Natural Seventh day of Twenty four hours Besides no one day so measured out could be comensurate to make an Vniversal Seventh day to serve all Nations to begin their Sabbath at the same hour For the Sun in its swift Course makes in every hour a new Horizon and so a new hour to every Nation according to their various Situations So that the Seventh day from the Creation is quite out of doors N. B. and the Seventh day after Six days labour in every Countrey must be taken into the room thereof In this Essay as I follow no Common Rode or plural of Authors so nor do I as if displeased tread upon any mans heels that hath gone before bearing Witness to the Divine Authorization and Morality of the Sabbath though on different Principles But my greatest care is least the Reader should not be as clear in his apprehensions of my expressions as I am in this Notion touching the Identity and sameness of our Lord's Day or Sabbath with that from the Creation to Israels coming out of Aegypt The Reader therefore N. B. that is desirous to understand is intreated studiously to read the whole and then compare and ponder part with part and then impartially judge of all And may perhaps thereby be provoked and be enabled to speak more fully to the Point then I have done as a looker on we say sees oft-times more then he that plays the Game If I have broken the Ice another may wade further Truth say the Ancients lies hidden in a quick-Spring-Well therefore is not drawn out but by degrees And every degree gives Light into further Truth Impossibles as deemed become possible possibles to appear probable probables to evidence themselves demonstrable Is it impossible for a Master of Reason to imagine this Supposition That he sees Noah in his Ark and while he there sees him one while in the upper room of the Ark another while in the lower that still he sees him in the Ark No more is it impossible for a man to conceive that whiles he considers the Sabbath day in the upper region of the time of the natural Sabbath day of Twenty four hours to wit in the Evening or consider the Sabbath in the lower Region of it namely in the Morning and beginning of the said day that still it is Materially the same Sabbath day though Formally it became the Jews Sabbath as limited by Moses's Administration And it becomes formally the Christian Sabbath as it was first stated by the Patriarchs before the Flood c. and afterwards stablished by Christs Resurrection I shall conclude with this confidence in the sight of God that if I have not promoted the Stablishment of our Christian Sabbath which was my whole design I am sure it is not prejudiced by Nathanael Homes THE INTRODUCTION Concerning the ESSAY Touching the SABBATH CAPITULUM I. 1. The Thesis
time the Idolatrous Worshiping of the Host of Heaven was set up by the Assyrians and Chaldeans Josh 24.2 3. c. as aforesaid ¶ 2. As the Chaldeans had the Sun for their Supream God everlastingly Governing not only the rest of the Planets but all things else even so had other Nations also the Sun for their chiefest Governour of the World For thus they argued Si Sol ut placuit veteribus Dux est Moderator reliquorum luminum c. That is If the Sun as it was the opinion of Men in ancient times be the chief and Governour of other Luminaries he alone surmounting in excellencie the other Planets according to the vertue of whose Motions the order of all human affairs is disposed it necessarily followeth that we should acknowledge the Sun who governs those that governs our affairs to be the Author of all things that are brought to pass among us (a) Macrob. in Somno Scip. Lib. 16. Cap. 2. To the same effect Gloss mag in Gen. c. 1. Diodor. Sicul Ant. l. 1 c. 2. To come to particular Nations The PERSIANS Worshiped the SVN for their God For Simeon the A. Bishop of Salucia was Martyred by them because he would not Worship the Sun So Vsthasar Guardian and Educator of Saporis then King of Persia was by him Martyred because being Converted by the said Simeon refused to Worship the Sun (b) of these things and see at large in Sozom. Eccles Hist l. 2 cap. 8. The AEGYPTIANS likewise Worshiped the SVN Saying The Sun and Moon were everlasting Gods and Governours of all things (c) Euseb de preparat Evang. l. 1. cap. 9. This Idolatry was in Aegypt long before Joseph or Jacob or any of his Posterity set footing in Aegypt N. B. Touching that their Idolatry worshiping the SVN See Jer. 43.12 13. Babylon shall kindle a Fire in the Houses of the God of Aegypt and he shall break in pieces the Images of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Beth-shemesh that is the House of the Sun And so Arias Montan. Translates it And so doth the Sept by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is the City of the Sun And touching the Antiquity of that Idolatrous Sun-worshiping in Aegypt that it was in use there long before Joseph or Jacob or any of his Posterity were in Aegypt it is evidently held forth to us in Gen. 41. v. 45. And Pharaoh call'd Joseph's name Zapnath-paaneah and he gave him to Wife Asenath the Daughter of Potiphera PRIEST OF ON which last Clause the Sept. render 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of Potiphera the Priest of the City of the Sun which the vulgar Latin imitates saying Sacerdotis Heliopoleos And this Antiquity of Sun-worshiping Idolatry is a considerable Notion N. B. to strengthen that before touching the Ancient Patriarchs weekly worship of God the Creator of the Sun upon the Sunday For Truth is ancienter then Error and Religious Worship then Idolatrous And the brutish Barbarians could not so much turn Votaries as to Worship the Sun without some pattern which they corruptly followed of them that Worshiped the God of the Sun We know that but One thousand six hundred years since which is but as yesterday to the Ancient Patriarches it was the Heathen Romans opinion That the Christians rising before day-light and singing of Psalms was but to Worship the Sun-rising (d) Plin. 2. Fox Mart. The PHENICIANS also had the SUN for their God And the Idol in which they worshiped the Sun was called Heliogabalus (e) Herodot de vita Imper Lib. 5. Moreover the SUN was the TROJANES God They had many Gods but the chiefest was the Sun and Pallas The Image of Pallas they esteemed the Protectress of Troy and her Image called Palladium to be sent them from the Sun which they kept in the Tower or Temple of Phaebus that is of the Sun and there they adored it And Pantheus was the Priest of the Sun when Troy was taken (f) Austin de Civit. Dei l. 1. cap. 2. Virg. Aene. Lib. 2. Yea the SUN was the GRECIANS God In Athens their chief City the place of giving Judgment was to be open to the SUN presuming that the Judge durst not give a wrong judgment in the face of the SUN who is said by Homer (g) Iliad l. 3. to have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. A revenging Eye who seeth and heareth all things (h) Homer Lib. 3. which is the property of God alone saith Plato (i) Plat. de Legibus The Judge of the Court had his Name from the SUN and was therefore called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 q. d. The Sun-Judge And the Judgment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as much as to say The Judgment of the SUN The ROMANS the Posterity of the Trojan Fugitives did under several Formes and Names as of Janus Apollo Dydemaeus c. Worship the SUN (k) Macrob Saturn lib. 1. c. 17. The inhuman Nation of the SCYTHIANS though they acknowledg no other God yet they Worship the SUN as God and offer up to him an Horse the swiftest of Cattel because the SUN is the swiftest of Creatures (l) Boë ubi de Scythea In a word The AETHIOPIANS CATHANES TARTARS and the rest of the Pagan-Nations Worshiped the SUN (m) So Boemus writeing of their manners and Customs So D. Fr. White CHAP. IX Proving that our SUN-DAY or lord's-LORD'S-DAY was with the Heathen Gentiles the SEVENTH day of the Week for their solemn day of Worship and is continued with us Christians to be our weekly SEVENTH day of solemn Worship Sect. 1. WE need not spend time and words to prove a known thing That a Week is a portion of time measured out by seven days of the same kind c1ontinued without interval If any of the Seven days be Horizontal that is from Sun-rising to Sun-rising or from Sunset to Sunset or Meridional that is from Noon to noon or from Midnight to Midnight then all must be Horizontal as the Jews days of their week were from Sunset to Sunset Or all must be Meridional as the Christians week consisting of Seven days from Midnight to Midnight So that from Saturday to Saturday from Sunday to Sunday from Munday to Munday is a week ¶ 1. Accordingly the Nation of the Romans in their Language called the Week Septimana that is Seven Mornings The Saxons in their Tongue called it a Sennight The Greeks called it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the space of Seven days And so the Hebrews call a Week 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a Seven days space ¶ 2. And likewise by Scripture accompt Seven days from any set time is counted a Week Laban Gen. 29.27 bid Jacob fulfil her Week that is the Seven days of Leahs Nuptials For that was the usual time in Solemnizing Marriages Judg. 14.12 So also is a week measured out by Seven days Levit. 12. v. 2 3 5. Sect. 2. Nor need we to mind the