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

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justification so there was some analogie or proportion which this day seemed to hold with the former Sabbath which might more easily induce● them to observe the same For as God rested on the Sabbath from all the works which he had done in the Creation so did the Sonne of God rest also on the day of his resurrection from all the works which he had done in our Redemption 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Gregory Nyssen notes it for us Orat. in sanct P●scha Yet so that as the Father rested not on the former Sabbath from the works of preservation so neither doth our Saviour rest at any time from perfecting this worke of our redemption by a perpetuall application of the benefit and effects thereof This was the cause and these the motives which did induce the Church in some tract of time to solemnize the day of Christs resurrection as a weekly Festivall though not to keepe it as a Sabbath 4 I say in tract of time for ab initio non fuit sic it was not so in the beginning The very day it selfe was not so observed though it was known to the Apostles in the morning early that the Lord was risen We find not on the newes that they came together for the performance of divine and religious exercises much lesse that they intended it for a Sabbath day or that our Saviour came amongst them untill late at night as in likelihood he would have done had any such performance beene thought necessary as was required unto the making of a Sabbath Nay which is more our blessed Saviour on that d●y and two of the Disciples whatsoever the others did were other wise employed then in Sabbath duties For from Hierusalem to Emaus Luke 24. 13. whether the two Disciples went was sixty furlongs which is seven miles and an halfe and so much back again unto Hierusalem which is fifteeene miles And Christ who went the journey with them at least part thereof and left them not untill they came unto 〈◊〉 w●s back againe that night and put himselfe into the middest of the Apostles Had he intended it for a Sabbath day doubtlesse he would have rather joyned himself with the Apostles as it is most likely kept themselues together in expectation of the issue and so were most prepared and fitted to beginne the new Christian Sabbath then with those men who contrary to the nature of a Sabbaths rest were now ingaged in a journey and that for ought wee know about worldly businesses Nor may we think but that our Saviour would have told them of so great a fa●lt as violating the new Christian Sabbath even in the first beginning of it had any Sabbath been intended As for the being of the eleven in a place together that could not have relation to any Sabbath duties or religious exercises being none such were yet commanded but onely to those cares and feares wherewith poore men they were distracted which made them loath to part asunder till they were setled in their hopes or otherwise resolued on somewhat whereunto to trust And where it is conceiv●d by some that our most blessed Saviour shewed himselfe oftner unto the Apostles upon the first day of the weeke then on any other and therefore by his own appearings did sanctifie that day insteed of the Iewish Sabbath neither the premisses are true nor the sequell necessary The premisses not true for it is no where to be found that he appeared oftner on the first day then any other of the week it being said in holy Scripture that he was seen of them by the space of forty dayes Act● 1. 3. as much on one as on another His first appearing after the night following his resurrection which is particularly specified in the book of God was when he shewed himself to Thomas who before was absent I●b● 20. 26 That the text tels us was after eight dayes from the time before remēbred which some co●ceive to be the eighth day after or the next first day of the week therupon cōclude that day to be most proper for the Congregations I● Iohn l. ●7 cap. 18. or publick meetings of the Church Diem oct●●vum Christus Thomae apparuit Do●inicum diem esse necesse est as Saint Cyril hath it Iure igitur sanctae congregationes die octauo in Ecclesia fiunt But where the Greek Text reads it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 post octo dies in the vulgar Latine after eight dayes according to our English Bibles that should be rather understood of the ninth or tenth then the eighth day after and therefore could not be upon the first day of the week as it is imagined Now as the premisses are untrue so the Conclusion is unfirme For if our Saviours apparition unto his Disciples were of it selfe sufficient to create a Sabbath then must that day whereon Saint Peter went on fishing Iohn 21. ● be a Sabbath also and so must holy Thursday too it being most evident that Christ appeared on those dayes unto his Apostles So that as yet from our Redeemers resurrection unto his ascention we find not any word or Item of a new Christian Sabbath to be kept amongst them or any evidence for the Lords Day in the foure Evangelists either in precept or in practice 5 The first particular passage which doth occurre in holy Scripture touching the first day of the weeke is that upon that day the Holy Ghost did first come downe on the Apostles and that upon the same Saint Peter preached his first Sermon unto the Iewes and baptized such of them as beleeved there being add●d to the Church that day three thousand soules This hapned on the Feast of Pentecost which fell that yeare upon the Sunday or first day of the weeke as elsewhere the Scripture calls it but as it was a speciall and a casuall thing so can it yeeld but little proofe if it yeeld us any that the Lords Day was then observed or that the Holy Ghost did by selecting of that day for his descent on the Apostles intend to dignifie it for Sabbath For first it was a casuall thing that Pentecost should fall that yeare upon the Sunday It was a moveable Feast as unto the day such as did change and shift it selfe according to the position of the Feast of Passeover the rule being this that on what day ●oever the second of the Passeover did fall upon that also fell the great Feast of Pentecost ●mend Temp. l. 2. Nam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 semper eadem est fer●a quae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Scaliger hath rightly noted So that as often as the Passeover did fall upon the Saturday or Sabbath as this yeare it did then Pentocost ●ell upon the Sunday but when the Passeover did chance to fall upon the Tewsday the Pentecost fell that yeare upon the Wednesday sic de coeteris And if the rule be true as I thinke it is that no sufficient argume●t
Millaine he did not fast the Sabbath Nay which is more Saint Augustine tels us that many times in Africa one and the selfe Church Epi●t 85. at least the severall Churches in the self-●ame Prouince had some that dined upon the Sabbath and some that fasted And in this difference it stood a long time together till in the end the Romane Church obtained the cause and Saturday became a fast almost through all the parts of the Western world I say the Westerne world and of that alone The Easterne Churches being so farre from altering their ancient custome that in the ●ixt Councell of Constantinople Anno 692 they did admonish those of Rome to forbeare fasting on that day upon pain of censures Which I have noted here in its proper place that we might know the better how the matter stood betweene the Lords Day and the Sabbath how hard a thing it was for one to get the mastery of the other both dayes being in themselues indifferent for sacred uses and holding by no other tenure then by the courtesie of the Church 4 Much of this kinde was that great conflict between the East and Westerne Churches about keeping Easter and much like conduced as it was maintained unto the honour of the Lords Day or neglect thereof The Pass●over of the Iewes was changed in the Apostles times to the Feast of Easter the anniversary memoriall of our Saviours resurrection and not changed onely in their times but by their authoritie Certain it is that they observed it for Polycarpus kept it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both with Saint Iohn and with the rest of the Apostles as Irenaeus tels us in Eusebius History The like Polycrates affirmes of Saint Philip also Lib. 5. c. 26 whereof see Euseb. l. 5. c. 14. Nor was the difference which arose in the times succeeding about the Festivall it selfe but for the time wherein it was to be observed The Easterne Churches following the custome of Hierusalem kept it directly at the same time the Iewes did their Passeover and at Hierusalem they so kept it the Bishops there for fifteene severall iuccessions being of the Circu●cision the better to content the Iewes their brethren and to winne upon them But in the Churches of the West they did not celebrate this Feast decima quarta luna upō what day soever it was as the others did but on some Sunday following after partly in honour of the day and partly ●o expresse some difference between Iewes and Christians A thing of great importance in the present case For the Christians of the East reflected not upon the Sunday in the Annuall returne of so great a Feast but kept it on the fourteenth day of the moneth be it what it will it may be very strongly gathered that they regarded not the Lords Day so highly which was the weekly memory of the resurrection as to preferre that day before any other in their publick meetings And thereupon Baronius pleads it very well that certainly Saint Iohn was not the Authour of the contrary practice as some gave it out Nam quaenam potu●t esse ratio Annal An. 159. c. For what saith he might be the reason why in the Revelation he should make mention of the Lords Day as a day of note and of good credit in the Church had it not got that name in reference to the resurrection And if it were thought fit by the Apostles to celebrate the weekly memory thereof upon the Sunday then to what purpose should they keepe the Anniversary on another day And so farre questionlesse we may joyne issue with the Cardinal that either Sunday is not meant in the Revelation or else Saint Iohn was not the Authour of keeping Easter with the Iewes on what day soever Rather we may conceive that Saint Iohn gave way unto the current of the times which in those places as is said were much intent upon the customes of the Iewes most of the Christians of those parts being Iewes originally 5 For the composing of this difference and bringing of the Church to an uniformity the Popes of Rome bestirred themselues ●o did many others also And first Pope Pius publisheth a declaration Com. Tom 1. Pas●ha domini die dominica annuis solennitatibus celebrandum esse that Easter was to be solemnized on the Lords day onely In Chronic. And ●here although I take the words of the letter directory yet I relie rather upon Eus●bius for the authority of the fact then on the Decretall it selfe which is neither the substance probable and the date starke false not to be t●usted there being no such Consuls it is Crabbes owne note as are there set downe But the Authoritie of Pope Pius did not reach so farre as th Asian Churches and therefore it produced an effect accordingly This was 159. and seven yeares after Polycarpus Bishop of Smyrna a Reverend and an holy man made away to Rome 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Euseb hist l 14. c. 13. then to conferre with Anicetus then the Roman Prelate about this businesse And though one could not wooe the other to desert the cause yet they communicated together and so parted Friends But when that Blastus afterwards had made it necessary which before was arbitrary and taught it to be utterly unlawfull to hold this Feast at any other time then the Iewish Pass●over becomming so the Authour of the Quart● decimani as they used to call them then did both Eleuth●rius publish a Decree that it was onely to be kept upon the Sunday and Irenaeus though otherwise a peaceable man write a Discourse entituled De schismate contra Blastum now not extant A little before this time this hapned Anno 1●0 the controversie had tooke place in Laodicea L. 4. c. 25. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Eusebius hath it which mooved Melito Bishop of Sardis a man of speciall eminence to write two Books de Paschate and one de die Dominico 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But to what side he took it is hard to say Were those discourses extant as they both are lost wee might no doubt finde much that would conduce to our present businesse Two yeares before the clo●e of this second century Eu●eb l 5. c. 23 24. Pope Victor presuming probably on his name sends abroad his Mandat● touching the keeping of this Feast on the Lords Day onely against the which when as Polycrat●s other Asian Prelates had set out their Manifests he presently without more ado declares them all for excomm●●icate But when this rather hindred then advanced the cause the Asian Bishops caring little for those Brut a sublumina and Irenaeus who held the same side with him having perswaded him to milder courses he went anotherway to work by practising with the Prelates of severall Churches to end the matter in particular Councels Of these was one held at Osro●na another by Bachyllus Bishop of Corinth a third in Ga●l by Irenaeus a fourth in
every one of them was instar Dominicae and qualis est Dominica in all respects nothing inferiour to the Lords day And in the Comment on Saint Luke which questionlesse was writ by Ambrose cap. 17. l. 8. it is said expresly Et sunt omnes dies tanquam Dominica that every day of all ●he fiftie was to be reckoned of no otherwise in that regard especially then the Sunday was Some footsteps of this custome yet remaine amongst us in that we fast not either on S. Marks Eve or on the Eve of Philip and Iacob happening within the time The fast of the Rogation week● was after instituted on a particular and extraordinarie occasion Now as these festivals of Easter and of Whitsontide were instituted in the first age or Centurie and with them those two dayes attendant which we still retaine whereof see Austin de Civit. Dei li. 22. ca. 8. Myssen in his first Hom. de Paschate where Easter is expresly called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the three-dayes-●east so was the feast of Christs nativitie ordained or instituted in the second that of his incarnation in the third For this we have an Homilie of Gregory surnamed Tha●maturg●s who lived in An. 230 entituled De annunciatione B. Virginis as we call it now But being it is questionable among the learned whether that Homilie be his or not there is an Homilie of Athanasius on the selfe same argument he lived in the beginning of the following Centurie whereof there is no question to be made at all That of the Lords nativitie began if not before in the second Age. Theophilus C●sariens who lived about the times of Commodus and Severus the Romane Emperours makes mention of it and sixeth it upon the 25. of Decemb. as we now observe it Natalem Domini quocunq●e die 8. Calend. Ianuar. venerit celebrare debemus as his owne words are And after in the time of Maximinus which was one of the last great persecutours L. 7. C. 6. Nicephor●s tels us that In ipso natalis Dominici die Christianos Nicemediae festivitatem celebrantes succens● templ● concremavit even in the very day of the Lords nativitie he caused the Christians to be burnt at Nicomedia whilest they were solemnizing this great feast within their Temple I say this Great Feast and I call it so on the authoritie of Beda who reckoneth Christmas Orat. de Philog●n Easter and Whitsontide for majora solennia as they stil are counted But before Bede it was so thought over all the Church Chrysostome calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the mother or metropolis of all other feasts And before him Pope Fabian Se● Binius Conc. T. 1. whom but now we spake of ordained that all lay-men should communicate at least thrice a yeare which was these three festivals Etsi non frequentius saltem ter in Anno Laici homines communicent c. in Pascha Pentecoste Natali Domini So quickly had the Annuall got the better of the weekly Festivalls According to which ancient Canon the Church of England hath appointed that every man communicate at lest thrice a yeare of which times Easter to be one 12 Before we end this Chapter there is one thing yet to be considered which is the name wherby the Christians of these first Ages did use to call the day of the resurrection and consequently the other dayes of the week according as they found the time divided The rather because some are become oftended that wee retaine those names amongst us which were to us commended by our Ancestours and to them by theirs Where first we must take notice that the Iewes in honour of their Sabbath used to referre their times to that distinguishing their dayes by Prima Sabbati Secunda Sabbati and so untill they came to the Sabbath it selfe as on the other side the Gentiles following the motions of the Planets gave to each day the name of that particular Planet by which the first houre of the day was governed as their Astrologers had taught them Now the Apostles being Iewes retained the custome of the Iewes and for that reason called that day on which our Saviour rose 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 una sabbati the first day of the week as our English reads it The Fathers many of them followed their example Saint Austin thereupon calls Thursday by the name of quintum sabbati Epist. 118 and so doth venerable Beda hist. lib. 4. c. 25. Saint Hierome Tuesday tertium sabbati in Epitaph Paulae Tertullian Friday by the old name parasceve l. 4. advers Marcion Saturday they called generally the Sabbath and Sunday sometimes dies solis and is sometimes Dominicus De invent rerum l. 5 6. Pope Silvester as Polydore Virgil is of opinion va●orum deorum memoriam abhorrens hating the name and memory of the Gentile-Gods gave order that the dayes should be called by the name of F●riae and the distinction to be made by Prima feria secunda feria c. the Sabbath and the Lords day holding their names and places as before they did Hence that of H●norius Augustodunensis Hebraeinominant dies suos una vel prima sabbati De im●gine mundi cap 2● c. Pagani sic dies solis Lunae c. Christiani vero sic dies nominant viz. Dies Dominicus feria prima c. Sabbat●m But by their leaves this is no universall rule the Writers of the Christian Church no● tying up their hands so strictly as to give the dayes what names they pleased Save that the Saturday is called amongst thē by no other name then that which formerly it had the Sabbath So that when ever for a thousand years and upwards wee meet with sabbatum in any Writer of what name soever it must be und●rstood of no day but Saturday As for the other day the day of the resurrection all the Evangelists and Saint Paul take notice of no other name then of the first day of the weeke S. Iohn and after him Ignatius call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lords Day But then again Iustin Martyr for the second Century doth in two severall passages call it no otherwise then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sunday as then the Gentiles called it and we call it now and so Ter●●ullian for the third who useth both and calls it sometimes diemsolis and sometimes Dominicum as before was said Which questionlesse neither of them would have done on what respect soever had it been ●ither co●trary to the Word of God or scandalous unto his Church So for the after ages in the Edicts of Constantine V●lentinian Valens Gratian Honorius Arcadius Thendosius Christian Princes all it hath no other name then Sunday or dies solis and m●●y faire yeares after them the Synod held at Dingulafinum in the lower Bavaria Anno 772 calls it plainly Sunday Festo die solis CHAP. III. That in the fourth Age from the time of Constantine to Saint Austine the Lords day was not taken
Easter 〈…〉 to the Lords day without much opposition of the Easterne 〈◊〉 6 what Iustin Martyr and Dionysius of Corinth have left us of the Lords day with Clemens Alera●drinus his dislike thereof 〈…〉 the Christians of these Ages used to pray standing on the Lords day and the time of Pentecost 8 what is recorded by Tertullian of the Lords day and the assemblies of the Church 9 Origen as his master Clemens had done before dislikes set dayes for the Assemblie 10 Saint Cyprian what hee tells us of the Lords day and of the reading of the Scriptures in Saint Cyprians time 11 Of other holy dayes established i● these three first Ages and that they were observed as solemnely as the Lords day was 12 The name of Sunday often used by the primitive Christians for the Lords day but the Sabbath never CHAP. III. That in the fourth Age from the time of Constantine to Saint Augustine the Lords day was not taken for a Sabbath day 1 The Lords day first established by the Emperour Constantine 2 What labours were permitted and what restrained on the Lords day by this Emperours Edict 3 Of other holy dayes and Saints dayes instituted in the time of Constantine 4 That weekely other dayes particularly the Wednesday and the Friday were in this Age and those before appointed for the meetings of the congregation 5 The Saturday as highly honoured in the Easterne Churches as the Lords day was 6 The Fathers of the Easterne Church crie downe the Iewish Sabbath though they held the Saturday 7 The Lords day not spent wholly in religious exercises and what was done with that part of it which 〈◊〉 left at large 8 The Lords day in this Age a day of Feasting and that it hath beene alwayes judged haereticall to hold fasts thereon 9 Of recreations on the Lords day and of what kind those dancings were against the which the Fathers inveigh so sharpely 10 Other Imperiall Edicts about the keeping of the Lords day and the other holy dayes 11 Of publike Orders on the Lords day and the other holy ●ayes at this time in use 12 The infinite dif●erences between the Lords day and the Sabbath CHAP. IV. The great improvement of the Lords day in the fift and sixt Ages make it not a Sabbath 1 In what estate the Lords day stood in Saint Austins time 2 Stage-playes and publicke shewes prohibited on the Lords day and the other holy dayes by Imperiall Edicts 3 The base and beastly nature of the Stage-playes at those times in use 4 The barbarous and bloody qualitie of the Spectacula or Shewes at this time prohibited 5 Neither all civill businesse nor all kinde of pleasures restrained on the Lords day by the Emperour Leo as it is conceived 6 The French and Spaniards of the sixt Age begin to Iudaize about the Lords day and of restraint of husbandrie on that day in that Age first made 7 The so much cited C●non of the Councell of Mascon proves no Lords day Sabbath 8 Of publike honours done in these Ages to the Lords day both by Prince and Prelate 9 No Evening Service on the Lords day till these present Ages 10 of publike orders now established for the better regulating of the Lords day meetings 11 The Lords day not more reckoned of than the greater Festivals and of the other holy dayes in these Ages instituted 12 All businesse and recreation not by Law prohibited are in themselves as lawfull on the Lords day at on any other CHAP. V. That in the next 600. yeeres from Pope Gregory forewards the Lords day was not reckned of as of a Sabbath 1 Pope Gregories ●are to set the Lords day free from some Jewish rigours at that time obtruded on the Church 2 Strange fancies taken up by some few men about the Lords day in these darker Ages 3 Scriptures and miracles in th●se times found out to justifie the keeping of the Lords day holy 4 That in the ●udgement of the most learned in these sixe Ages the Lords day hath no other ground than the authoritie of the Church 5 With how much difficultie the people of these west●rne parts were barred from following their husbandrie and Courts of Law on the Lords day 6 Husbandry not restrained in the Easterne parts untill the time of Leo Philosophus 7 Markets and Handy-crafts restrained with no lesse opposition that the Plough and pleading 8 Severall casus reservati in the Lawes themselves wherein men were permitted to attend those businesses on the Lords day which the Lawes restrained 9 Of divers great and publike actions done in these Ages on the Lords day 10 Dancing and other sports no otherwise prohibited on the Lords day than as they were an hindrance to Gods publike service 11 The other holy daye● as much esteemed of and observed as the Lords day was 12 The publicke hallowing of the Lords day and the other holy dayes in these present Ages 13 No Sabbath all these Ages heard of either on Saturday or Sunday and how it stood with S●turday in the Easterne Churches● CHAP. VI. What is the judgement of the Schoole-men and of the Protesta●t● and what the practise of those Church●● in this Lords-day ●usin●sse 1 That in the judgement of the Schoole-men the keeping of one da● in seven is not the morall part of the 4. Commandement 2 as also that the Lords day is not founded on divine authority but the authority of the Church 3 A Catalogue of the holy dayes 〈◊〉 up in the Councell of Lyons and the new doctrine of the Schooles ●ouching the naturall sanctitie of the holy dayes 4 In what estate the Lords day stood in matter of restraint from labour at the Reformaton 5 The Reformatiours finde great fault both with the said ●ew doctrine and restraints from labour 6 That in the iudgement of the P●otestant Divines the ●●●ctifying of one day in seven is not the morall part of the 4. Commandement 7 As also that the Lords day hath no other ground on which so stand than the authority of the Church 8 And that the Church hath power to change the day and to transferre it to some others 9 What is the practise of the Roman Lutheran and chiefly the Calvinian Churches on the Lords day in matter of devotion rest from labour and sufferance of lawfull pleasure 10 Dancing cryed do●ne by Calvin and the French Churches not in relation to the Lords day but the sport it selfe 11 In what estate the Lords day stands in the Easterne Churches and that the Saturday is observed by the Ethiopians as the Lords day is CHAP. VII In what estate the Lords day stood in this Isle of Britaine from the first planting of Religion to the Refor●●tion 1 What doth occurre about the Lords day and the other Festivals amongst the Churches of the Brittans 2 Of the estate of the Lords day and the other holy dayes in the Saxon Hep●ar●hie 3 The honours done unto the Sunday and the other holy
and was to be accounted as a part of the Lords day or first day of the weeke and breaking bread that night as it is broken in the Sacrament of the Lords bodie continued his discourse till midnight Vt lucescente proficisceretur Dominico die that so he might begin his journey with the first dawning of the Lords day which was then at hand Or if they did not meet till the day it selfe since it is there expressed that he preached unto them being to depart upon the morrow we have the reason why he continued his discourse so long viz. because he was to leave them Et eos sufficienter instruere cupiebat and he desired to lesson them sufficiently before he left them So farre S. Austin Chuse which of these you will and there wil be but little found for sanctifying the Lords day by Saint Paul at Troas For if this meeting were upon Saturday night then made Saint Paul no scruple of travailing upon the Sunday or if it were on the Sunday and that the breaking bread there mentioned were the celebration of the Sacrament which yet Saint Augustine saith not in termes expresse but with a sicut yet neither that nor the discourse or sermon which was joyned unto it were otherwise then occasionall onely by reason of S. Pauls departure on the morrow after Therefore no Sabbath or established day of publick meeting to be hence collected 10 This action of Saint Paul at Troas is placed by our Chronologers in Anno 57 of our Saviours birth and tha● yeare also did he write his first Epistle to the Corinthians wherein amongst many other things hee gives them this direction touching collections for the poorer brethern at Hierusalem C. 16. v 1. Concerning the gathering for the Saints saith he as I have ordained in the Churches of Galatia so do ye also And how was that Every first day of the weeke let every one of you s●t aside by himselfe and lay up as God hath prospered him that there be no gatherings when I come This some have made a principall argument to prove the institution of the Lords day to be Apostolicall and Apostolicall though should we grant it yet certainly it never can be proved so from this Text of Scripture For what hath this to do with a Lords-day dutie or how may it appeare from hence that the Lords day was ordered by the Apostles to be weekly celebrated instead of the now antiquated Iewish Sabbath being an intimation onely of Saint Pauls desire to the particular Churches of the Galatians and Corinthians what he would have them do in a particular and present case Agabus had signified by the Spirit Act. 11. 28. 29. that there should be a great dearth over all the world and thereupon the Antiochians purposed to send reliefe unto the brethren which dwelt in Iu daea It is not to be thought that they made this collection on the Sunday onely but sent their common bounties to them when and as often as they pleased Collections for the poore in themselues considered are no Lords day duties no duties proper to the day and therefore are not here appointed to be made in the congregation but every man is ordered to lay up somewhat by himselfe as it were in store that when it came to a full round summe it might be sent away unto Hierusalem which being but a particular case and such a case as was to end with the occasion can be no generall rule for a perpet●ity For might it not fall out in time that there might be no poore nay no Saints at a●l in all Hierusalem as when the Towne was razed by Adrian or after peopled by the Saracens Surely if not before yet then this dutie was to ●ease and no collection to ●e made by those of Corinth and consequently no Lords day to be k●pt amongst them because no coll●ction in case collections for the ●aints as some do ga●her from this place were a sufficient argument to 〈◊〉 the Lords d●y 〈◊〉 ●y divine authority 〈…〉 us take the 〈…〉 observations as have beene made upon it by the Fathers Vpon the first day of the weeke i. e. as generally they conceive it on the Lords day I● locum And why on that Chrysostome gives this reason of it that so the very day might prompt them to be bountifull to their poore brethren as being that day whereon they had received such inestimable bounties at the hands of God in the resurrection of our Saviour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as that Father hath it What to be done on that day V●usquisque apud se reponat Let every man lay by himselfe saith the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He saith not saith S. Chrysostome let every man bring it to the Church And why 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for feare lest some might be ashamed at the smallnesse of their offering but let them lay it by saith he and adde unto it weeke by weeke that at my comming it may grow to a fit proportion That there be no gathering when I come but that the money may be ready to be sent away immediately upon my comming and being thus raised up by little and little they might not be so sensible thereof as if upon his comming to them it were to be collected all at once and upon the sudden Vt Paulatim reservantes non una hora gravari se putent In locum as S. Hierome hath it Now as it is most cleare that this makes nothing for the Lords day or the translation of the sabbath thereunto by any Apostolical precept so is it not so cleare that this was done upon the first day of the weeke but that some learned men have made doubt ther●of Calvin upon the place takes notice how S. Chrysostome expounds the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Apostle by primo sabbati the first day of the weeke as the English reades it but likes it not Cui ego non assentior as his phrase is conceiving rather this to be the meaning of S. Paul that on some sabbath day or other untill his comming every man should lay up somewhat towards the collection And in the second of his Institutes he affirmes expresly that the day destinate by Saint Paul to these Collections C●p. 8. ● 3● was the Sabbath day The like do Victorinus Strigelius Hunnius and Aretius Protestant Writers all note upon the place Singulis sabbatis saith Strigelius per singula sabbata so Aretius diebus sabbatorum saith Egidius Hunnius all rendring 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 on the Sabbath dayes More largely yet Hemingius who in his Comment on the place takes it indefinitely for any day in the week so they fixed on one Vult enim ut quilibet certum diem in septimana constituat in quo apud se seponat quod irrogaturus est in pauper●s Take which you will either of the Fathers or the Modernes and we shall find no Lords Day instituted by any
very evill Author Therefore as the Iews did by the festivall solemniti● of their Sabbath rejoyce in God that created the world as in the Author of of all goodnesse so they in hatred of the maker of the world sorrowed and wept and fasted on that day as being the birth-day of all evill And whereas Christi●●● men of sound heleefe did solemnize the Sunday in a joyfull memorie of Christs resurrectio● so likewise at the selfe same time such Hereticks as denyed the resurrection did contrary to them that held it and fasted when the rest rejoyced For the expressing of which two last heresies Ignat. it was that he affirmed with such zeale and earnestnesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If any one did fast either upon the Lords day or the sabbath except one sabbath in the yeare which was Easter Eve he was a murderer of Christ So he in his Epistle ad Philippenses The Canons attributed to the Apostles Can. 65. take notice of the misdemeanour though they condemne it not with so high a censure it being in them onely ordered that if a Clergie-man offended in that kinde he should be degraded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if any of the Laitie they should be excommunicated Which makes me marvell by the way that those which take such paines to justifie Ignatius as Baroniu● doth in Ann. 57. of his Grand Annales should yet condemne this Canon of imposture which is not so severe as Ignatius is onely because it speakes against the Saturdayes fast Whereof consult the Annales Ann. 102. Now as Ignatius labours here to advance the sabbath in opposition of those hereticks before remembred making it equally a festivall with the Lords day so being to deale with those which too much magnified the sabbath and thought the Christians bound unto it as the Iews had beene he bends himselfe another way and resolves it thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Let us not keep the Sabbath in a Iewish manner in sloth and idlenesse for it is written that he that will not labour shall not eate and in the sweat of thy brows shalt thou eate thy bread But let us keepe it after a spirituall fashion not in bodily ease but in the studie of the law not eating meat drest yesterday or drinking luke-warme drinks or walking out a limited space or setling our delights as they did on dancing but in the contemplation of the works of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. And after we have so kept the sabbath let every one that loveth Christ keep the Lords day festival the resurrection day the Queene and Empresse of all dayes in which our life was raised againe and death was overcome by our Lord ●nd Saviour So that we see that he would have both dayes observed the Sabbath first though not as would the Ebionites in a Iewish sort and after that the Lords day which he so much magnifieth the better to abate that high esteeme which some had cast upon the Sabbath Agreeable unto this we finde that in the Constitutions of the Apostles for by that name they passe though not made by them both dayes are ordered to be kept holy one in memoriall of the Creation the other of the Resurrection 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 See the like l. 8. c. 33. of which more hereafter 3 And so it was observed in the Easterne parts where those of the dispersion had tooke up their seats and having long time had their meetings on the Sabbath day co●ld not so easily be perswaded from it But in the Westerne Churches in the which the Iews were not so considerable and where those● hereticks before remembred had beene hardly heard of it was plainly otherwise that day not onely not being honoured with their publicke meetings but destinate to a setled or a constant fast Some which have looked more nearely into the reasons of this difference conceive that they appointed this day for fasting in memory of Saint Peters conflict with Simon Magus which being to be done on a Sunday following the Church of Rome ordained a solemne fast on the day before the better to obtaine Gods blessing in so great a businesse which falling out as they desired they kept it for a fasting day for ever after Saint Austin so relates it as a generall and received opinion but then he adde● Quod eam esse falsam perhibeant plerique Romani That very many of the Romans did take it onely for a fable As for Saint Austin he conceives the reason of it to be the severall uses which men made of our Saviours resting in the grave the whole Sabbath day For thence it came to passe saith he that some especially the Easterne people Adrequiem significandam mallent relaxare jejunium to signifie and denote that rest did not use to fast where on the other side those of the Church of Rome and some Westerne Churches kept it alwayes fasting Propter humilitatem mortis Domini by reason that our Lord that day lay buried in the sleepe of death But as the Father comes not home unto the reason of this usage in the Easterne countries so in my minde Pope Innocent gives a likelier reason for the contrary custome in the Westerne For in a Decretall by him made touching the keeping of this Fast Co●cil Tom. ● he gives this reason of it unto Decentius Eugubinus who desired it of him because that day and the day before were spent by the Apostles in griefe and heavinesse Nam constat Apostolos biduo isto in moerore fuisse propter metum I●daeorum se occul●isse as his words there are The like saith Platina that Innocentius did o●daine the Saturday or Sabbath to be alwayes fasted Quod tali die Christus in sepulchro jacuisset quod discipuli ejus jejunassent In Innocent Because our Saviour lay in the grave that day and it was fasted by his disciples Not that it was not fasted before Innocents time as some vainely thinke but that being formerly an arbitrary practi●e only it was by him intended for a binding Law Now as the African and the Westerne Churches were severally devoted either to the Church of Rome or other Churches in the East so did they follow in this matter of the Sabbaths fast the practice of those parts to which they did most adhere Millaine though neere to Rome followed the practice of the East which shewes how little power the Popes then had even within Italie it selfe Paulinus tels us also of S. Ambrose Inv●ta Amb●os that he did never use to dine nisi die sabbati Dominic● c. but on the Sabbath the Lords day and on the Anniversaries of the Saints and Martyrs Yet so that when he was at Rome hee used to doe as they there did submitting to the orders of the Church in the which hee was Whence that so celebrated speech of his Cum hi● sum nonjejuno sabbato cum Romae sum jejuno sabbato at Rome he did at
Which whosoever doth and is upright in thought word and deed adhering alwayes unto God our naturall Lord 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Every day is to him a Lords day It seemes too that he had his desire in part it being noted by the Mandeburgians that every day there were assemblies in Alexandria where he lived for hearing of the word of God Et de collectis quotidie celebratis in quibus praedicatum sit verbum Dei Hom. 9. in Isa. significare videtur as they note it from him Indeed the Proem to his severall Homilies seeme to intimate that if they met not every day to heare his Lectures they met very often But being a learned man and one that had a good conceit of his owne abilities he grew offended that there was not as great resort of people every day to heare him as upon the Festivals Of Sunday there is little doubt but that it was observed amongst them and so was Saturday also as we shall see hereafter out of Athanasius Of Wednesday and Friday it is positively said by S●crates Hist. l. 5 c. 21. that on them both the Scriptures were read openly and afterwards expounded by the Doctors of the Church and all things done appointed by the publicke Liturgie save that they did not use to receive the sacrament 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And this saith he was the old in Alexandria which he confirmes by the practi●e of Origen who was accustomed as he tells us to preach upon these dayes to the Congreg●●ion Tertullian too takes speciall notice of these two dayes whereof consult him in his booke adv Psychicos 10 About the middle of this Centurie did Saint Cyprian live another Af●ican and he hath left us somewhat although not much which concernes this busines Aurelius Lib. 2. Epist. 5. one of excellent part● was made a Reader in the Church I thinke of Carthage which being very welcome newes to the common people Saint Cyprian makes it ●●wne unto them and withall lets them understand that Sunday was the day appointed for him to begin his Ministerie Et quoni●m semper gaudium properat nec mera ferre potest laetitia dominico legit So that as Sunday was a day which they used to meet on so reading of the Scripture was a speciall part of the Sundayes exercise Not as an exercise to spend the time when one doth wait for anothers comming till the assemblie be complete and that without or choice or stint appointed by determinate order as is now used both in the French and Belgicke Churches for what need such an eminent man as Aurelius was be taken out with so much expectation to exercise the Clarks or the Sextons dutie But it was used amongst them then as a chiefe portion of the service which they did to God in hearkening reverently unto his voice It being so ordered in the Church that the whole Bible or the greatest part thereof Preface to 〈◊〉 Common prayer should be read over once a yeare And this that so the Ministers of the congregation by often reading and meditation of Gods Word be stirred up to godlinesse themselves and be the more able to● exhort other by wholesome doctrine and to conf●te them that were Adversaries to the truth as that the people by daily hearing of the Scriptures should profit more and more in the knowledge of God and be the more inflamed with the love of his true Religion Nor for the duties of the people on this day in the Congregation as they used formerly to heare the Word and receive the Sacraments and to powre forth their soules to God in affectionate prayers Decret l. 5. C 7. so much about these times viz. in Ann. 237. it had beene appointed by Pope Fabian that every man and woman should on the Lords day bring a quantitie of bread and wine first to be offered on the Altar and then distributed in the Sacrament A thing that had beene done before as of common course but now exacted as a duty for the neglect whereof Saint Cyprian chides with a rich widdow of his time who neither brought her offering nor otherwise gave any thing to the poore-mans Boxe and therefore did not keepe the Lords day D● pietat Eleemos as she should have done Locuples dives dominicum celebrarete credis quae Corbonam omnino non respicis quae in Dominicum here he meanes the Church sine sacrificio venis quae partem de sacrificio quod pauper obtulit sumis In after times this custome went away by little and little instead of which it was appointed by the Church and retained in ours that Bread and Wine for the Communion shall bee provided by the Churchwardens at the charge of the Parish I should now leave Saint Cyprian here V. l. 3 Epi 8. but that I am to tell you first that he conceives the Lords day to have beene prefigured in the eight day destinate to circum●ision Which being but a private opinion of his owne I rather shall referre the Reader unto the place then repeate the words And this is all this Age affords me in the present search 11 For other holy dayes by the Church for Gods publicke service those three Centuries precedent besides the Lords day or the Sunday which came every weeke Origen names the Good Friday as we call it now Cont. Cels. l 8. the Parasceve as he cals it there the feast of Easter and of Pente●ost Of Easter we have spoke already For Pentecost or Whitsontide as it began with the Apostles so it continues till this present but not in that solemnitie which before it had For antiently not that day onely which wee call Whitsunday or Pentecost 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but all the fiftie dayes from Easter forwards were accounted holy and solemnized with no lesse observation then the sundayes were no kneeling on the one nor upon the other no fasting on the one nor upon the other Of which dayes that of the Ascention or Holy-Thursday being one became in little time to be more highly reckoned of then all the rest as we shall prove hereafter out of Saint Austin But for these 50. dayes aforesaid De Coron 〈◊〉 c● 3. Tertullian tels us of them thus Die Dominico jejunium nefas ducimus vel de geniculis adorare Eadem immunitate a die Pasehae in Pente●osten gaudemus which makes both alike Which words if any thinke too short to reach the point he tels us in another place that all the Festivals of the Gentiles contained not so many dayes as did that one De Id● c. 14. Excerpe singulas solennitates nationum in ordinem texe Pentecosten implere non poterunt The like he hath also in his booke adv Psychicos the like Saint Hierom. ad Lucinum the like Saint Ambrose or Maximus Taurinens which of the two soever it was that made those Sermons Serm. 60. 61. In which last it is said expresly of those fifty daies that
I finde extant as a Canon of the 6 Generall councell holden in Constantinople but since both this and all the rest of the same stampe there are nine in all are thought not to belong of right unto it I have chose rather to referre it to this Theodulphus though a private man amongst whose workes I finde it in the great Bibliotheca Patrum Tom. 9. Thus in a Synod held at Coy within the realme and diocesse of Oniedo Anno 1050 it was decreed that all men should repaire to Church on the Lords day and there heare Matins Masse and other the ●anonicall houres 〈◊〉 6. as also Opus servile non excerceant nec sectentur itinera that they should doe no servile worke nor take any journey Yet with exceptions foure or five namely unlesse it were for devotions sake or to bury the dead or to visit the sicke or finally prosecreto regis vel Saracenorum impetu on speciall businesse of the Kings or to make head against the Saracens The King was much beholding to them that they would take such care of his state affaires more then some Princes might be now in case their businesse were at the disposing of particular men So had it beene decreed by severall Emperours yea and by severall Councells too which for the East part● was confirmed by Emanuel Comnenus the Easterne Emperour Anno 1174. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that all accesse to the tribunall should bee quite shut up that none of those who sate in judgement should sit on any cause that day Yet this not absolutely but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. unlesse the King shall please on any new emergent cause as many times businesse comes unlooked for to appoint it otherwise Thus also for the workes of labour fishing had beene restrained on the Lords day as a toylesome Act and on the other holy dayes as well as that yet did it please Pope Alexander the third he entred on the chaire of Rome Anno 1160. to order by his decretall that on the Lords day and the rest Decretal l. 2. 7 tit 9 c. 3. it might be lawfull unto those who dwelt upon the Coast Si halecia terrae inclinarint ●orum captioni ingruente necessitate intendere to set themselves unto their fishing in case the Herring came within their reach and the tim● was seasonable Provided that they sent a convenient portion unto the Churches round about them and unto the poore Nay even the workes of handycrafts were in some sort suffered For whereas in the Councell of Laodicea it was determined that men should rest on the Lords day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from all their handy worke and repaire to Church Balsamon tells us in his Glosse In Can. 29. Concil L●●d that so it was resolved amongst them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not absolutely but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if with conveniency they could For still saith he he lived in Anno 1191 in case men labour on that day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 either because of want or any other necessity they are held excusable Lastly whereas Pope Gregory the ninth had on the Sundayes and the holy dayes commanded ut homines jumenta omnia quiescant Chroni● Aeditui that there should be a generall restraint from labour both of man beast there was a reservation also nisi urgens necessitas instet vel nisi pauperibus vel ecclesiae gratis fiat unlesse on great necessity or some good Office to be done unto the poore or the Church 9 Nor were there reservations and exceptions onely in point of businesse and nothing found in point of practise but there are many passages especially of the greatest persons most publick actions left upon record to let us know what liberty they assumed unto themselves as well on this day as the rest And in such onely shall I instance and as being most exemplary and therefore most conducing to my present purpose And first wee reade of a great battaile fought on Palme Sunday Aventi●e Hist. ● 3. Anno. 718. betweene Charles Martell Grand master of the houshould of the king of France and Hilpericus the King himselfe wherein the victory fell to Charles and yet wee reade not there of any great necessity nay of none at all but that they might on both sides have deferred the battaile had they conceived it any ●inne to fight that day Vpon the Sunday before Lent Anno 835. Ludovick the Emperour surnamed Pius or the godly together with his Prelates and others Baro● which had beene present with him at the assembly held at Theonville went on his journey unto Mets nor doe we finde that it did derogate at all from his name and piety Vpon the Sunday after Whitsontide Anno 844. Ludowick sonne unto Lotharius the Emperour made his solemne entrance into Rome the Roman Citizens attending him with their Flagges and Ensignes the Pope and Clergy staying his comming in S. Peter● Church there to entertaine him Vpon a Sunday Anno 1014. Henry the Emperour duodecem senatoribus vallatus environed with twelve of the Roman Senatours Ditmarus Hist. l. 7. came to S. Peters Church and there was crowned together with his wife by the Pope then being On Easter day in ipsa die paschalis solennitatis Anno. 1027. Conrade the Emperour was solemnely inaugurate by Pope Iohn Canutus King of England Otho Frising hist l. 6. c. 29. and Rodalph King of the Burgundians being then both present and the next Sunday after began his journey towards Germany Vpon Palme Sunday Anno. 1084. Wibert Archbishop of Ravenna was solemnly inthronized in the Chaire of Rome Vrspergens C●●onico● and the next Sunday after being Easter day Henry the third Imperiali dignitate sublimatus est was crowned Emperour On Passion Sunday Anno 1148. Lewis the King of France afterwards Canonized for a Saint made his first entrie into Hierusalem with all his Army and yet we reade not any where that it was layd in barre against him to put by his Sainting as possibly it might be now were it yet to doe What should I speake of Councells on this day assembled as that of Charles Anno 1146. for the recovery of the holy land of Tours on Trinity Sunday as wee call it now Anno 1164. against Octavian the Pseudo Pope that of Ferrara upon Passion Sunday Anno. 1177. against Frederick the Emperour or that of Paris Anno 1226. summoned by Stephen then Bishop there on the fourth Sunday in Lent for the condemning of certaine dangerous and erronious positions at that time on foote I have the rather instanced in these particulars partly because they hapned about these times when Prince and Prelate were most intent in laying more and more restraints upon their people for the more honour of this day and partly because being all of them publicke actions and such as mooved not forwards but by divers wheeles they did require a greater number of people to attend them And howsoever Councells in
themselves be of an ecclesiasticall nature and that the crowning of a King in the act it selfe be mixed of sacred and of ●ivill yet in the traine and great attendance that belongs unto them the pompe the triumphes and concourse of so many people they are meerely secular And secular although they were yet we may well perswade our selves that neyther Actor or Spectatour thought themselves guilty any wise of offering any the least wrong to the Lords day though those solemnities no question might without any prejudice have beene put off to another time No more did those who did attend the Princes before remembred in their magnificent entries into Rome and Metz or the other millitary entrance into Hierusalem which were meere secular Acts and had not any the least mixture eyther of e●●lesiasticall or sacred nature 10 For recreations in these times there is no question to bee made but all were lawfull to bee used on the Lords day which were accounted lawfull upon other dayes and had not beene prohibited by authority and wee finde none prohibited but dancing onely Not that all kind of dancing was by Law restrained but either the abuse thereof at times unseasonable when men should have beene present in the Church of God or else immodest shamelesse dancings such as were those against the which the Fathers did inveigh so sharply in the primitive times In reference to the first Damascen tells us of some men Parallellorum lib. 3. cap. 47. who onely wished for the Lords day ut ab opere feriati vitiis operam dent that being quitted from their labours they might enjoy the better their sinfull pleasures For looke into the streets saith he upon other dayes and there is no man to bee found Die dominico egredere atque alios cithara canentes alios applaudentes saltantes c. But looke abroad on the Lords day and you shall finde some singing to the Harpe others applauding of the Musicke some dancing others jeering of their Neighbours alios denique luctantes reperi●s and some also wrastling It followeth Praco ad ecclesiam vocat omnes segnitie torpent moras nectunt cithara aut tuba personuit omnes tanquam alis instructi currunt Doth the Clarke call unto the Church they have a feaver-lurdane and they cannot stirre doth the Harpe or Trumpet call them to their pastimes they flie as they had wings to helpe them They that can finde in this a prohibition either of musicke dancing publicke sports or manlike exercises such as wrastling is on the Lords day must certainely have better eyes than Lynceus and more with than Oedipus Plainely they prove the contrary to what some alleage them and shew most clearely that the recreations there remembred were allowed of publickly otherwise none durst use them as wee see they did in the open streets Onely the Father seemes offended that they preferred their pastimes before their prayers that they made little or no haste to Church and ranne upon the spurre to their recreations that where Gods publicke service was to be first considered in the Lords day and after on spare times mens private pleasures these had quite changed the course of nature loved the Lords day more for pleasure than for devotion This is the most that can be made from this place of Damascen and this makes more for dancing and such recreations then it doth against them in case they be not used at unfitting houres Much of this nature is the Canon produced by some to condemne dancing on the Lords day as unlawfull utterly which being looked into condemnes alone immodest and unseemely dancings such as no Canon could allow of upon any day of what name soever A Canon made by Pope Eugenius in a Synod held at Rome Anno 826. what time both Prince and Prelates did agree together to raise the Lords day to as high a pitch as they fairely might Now in this Synod there were made three Canons which concerne this day the first prohibitive of businesse and the workes of labour the second against processe in causes criminall the third ne mulieres festis diehus vanis ludis vacent that women doe not give themselves on the holy dayes unto wanton sports and is as followeth Sunt quidam maxime mulieres qui festis sacris diebus c. Can. 35. Certaine the●e are but chiefly women which on the holy dayes and Festivalls of the blessed Martyrs upon the which they ought to rest have no great list to come to Church as they ought to doe sed balando turpia verba decantando c. but spend the time in dancing and in shamelesse songs leading and holding out their dances as the Pagans used and in that manner come to the Congregation These if they come unto the Church with few sinnes about them returne backe with more and therefore are to bee admonished by the parish Priest that they must onely come to Church to say their prayers such as doe otherwise destroying not themselves alone but their neighbours also Now in this Canon there are these three things to be considered First that these women used not to come unto the Church with that sobriety and gravity which was fitting as they ought to doe but dancing singing sporting as the Pagans used when they repaired unto their Temples secondly that these dancings were accompanied with immodest songs and therefore as unfit for any day as they were for Sunday and thirdly that these kind of dancings were not prohibited on the Lords day onely but on all the holy dayes Such also was the Canon of the third Councell of Tolledo Anno. 589. Decret pars 3. de consectat distinct 3. which afterwards became a part of the Canon Law though by the oversight of the Collector it is there sayd to be the fourth and this will make as little to the purpose as the other did It is this that followeth Irreligiosa consuetudo est quam vulgus per sanctorum solennitates festivitates agere consuevit Populi qui divina officia debent attendere saltationibus turpibus invigilant cantica non solum mala can●ntes sed etiam religiosorum officijs perstrepunt Hoc euim ut ab omni Hispania the Decret reades ab omnibus provincijs depellatar sacerdotum ac judicum a sancto Conci ●io cura committitur There is an irreligious custome taken up by the common people that on the Festivalls of the Saints those which should be attent on Divine Service give themselves wholy to lascivious and shamelesse dances and doe not onely sing unseemely songs but disturbe the Service of the Church Which mischiefe that it may bee soone remooved out of all the Country the Councell leaves it to the care of the Priests and Iudges Such dances and imployed to so bad a purpose there is none could tolerate and yet this generally was upon the holy dayes Saints dayes I meane as well as Sundayes whereby wee see the Church had no lesse
care of one than of the other 11 And so indeede it had not in this alone but in all things else the holy dayes as wee now distinguish them being in most points equall to the Sunday and in some superiour Leo the Emperour by his Edict shut up the Theater and the Cirque or shewplace on the Lords day The like is willed expressely in the sixt generall Councell holden at Constantinople Anno 692. Can. 66. for the whole Easter weeke Nequaquam ergo his diebus equorum cursus vel aliquod publicum fiat spectaculum so the Canon hath it The Emperour Charles restrained the Husbandman and the tradesman from following their usuall worke on the Lords day The Councell of Melun doth the same for the said Easter weeke and in more particulars it being ordered by that Synod that men forbeare during the time above remembred Can. 77. ab omni opere rurali fabrili Carpentario gynaeceo coement ario pictorio venatorio forensi mercatorio audientiali ac sacrametis exigendis from husbandry the craft of Smithes Carpenters from needle-work cementing painting hunting pleadings merchandize casting of accounts from taking Oathes The Benedictines had but three messe of pottage upon other dayes die vero dominico in praecipuis festivitatibus but on the Lords day and the principall festivalls a fourth was added as saith Theodomare the Abbot in an Epistle to Charles the Great Law-suites and Courts of judgement were to bee layd aside and quite shut up on the Lords day as many Emperours and Councells had determined severally The Councell held at Friburg Anno 895. Conc. Tribu 〈◊〉 26. did resolve the same of holy dayes or Saints dayes and the time of Lent Nullus omnino secularis diebus dominicis vel Sanctorum in festis seu Quadragesimae aut jejuniorum placitum habere sed nec populum illo pr●●sumat coercere as the Canon goeth The very same with that of the Councell of Erford Anno 932. cap. 2. But what neede private and particular Synods bee produced as witnesses herein when wee have Emperours Popes and Patriarkes that affirme the same To take them in the order in which they lived Photius the Patriarke of Constantinople Anno 858. Ap. Balsam tit 7. cap. 1. thus reckoneth up the Festivalls of especiall note viz. Seaven dayes before Easter and seaven dayes after Christmasse Epiphanie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the feasts of the Apostles and the Lords day And then he addes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that on those dayes they neither suffer publicke shewes nor Courts of justice Emanuel Comnenus next Emperour of Constantinople Ap● Balsam Anno 1174. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. We doe ordeine saith he that these dayes following be exempt from labour viz. the nativity of the Virgin Mary holy-rood day and so hee rockoneth all the rest in those parts observed together with all the Sundayes in the yeare and that in them there be not any accesse to the seates of judgement Lib. 2. tit de ferijs cap. 5. The like Pope Gregory the ninth Anno 1228. determineth in the Decretall where numbring up the holy dayes he concludes at last that neither any processe hold nor sentence bee in force pronounced on any of those dayes though both parts mutually should consent unto it Consentientibus etiam partibus nec processus habitus teneat nec sententia quam contingit diebus hujusmodi promulgari So the Law resolves it Now lest the feast of Whit sontide might not have some respect as well as Easter it was determined in the Councell held at Engelheim Cap. 6. Anno 948. that Munday Tuesday Wednesday in the Whitsun-weeke non minus quam dies dominicus solenniter honorentur should no lesse solemnely be observed than the Lords day was So when that Otho Bishop of Bamberg had planted the faith of Christ in Pomerania Vrspergens Chronic. and was to give account thereof to the Pope then being he certifieth him by his letters Anno. 1124 that having christned them and built them Churches he left them three injunctions for their Christian carriage First that they eate no flesh on Fridayes secondly that they rest the Lords day ab omni opere malo from every evill worke repairing to the Church for religious dueties and thirdly Sanctorum solennitates cum vigiliis omni diligentia observent that they keepe carefully the Saints dayes with the Eves attendant So that in all these outward matters we finde faire equality save that in one respect the principall festivals had preheminence above the Sunday For whereas fishermen were permitted by the Decretall of Pope Alexander the third as before was sayd diebus dominicis aliis festis on the Lords day and other holy dayes to fish for herring in some cases there was a speciall exception of the greater festivals praeterquam in majoribus anni solennitatibus as the order was But not to deale in generals onely Isidore Arch-bishop of Sevill in the beginning of the seventh Century making a Catalogue of the principall festivalls beginnes his list with Easter and ends it with the Lords day as before we noted in the fifth section of this Chapter Now lest it should be thought that in sacred matters and points of substance the other holy dayes were not as much regarded as the Lords day was the Councell held at Mentz Anno 813 did appoint it thus that if the Bishop were infirme or not at home Non desit tamen diebus dominicis festivitatibus qui verbum dei praedicet juxta quod populus intelligat yet there should still be some to preach Gods word unto the people according unto their capacities both on the Lords day and the other festivals Indeed why should not both be observed alike the Saints dayes being dedicated unto God as the Lords day is and standing both of them on the same authority on the authority of the Church for the particular institution on the authority of Gods Law for the generall warrant It was commanded by the Lord and written in the heart of man by the penne of nature that certaine times should bee appointed for Gods publicke worship the choycing of the times was left to the Churches power and she designed the Saints dayes as shee did the Lords both his and both alotted to his service onely This made Saint Bernard ground them all the Lords day and the other holy dayes on the fourth Commandement the third in the Account of the Church of Rome Spirituale obsequium deo praebetur in observantia sanctarum solennitatum unde tertium praceptum contexitur Serm. 3. Super Salve reg Observa diem Sabbati i. e. in sacris ferijs te exerce So S. Bernard in his third Sermon Super salve Regina 12 The Lords day and the holy dayes or Saints dayes being of so neere a kinne we must next see what care was taken by the Church in these presentages for hallowing them unto the Lord. The times were
all things are not expedient This is the generall tendry of the Roman Schooles that which is publickly avowed and made good amongst them And howsoever Petrus de Anchorana and Nicholas Abbat of Patermo two learned Canonists as also Angelus de Clavasio and Silvester de Prierats two as learned Casuists seeme to defend the institution of the Lords day to have its ground and warrant on divine authority yet did the generall current of the Schooles and of the Canonists also runne the other way And in that current still it holds the Iesuites and most learned men in the Church of Rome following the generall and received opinion of the Schoolemen whereof see Bellarm de cultu Sanct. l. 3. c. 11. Estius in 3. Sent. dist 37. Sect. 13. but specially Azorius in his Institut Moral part second cap. 2 who gives us an whole Catalogue of them which hold the Lords day to be founded onely on the authority of the Church Touching the other power the power of dispensation there is not any thing more certaine then that the Church both may and doth dispense with such as have therein offended against her Canons The Canons in themselves doe professe as much there being many casus reservati as before wee sayd expressed particularly in those Lawes and Constitutions which have beene made about the keeping of this day and the other festivalls wherein a dispensation lyeth if wee disobey them Many of these wee specified in the former Ages and some occurre in these whereof now we write Decretal .l. 2 tit de feriis cap. 5. It pleased Pope Gregory the ninth Anno 1228 to inhibit all contentious suites on the Lords day and the other festivalls and to inhibit them so farre that judgement given on any of them should be counted voyde Etiam consentientibus partibus although both parties were consenting Yet was it with this clause or reservation nisi vel necessitas urgeat vel pietas suadeat unlesse necessity inforced or piety perswaded that it should be done So in a Synod holden in Valladolit apud vallem Oleti in the parts of Spaine Anno 1322. Concil ●abinens de feriis a generall restraint was ratified that had beene formerly in force quod nullus in diebus dominicis festivis agros colere a●deat aut manualia artificia exercere praesumat that none should henceforth follow husbandry or exercise himself in mechanick trads upon the Lords day or the other holy dayes Yet was it with the same Proviso nisi urgente necessitate vel evidentis pietatis causa unlesse upon necessity or apparant piety or charity in each of which he might have licence from the Priest his owne Parish-Priest to attend his businesse Where still observe that the restraint was no lesse peremptory on the other holy dayes then on the Lords day 3 These holy dayes as they were named particularly in Pope Gregories decretall so was a perfect list made of them in the Synod of Lyons Anno 244. De consecrat distinct 3. c. 1 which being celebrated with a great concourse of people from all parts of Christendome the Canons and decrees thereof began forthwith to finde a generall admittance The holy dayes allowed of there were these that follow viz. the feast of Christs nativity ●aint Stephen S. Iohn the Evangelist the Innocents S. Silvester the Circumcision of our Lord the Epiphanie Easter together with the weeke precedent and the weeke succeeding the three dayes in Rogation weeke the day of Christs ascention Whitsunday with the two dayes after Iohn S. the Baptist the feasts of all the twelve Apostles all the festivities of our Lady S. Lawrence all the Lords dayes in the year● S. Michael the Archangell All Saints S. Martins the Wakes or dedication of particular Churches together with the feasts of such topicall or locall Saints which some particular people had beene pleased to honour with a day particular amongst themselves On these and every one of them the people were restrained as before was sayd from many severall kinds of worke on paine of ecclesiasticall censures to be layd on them which did offend unlesse on some emergent causes either of charity or necessity they were dispensed with for so doing In other of the festivalls which had not yet attained to so great an height the Councell thought not ●it perhaps by reason of their numbers that men should be restrained from labour as neyther that they should be incouraged to it but left them to themselves to bestow those times as might stand best with their affaires and the Common wealth For so the Synod did determine Reliquis festivitatibus quae per annum Cunt non esse plebem cogendam ad feriandum sed nec prohibendam And in this state things stood a long time together there being none that proferd opposition in reference to these restraints from labour on the greater festivalls though some there were that thought the festivalls too many on which those burden of restraints had unadvisedly beene imposed on the common people Nicholas de Clemangis complained much as of some other abuses in the Church so of the multitude of holy dayes Ap. Hospin cap. 4. de fest Christi which had of late times beene brought into it And Pet. de Aliaco Cardinall of Cambray in a discourse by him exhibited to the Councell of Constance made publick suite unto the Fathers there assembled that there might a stop in that kind hereafter as also that excepting Sundayes and the greater festivalls liceret operari post auditum officium it might bee lawful for the people after the end of Divine Service to attend their businesses the poore especially having little time enough on the working dayes ad vite necessaria procuranda to get their livings But these were onely the expressions of well-wishing men The Popes were otherwise resolved and did not onely keepe the holy dayes which they found established in the same state in which they found them but added others daily as they saw occasion At last it came unto that passe by reason of that rigorous and exact kind of rest which by the Canon Law had beene fastned on them that both the Lords day and the other festivalls were accounted holy not in relation to the use made of them or to the holy actions done on them in the honour of God but in and of themselves considered they were avowed to bee vere alijs sanctiores truely and properly invested with a greater sanctity then the other dayes Bellarm. de cultu S. l. 3. c. 10. Yea so farre did they goe at last that it is publickly maintained in the Schooles of Rome non sublatam esse sed mutatam tantum in novo Testamento significati●n●m discretionem dierum that the difference of dayes and times and the mysterious significations of the same which had before beene used in the Iewish Church was not abolished but onely changed in the Church of Christ. Aquinas did first leade this dance in
solennibus reckoneth up certaine dayes in which it was permitted unto free-men to enjoy their festivall liberty as the phrase there is servis autem ijs qui sunt legitima officiorum servitute astricti non item but not to slaves and such as were in service unto other men viz. the twelve dayes after Christs Nativity dies ille quo Chr●stus subegit diabolum the day wherein our Saviour overcame the Divell the festivall of Saint Gregory seaven dayes before Easter and as many after the festivall day of Saint Peter and Paul the weeke before our Lady day in harvest All-Hallowtide and the foure wednesdayes in the Ember-weeke Where note how many other dayes were privileged in the selfe same manner as the Lords day was in case that bee the day then spoke of wherein our Saviour overcame the Divell as I thinke it is as also that this privilege extended unto free-men onely servants and bond-men being left in the same condition as before they were to spend all dayes alike in their masters businesses This Alured began his reigne anno 871. and after him succeeded Edward surnamed the Elder in the yeere 900. who in a league betweene himselfe and Gunthrun King of the Danes in England did publickely on both sides prohibite as well all markettings on the Sunday as other kinde of worke whatsoever on the other holy dayes Dacus si die Dominico quicquam fuerit mercatus reipsa Oris praeterea 12 mulctator Anglus 30 solidos numerato c. If a Dane bought any thing on the Lords day he was to forfeit the thing bought and to pay 12 Oras every Ora being the fifteenth part of a pound an Englishman doing the like to pay 30 shillings A freeman if he did any worke die quocunque festo on any of the holy dayes was forthwith to be made a Bondman or to redeeme himselfe with mony a bond-slave to be beaten for it or redeeme his beating with his purse The master also whether that he were Englishman or Dane if he compelled his servants to worke on any of the holy daies was to answer for it So when it had been generally received in other places to begin the Sunday-service on the Eve before it was enacted by K. Edgar surnamed the peaceable who began his reigne anno 959 diem Sabbati ab ipsa die Saturni hora pomeridiana tertia usque in lunaris diei diluculum festum agitari that the Sabbath should beginne on Saturday at three of the clocke in the afternoone and not as Foxe relates it in his Acts and Monuments at nine in the morning and so hold on till day breake on Monday Where by the way though it be dies Sabbati in the Latine yet in the Saxon copie it is onely Healde the holy day After this Edgars death the Danes so plagued this realme that there was nothing setled in it either in Church or state till finally they had wonne the Garland and obteined the Kingdome The first of these Canutus an heroicke Prince of whom it is affirmed by Malmesbury omnes leges ab antiquis regibus maxime sub Etheldredo latas that hee commanded all those lawes to be observed which had been made by any of the former Kings and those before remembred amongst the rest of which see the 42 of his Constitutions especially by Etheldred his predecessour and that upon a grievous mulct to bee layed on such who should disobey them These are the lawes which afterwards were called King Edwards non quòd ille statuerit sed quòd observarit not because hee enacted them but that he caused them to bee kept Of these more anon Besides which Lawes so brought together there were some others made at Winchester by this King Canutus Leg. 14. 15. and amongst others this that on the Lords day there should be no marketting no Courts or publicke meetings of the people for civill businesses as also that all men absteine from hunting and from all kind of earthly work Yet was there an exception too nisi ●lagitante necessitate in cases of necessity wherein it was permitted both to buy and sell and for the people to meet together in their Courtes For so it passeth in the Law Die Dominico mercata concelebrari populive conven●us agi nisi flagitante necessitate planissime vetamus ipso praeterea die sacrosancto à venatione opere terreno prorsus omni quisque abstineto Not that it is to be supposed as some would have it that he intēded Sunday for a Sabbath day For entring on the Crown an 1017 he did no more then what had formerly been enacted by Charles the Great and severall Councels af●er him none of which dreamed of any Sabbath Besides it is affirmed of this Canutus Lib. 6. c. 29. by Otho Frisingensis that in the yeere 1027 he did accompany the Emperour Conrade at his coronation on an Easter day which questionlesse hee would not have done knowing those kinde of pompes to be meerely civill to have in them much of ostentation had he intended any Sabbath when he restrained some works on Sunday But to make sure worke of it without more adoe the lawes by him collected which we cal S. Edwards make the matter plaine where Sunday hath no other privilege then the other fea●ts which is more is ranked below thē The law is thus entituled De tēporibus diebus pacis Domini Regis the text as followeth ●og de Hoveden in Henrico secundo Ab adventu Domini usque ad octavam Epiphaniae pax Dei Ecclesiae per ●mne regnū c. From Advent to the ctaves of Epiphanie let no mans person be molested nor no suite pursued the like from Septuagesima to Low-sunday and so from holy thursday to the next Sunday after Whitsontide Item omnibus Sabbatis ab hora nona usque ad diem Lunae c. the like on Saturdayes from three in the afternoone untill munday morning as also on the Eves of the Virgin Mary S. Michael S. Iohn the Baptist all the holy Apostles of such particular Saints whose festivalls are published in the Church on the Sunday mornings the Eve of All Saints in November from three of the Clock till the solemnity be ended As also that no Christian be molested going to Church for his devotiōs or returning thence or travelling to the dedicatiō of any new erected Church or to the Synods or any publicke chapter meeting Thus was it with the Lords day as with many others in S. Edwards Lawes which after were confirmed and ratified by King Henry the second after they had long beene neglected 4 Now goe wee forwards to the Normans and let us see what care they tooke about the sanctifying of the Lords day whether they either tooke or meant it for a Sabbath And first beginning with the reigne of the first six Kings wee finde them times of action and full of troubles as it doth use to bee in unsetled states no Law
aquarum cap. 16. §. 2. à die Sabbati post vesperas usque ad diem lunae post ortum solis from Saturday after Evening prayer untill Sunne-rising on the munday This after was confirmed in the first Parliament of King Iames the first and is to this day called the Saturdaies Slop So easily did the Popes prevalle with our now friends of Scotland that neither miracle nor any speciall packet from the Court of Heaven was accounted necessary 8 But here with us in England it was not so though now the Popes had got the better of King Iohn that unhappy Prince and had in Canterbury an Archbishop of their owne appointment even that Steven Lang●on about whom so much strife was raised Which notwithstanding and that the King was then a Minor yet they proceeded here with great care and caution and brought the holy dayes into order not by command or any Decretall from Rome Ap. Lind●ood but by a councell held at Oxford Ann● 1222 where amongst other ordinances tending unto the government of the Church the holy dayes were divided into these three rankes In the first ranke were those quae omni venerati●ne servanda erant which were to bee observed with all reverence and solemnity of which sort were omnes dies Dominici c. all Sundayes in the yeere the feast of Christs Nativity together with all others now observed in the Church of England as also all the festivalls of the Virgin Mary excepting that of her Conception which was left at large with diverse which have since beene abogated And for conclusion festum dedicationis cujuslibet Ecclesiae in sua parochia the W●kes or feasts of dedication of particular Churches in their proper parishes are there determined to bee kept with the same reverence and solemnity as the Sundayes were Nor was this of the Wakes or feasts of dedication any new devise but such as could pleade a faire originall from the Councell held in Mentz anno 813 If it went no higher For in a Catalogue there made of such principall feasts as annually were to bee observed they reckon dedicationem templi the consecration feast or wake as wee use to call it and place it in no lower ranke in reference to the solemnity of the same then Easter Whitsontide and the rest of the greater festivalls Now in those Wakes or feasts of dedication were either held upon the very day on which or the Saints day to which they had first been consecrated But after finding that so many holy dayes brought no small detriment to the commonwealth it came to passe that generally these Wakes or feasts of dedication were respited untill the Sunday following as wee now observe them Of the next ranke of feasts in this Councell mentioned were those which were by Priest and Curate to bee celebrated most devo●tly with all due performances minoribus operibus servilibus secundum consu●tudinem l●●i i●●is diebus interdictis all servile workes of an inferiour and lesse important nature according to the custome of the place being layd aside Such were Saint Fabian and Sebastian and some twenty more which are therein specified but now out of 〈◊〉 and amongst them the festivall of Saint George was one which after in the yeere 1414 was made by Chicheley then Archbishop a Majus duplex and no lesse solemnely to be observed then the feast of Christmasse Of the last ranke of 〈◊〉 were those in q●ibus post missa● opera rusticana ●oncedebantur sed antequam non wherein it was permitted that men might after Masse pursue their Countrey businesses though not before and these were onely the Octaves of Epiphanie and of Iohn the Baptist and of Saint Peter together with the translations of Saint Benedict and Saint Martin But yet it seemes that on the greater festivalls those of the first ranke there was no restraint of tillage and of shipping if occasion were and that necessity did require though on those dayes Sundayes and all before remembred there was a generall restraint of all other works For so it standeth in the title prefixt before those festivalls● haec sunt festa in quibus prohibitis aliis operibus conceduntur opera agriculturae carrucarum Where by the way I have translated carrucarum shipping the word not being put for plough or Cart which may make it all one with the word foregoing but for shipps and sayling Carruca signifieth a shippe of the greater burden such as to this day wee call Carrects which first came from hence And in this sense the word is to bee found in an Epistle writ by Gildas Illis ad sua remeantibus emergunt certatim de Carruchis quibus sunt trans Seyticam vallem avecti So then as yet tillage and sayling were allowed of on the Sunday if as before I said Math. Westm●naster occasion were and that necessity so required Of other passages considerable in the reigne of K. Henry the third the principall to this point and purpose are his owne coronation on Whitsonaa● anno 1220 two yeeres before this Councell which was performed with great solemnity and concourse of people Next his bestowing the order of Knighthood on Richard de Clare Earle of Gloucester accompanied with forty other gallants of great hopes and spirit on Whitsunday too anno 1245 and last of all a Parliament assembled on mid-lent Sunday Parliamentum generalissimum the Historian calls it the next yeere after 9 This was a faire beginning but they staid not here For after in a Synod of Archbishop I●●ippes he was advanced unto that see anno 1349. Lindw l. 2. ti● de feri●s it was decreed de fratrum nostrorum consili● with the assent and counsaile of all the Prelates then assembled that on the principall feasts hereafter named there should bee generally a restraint through all the Province ab universis servilibus operibus etiam reipubl utilibus even from all manner of servile works though otherwise necessary to the Commonwealth This generall restraint in reference to the Sunday was to beginne on Saturday night ab hora diei Sabbat● vespertina as the Canon goes not a minute sooner and that upon good reason too n● Iudaic ae superstitionis participes videamur lest if they did beginne it sooner as some now would have us they might bee guilty of a Iewish superstition The same to bee observed in such other feasts quae suas habent vigilias whose Eves had formerly beene kept As also that the like restraint should bee observed upon the feast of Christmasse S. Steven S. Iohn c. and finally on the Wakes or dedication● feasts which before we spake of Now for the wo●kes before prohibited though necessary to the Commonwealth as wee may reckon husbandry and all things appertayning thereunto so probably wee may reckon lawdayes and all publicke sessions in Courts of Iustice in case they had not beene left off in former times when as the Iudg●s generall being of the Clergy might in obedience to the
Canon-law Fi●●● of the la●● l. 1. c. 3. forbeare their sessions on those dayes the Lord day especially For as our Sages in the law have resolved it generally that day is to be exempt from such businesse even by the Common law for the sole●nity thereof to the intent that people may apply themselves 〈◊〉 prayer and ●●ds publicke service Particularly Fitz-Herbert tells us that no plea shall bee holden Quindena Paschae because it is alwayes on the Sunday Nat. ●revium fol. 17. but it shall be holden ●rastino quindenae pas●●ae on the morrow after So Iustice Dyer hath resolved 1 Eliz. p. 168. that if a writ of scire facias out of the Common pleas beare Teste on a Sunday it is an errour because that day is not dies juridicus in Ban●o And so it is agreed amongst them that on a fine levied with Proclamations according to the Statute of King Henry the seventh if any of the Proclamations be made on the Lords day all of them are to be accounted erroneous Acts. But to returne unto the Canon where before wee left however that Archbishop Langton formerly and Islip at the present time had made these severall restraints from all ●●rvile labours yet they were far inough from intertayning any Iewish fancy The Canon last remembred that of Simon Islip doth expresse as much But more particularly and pun●tually wee may finde what was the judgement of these times in a full declaration of the same in a Synod a● ●ambeth what time Iohn Peckam was Archbishop which was in anno 1280. It was thus determined Sci●udum est quod obligatio ad feriandum in S●bbato legali expiravit omnino c. Lindw l. 1. ti● de offic Archipresb It is to bee understood that all manner of obligation of resting on the legall Sabbath as was required in the Old Testament is utterly expired with the other ceremonies And it is now sufficient in the New Testament to attend Gods service upon the Lords dayes and the other holy dayes ad hoc Ecclesiastica authoritate deputatis appointed by the Church to that end and purpose The manner of sanctifying all which dayes non est sumendus à superstitione Iudaica sed à Canonicis institutis is not to bee derived from any Iewish superstition but from the Canons of the Church This was exact and plaine inough and this was constantly the doctrine of the Church of England Iohannes de Burgo who lived about the end of K. Henry the sixt doth allmost word for word resolve it so in his Pupilla oculi part 10. c. 11. D. 10 Yet finde we not in these restraints that Marketting had beene forbidden either on the Lords Day or the other holy dayes and indeed it was not that came in afterwards by degrees partly by Statutes of the Realme partly by Canons of the Church not till all Nations else had long layd them downe For in the 28. of King Edward the third cap. 14. it was accorded and established that shewing of Wools shall be made at the Staple every day of the wèeke except the Sunday and the solemne Feasts in the yeere This was the first restraint in this kind with us here in England and this gives no more priviledge to the Lords Day than the solemne Festivals Nor was there more done in it Antiq. ●rit in Stafford for almost an hundred yeeres not till the time of Henry the sixt anno 1444. what time Archbishop Stafford decreed throughout his Province ut nundina● emporia in Ecclesiis aut Coemiteriis diebusque Dominicis atque Festis praeterquam tempore messis non teneantur that Faires and Markets should no more be kept in Churches and Church-yards or on the Lords dayes or the other holy dayes except in time of harvest onely If in that time they might bee suffered then certainely in themselves they were not unlawfull on any other further then as prohibited by the higher powers Now that which the Archbishop had decreed throughout his Province Catworth Lord Major of London Fabians Chronicle attempted to exceed within that cittie For in this yeere saith Fabian anno 1444 an Act was made by authority of the common Councell of London that upon the Sunday should no manner of thing within the franchise of the Citty bee bought or sold neither victuall nor other thing nor none Artificer should bring his ware unto any man to be worne or occupyed that day as Taylers garments and Cordwayners shooes and so likewise all other occupations But then it followeth in the story the which ordinance held but a while inough to shew by the successe how ill it doth agree with a Lord Maior to deale in things about the Sabbath Afterwards in the yeere 1451 which was the 28 of this Henries reigne it pleased the King in Parliament to ratifie what before was ordered by that Archbishop in this forme that followeth Considering the abominable iniuries and offenses done to Almighty God 28. H. 6. c. 16. and to his Saints alwayes ayders and singular assistants in our necessities by the occasion of faires and marketts upon their high and principall feasts as in the feast of the Ascension of our Lord in the day of Corpus Christi in the day of Whitsunday Trinity Sunday and other Sundayes as also in the high feast of the assumption of our Blessed Lady the day of All Saints and on Good Friday accustomably and miserably holden and used in the Realme of England c. our Soveraigne Lord the King c. hath ordayned that all manner of faires and marketts on the said principall feasts and Sundayes and Good Friday shall cleerely cease from all shewing of any goods and merchandises necessary victuall onely except which yet was more then was allowed in the City-Act upon paine of forfeiture of all the goods aforesaid to the Lord of the franchise or liberty where such goods be or shall be shewed contrarie to this ordinance the foure Sundayes in harvest except Which cause or reservation sheweth plainely that the things before prohibited were not esteemed unlawfull in themselves as also that this law was made in confirmation of the former order of the Arch-bishop as before was said Now on this law I finde two resolutions made by my Lords the Iudges First Iustice Brian in the 12 of King Edward the fourth declared that no sale made upon a Sunday though in a fayre or market overt for markets as it seemeth were not then quite layed downe though by law prohibited shall bee a good sale to alter the property of the goods And Ploydon in the time of Queene Elizabeth was of opinion Dal●ous Iustice. cap. 27. that the Lord of any faire or market kept upon the Sunday contrary to the statute may therefore be e●dited for the King or Queene either at the Assises or generall Gaole delivery or quarter Sessions within that County If so in case such Lord may bee endited for any fayre or market kept
THE HISTORY OF THE SABBATH IN TWO BOOKES BY PET. HEYLYN DEVT. 32. 7. Remember the dayes of old consider the yeeres of many Generations aske thy Father and hee will shew thee thy Elders and they will tell thee LONDON Printed for Henry Seile and are to bee sold at the Signe of the Tygers-head in Saint Pauls Church-yard 1636. TO THE MOST HIGH AND MIGHTIE PRINCE CHARLES By the Grace of God King of Great Brittaine France and Ireland Defender of the Faith c. Most dread Soveraigne YOur Maiesties most Christian care to suppresse those rigours which some in maintenance of their Sabbath-Doctrines had pressed upon this Church in these latter dayes iustly deserves to be recorded amongst the principall Monuments of your zeale and pietie Of the two great and publike enemies of Gods holy Worship although prophanenesse in it selfe be the more offensive yet superstition is more spreading and more quicke of growth In such a Church as this so setled in a constant practise of Religious Offices and so confirmed by godly Canons for the performance of the same there was no feare that ever the Lords Day the day appointed by Gods Church for his publike service would have beene over-runne by the prophane neglect of any pious duties on that day required Rather the danger was lest by the violent torrent of some mens affections it might have beene ore-flowne by those superstitions wherewith in imitation of the Iewes they began to charge it and thereby made it farre more burdensome to their christian Brethren than was the Sabbath to the Israelites by the Law of MOSES Nor know wee where they would have staid had not your Maiestie been pleased out of a tender care of the Churches safetie to give a checke to their proceedings in licencing on that day those Lawfull Pastimes which some without authority from Gods Word or from the practise of Gods Church had of late restrained Yet so it is your Maiesties most pious and most Christian purpose hath not found answerable entertainment especially amongst those men who have so long dreamt of a Sabbath day that now they will not be perswaded that it is a Dreame For the awakening of the which and their reduction to more sound and sensible counsailes next to my duty to Gods Church and your sacred Maiestie have I applyed my selfe to compose this Story wherein I doubt not but to shew them how much they have deceived both themselves and others in making the old Iewish Sabbath of equall age and observation with the Law of Nature and preaching their new Sabbath doctrines in the Church of Christ with which the church hath no acquaintance wherin I doubt not but to shew them that by their obstinate resolution not to make publication of your Maiesties pleasure they tacitely condemne not onely all the Fathers of the primitive times the learned Writers of all Ages many most godly Kings and Princes of the former dayes and not few Councels of chiefe note and of faith unquestionable but even all states of Men Nations and Churches at this present whom they most esteeme This makes your Maiesties interest so particular in this present Historie that were I not obliged unto your Maiestie in any neerer bond than that of every common Subiect it could not be devoted unto any other with so iust propriety But being it is the Worke of your Maiesties servant and in part fashioned at those times which by your Maiesties leave were borrowed from attendance on your sacred person your Maiesty hath also all the rights unto it of a Lord and Master So that according to that Maxime of the civill Lawes Quodcunque perservum acquiritur id domino acquirit ●uo Institut l. 1. tit ● 5. 1. your Maiestie hath as absolute power to dispose therof as of the Author who is Dread Soveraigne Your Majesties most obedient Subject and most faithfull Servant PET. HEYLYN A PREFACE To them who being themselves mistaken have misguided others in these new Doctrines of the Sabbath NOt out of any humour or desire of being in action or that I love to have my hands in any of those publike quarrels wherewith our peace hath beene disturbed but that posteritie might not say we have beene wanting for our parts to your information and the direction of Gods people in the wayes of truth have I adventured on this Story A Story which shall represent unto you the constant practise of Gods Church in the present busines from the Creation to these daies that so you may the better see how you are gone astray from the paths of truth and tendries of Antiquity and from the present judgement of all Men and Churches The Arguments whereto you trust and upon seeming strength whereof you have beene emboldned to presse these Sabbatarian Doctrines upon the consciences of poore people I purpose not to meddle with in this Discourse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They have beene elsewhere throughly canvassed and all those seeming strengths beate downe by which you were your selves misguided and by the which you have since wrought on the affections of unlearned men or such at least that judged not of them by their weight but by their numbers But where you give it out as in matter of fact how that the Sabbath was ordained by God in Paradise and kept accordingly by all the Patriarkes before Moses time or otherwise ingraft by nature in the soule of man and so in use also amongst the Gentiles in that I have adventured to let men see that you are very much mistaken and tell us things directly contrary unto truth of Story Next where it is the ground-worke of all your building that the Commandement of the Sabbath is morall naturall and perpetuall as punctually to be observed as any other of the first or second Table I doubt not but it will appeare by this following History that it was never so esteemed of by the Iewes themselves no not when as the observation of the same was most severely pressed upon them by the Law and Prophets nor when the day was made most burdensome unto them by the Scribes and Pharisees Lastly whereas you make the Lords day to be an institution of our Saviour Christ confirmed by the continuall usage of the holy Apostles and both by him and them imposed as a perpetuall ordinance on the Christian Church making your selves beleeve that so it was observed in the times before as you have taught us to observe it in these latter dayes I have made manifest to the world that there is no such matter to be found at all either in any writings of the Apostles or monument of true Antiquity or in the practise of the middle or the present Churches What said I of the present Churches so I said indeed and doubt not but it will appeare so in this following Storie the present Churches all of them both Greeke and Latin together with the Protestants of what name soever being farre different both in their Doctrine
Ioseph nor the Israelites in Aegypt did observe the Sabbath 9 The Israelites not permitted to offer sacrifice while they were in Aegypt 10 Particular proofes that all the morall Law was both knowne and kept amongst the Fathers CHAP. IV. The nature of the fourth Commandement and that the Sabbath was not kept amongst the Gentiles 1 The Sabbath first made knowne in the fall of Mannah 2 The giving of the Decalogue and how farre it bindeth 3 That in the Iudgment of the Fathers in the Christian Church the fourth Commandement is of a different nature from the other nine 4 The Sabbath was first given for a Law by Moses 5 And being given was proper onely to the Iewes 6 What moved the Lord to give the Israelites a Sabbath 7 〈◊〉 the seventh day was rather chosen for the Sabbath than any other 8 The seventh day not more honoured by the Gentiles than the eighth or ninth 9 The Attributes given by some Greeke Po●ts to the seventh day no Argument that they kept the Sabbath 10 The Iewes derided for their Sabbath by the Grecians Romans and Aegyptians 11 The division of the yeere into weekes not generally used of old amongst the Gentiles CHAP. V. The practise of the Iewes in such observances as were annexed unto the Sabbath 1 Of some particular adjuncts affixed unto the Iewish Sabbath 2 The Annuall Festivals called Sabbaths in the Booke of God and reckned as a part of the fourth Commandement 3 The Annuall Sabbaths no lesse solemnely observed and celebrated than the weekely were if not more solemnely 4 Of the Parasceve or Preparation to the Sabbath and the solemne Festivals 5 All manner of worke as well prohibited on the Annuall as the weekely Sabbaths 6 What things were lawfull to bee done on the Sabbath dayes 7 Touching the prohibition of not kindling fire and not dressing meat 8 What moved the Gentiles generally to charge the Iewes with fasting on the Sabbath day 9 Touching this prohibition Let no man goe out of his place on the Sabbath day 10 All lawfull recreations as dancing feasting man-like exercises allowed and practised by the Iewes upon their Sabbaths CHAP. VI. Touching the observation of the Sabbath unto the time the people were established in the promised Land 1 The Sabbath no● kept constantly during the time the people wandred in the wildernesse 2 Of him that gathered stickes on the Sabbath day 3 Wherein the sanctifying of the Sabbath did consist in the time of Moses 4 The Law not ordered to be reade in the Congregation every Sabbath day 5 The sacke of Hi●richo and the destruction of that people was upon the Sabbath 6 No Sabbath after this without Circumcision and how that ceremonie could consist with the Sabbaths rest 7 What moved the Iewes to preferre Circumcision before the Sabbath 8 The standing still of the Sunne ●t the prayer● of Iosuah c. could no● but make some alteration about the Sabbath 9 What wa● the Priests worke on the Sabbath day and whether it might ●●and with the Sabbaths rest 10 The 〈◊〉 of the Levites over al the Tribes had 〈◊〉 relation unto the reading of the Law on the Sabbath day CHAP. VII Touching the keeping of the Sabbath from the time of David to the Macchabees 1 Particular necessities must give place to the Law of Nature 2 That Davids flight from Saul was upon the Sabbath 3 What David did being King of Israel in ordering things about the Sabbath 4 Elijahs flight upon the Sabbath and what else hapned on the Sabbath in Elijahs ●ime 5 The limitation of a Sabbath dayes journey not know●e amongst the Iewes when Elisha lived 6 The Lord becomes offended with the Iewish Sabbaths and on what occasion 7 The Sabbath 〈◊〉 by the Samaritans and their stra●ge ●●●ities therein 8 Whether the Sabbaths were observed d●ring the captivitie 9 The speciall care of Nehemiah to reforme the Sabbath 10 The weekely reading of the Law on the Sabbath day begun by Ezra 11 No Synagogues nor weekely reading of the Law during the Government of the Kings 12 The Scribes and Doctors of the Law impose new rigours on the people about their Sabbaths CHAP. VIII What doth occurre about the Sabbath from the Macchabees to the destruction of the Temple 1 The Iewes refuse to fight in their owne defence upon the Sabbath and what was ordered thereupon 2 The Pharisees about these times had made the Sabbath burdensome by their traditions 3 Hierusalem twice taken by the Romans on the Sabbath day 4 The Romans many of them Iudaize and take up the Sabbath as other nations did by the Iewes example 5 Whether the Strangers dwelling amongst the Iewes did observe the Sabbath 6 Augustus Caesar very gracious to the Iewes in matters that concerned their Sabbath 7 What our Redeeme● taught and did to rectifie the abuses of and in the Sabbath 8 The small ruine of the Temple and the Iewish Ceremonies on a Sabbath day 9 The Sabbath abrogated with the other Ceremonies 10 Wherein consists the Christian Sabbath mentioned in the Scriptures and amongst the Fathers 11 The idle and rediculous nicities of the moderne Iewes in their Parasce●es and their Sabbaths conclude this first part THE SECOND BOOKE CHAP. I. That there is nothing found in Scripture touching the keeping of the Lords day 1 The Sabbath not intended for a perpetuall ordinance 2 Preparatives unto the dissolution of the Sabbath by our Saviour Christ. 3 The Lords day not enjoyn'd in the place thereof either by Christ or his Apostles but instituted by the authority of the Church 4 Our Saviours Resurrection upon the first day of the weeke and apparition on the same make it not a Sabbath 5 The comming downe of the Holy Ghost upon the first day of the weeke makes it not a Sabbath 6 The first day of the weeke was not kept more like a Sabbath than the other dayes by Peter Paul or 〈◊〉 other of the Apostles 7 Saint Paul frequents the Synagogues on the Iewish Sabbath and upon what reasons 8 What was concluded against the Sabbath in the Councell holden at Hierusalem 9 The preaching of Saint Paul at Troas upon the first day of the weeke no Argument that then that day was set apart by the Apostles for religious exercises 10 Collections on the first day of the weeke 1 Cor. 16. conclude as little for that purpose 11 Those places of Saint Paul Galat. 4. 10. Coloss. 2. 16. doe prove in 〈…〉 Lords day untill the end of this first Age and what that title addes unto it CHAP. II. In what estate the Lords day stood from the death of the Apostles to the reigne of Constantine 1 Touching the Order● s●●led by the Apostles for the Congregation 2 The Lords day and the Saturday both Festivals and both observed in the East in Ignatius time 3 The Saturday not without great difficul●y made fasting day 4 The controversie about keeping Easter and how much it conduceth to the present businesse 5 The ●east of
house of Israel Nor is Iosephus the only learned man amongst the Iewes that so interpreteth Moses meaning Solomon Iarchi one of the principall of the Rabbins speaks more expresly to this purpose and makes this Glosse or Comment upon Moses words Benedixit ei i.e. in manna c. God blessed the seventh day i.e. in Mannah because for every day of the week an Homer of it fell upon the earth a double portion on the sixt sanctisied it i.e. in Mannah because it fell not on the seventh day at al. Et scriptura loquitur de refutura And in this place saith he the Scripture speaks as of a thing that was to come But what need more be said Mercer a learned Protestant In Gen. 2. one much cōversant in the Rabbins cōfesseth that the Rabbins generally referred this place passage to the following times even to the sanctification of the Sabbath established by the Law of Moses Hebreifere ad futurū referunt i.e. sanctificationem Sabbati postea lege per Mosen sancitam unde Manna eo die non descendit And howsoever for his own part he is of opinion that the first Fathers being taught by God kept the seventh day holy yet he conceives withall that the Commandement of keeping holy the Sabbath day was not made till afterwards Nam hinc from Gods own resting on that day postea praeceptum de Sabbato natum est as hee there hath it Doubtlesse the Iewes who so much doted on their Sabbath would not by any means have robbed it of so great antiquity had they had any ground to approve thereof or not known the contrary So that the scope of Moses in this present place was not to shew the time when but the occasion why the Lord did after sanctity the seventh day for a Sabbath day viz. because that on that day he rested from the works which he had created 3 Nor was it otherwise conceived then that Moses here did speak by way of Prolepsis or Anticipation till Ambrose Catharin one of the great sticklers in the Trent-Councell opined the contrary Hee in his Comment on that text fals very foule upon Tostatus and therein leads the dance to others who have since taken up the same opinion Ineptum est quod quidam commentus est c. It is a foolish thing sayth he that In Gen. 2. as a certain Writer fancieth the sanctification of that day which Moses speaks of should not be true as of that very point of time whereof he speaks it but rather is to be referred unto the time wherein he wrote as if the meaning onely were that then it should be sanctified when it was ordered and appointed by the Law of Moses And this he calls Commentum ineptum contra literam ipsam contra ipsius Moseos declarationem A foolish and absurd conceit contrary unto Moses words and to his meaning Yet the same Catharin doth affirme in the self● same Booke Scripturis frequentissimum esse multa per anticipationem narrare that nothing is more frequent in the holy Scriptures then these anticipations And in particular that whereas it is said in the former Chapter male and female created he them per anticipationem di●tum esse non est dubitandum that without doubt it is so said by anticipation the woman not being made as he is of opinion till the next day after which was the Sabbath For the Anticipation he cites Saint Chrysostome who indeed tels us on that text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Behold saith he how that which was not done as yet is here related as if done already He might have added for the purpose Origen on the first of Genesis and Gregory the Great Moral lib. 32. cap. 9. both which take notice of a Prolepsis or Anticipation in that place of Moses For the creation of the woman he brings in Saint Ierome who in his Tract against the Iewes expresly saith mulierem conditam fuisse die septimo that the woman was created on the seventh day or Sabbath to which this Catharin assents and thinks that thereupon the Lord is said to have finished all his works on the seventh day that being the last that he created This seemes indeed to be the old tradition if it be lawfull for me to digresse a little it being supposed that Adam being wearied in giving names unto all creatures on the sixt day in the end whereof hee was created did fall that night into a deepe and heavy sleepe and that upon the Sabbath or the seventh day morning his side was opened and a rib took thence for the creation of the woman Aug Steuchiu● in Gen. 2. So Augustinus Steuchius reports the Legend And this I have the rather noted to meet with Catharinus at his own weapon For whereas he concludes from the rest of God that without doubt the institution of the Sabbath began upon that very day wherein God rested it seemes by him God did not rest upon that day and so we either must have no Sabbath to be kept at all or else it will be lawfull for us by the Lords example to do what ever worke we have to do upon that day and after sanctifie the remaynder And yet I needs must say withall that Catharinus was not the onely hee that thought God wrought upon the Sabbath Problem l●● 5● Aretius also so conceived it Dies itaque tota non fuit quiete transacta sed perfecto opere ejus deinceps quievit ut Hebraeus contextus habet Mercer a man well skilled in Hebrew denyeth not but the Hebrew text will beare that meaning In Gen 2. Who thereupon conceives that the seventy Elders in the translation of that place did purposely translate it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that on the sixt day God finished all the worke that he had made and after rested on the seventh And this they did saith he ut omnem dubitandi occasionem tollerent to take away all hint of collecting thence that God did any kind of worke upon that day For if hee finished all his works on the seventh day it may be thought saith he that God wrought upon it Saint Hierome noted this before that the Greeke text was herein different from the Hebrew and turns it as an argument against the Iewes and their rigid keeping of the Sabbath Artabimus igitur Iudaeos qui de ocio Sabbati gloriantur Qu Hebrai●● in Gen. quod jam tunc in principio Sabbatum dissolutum sit dum Deus operatur in Sabbato complens opera sua in eo benedicens ipsi diei quia in ipso vniversa compleverat If so if God himselfe did breake the Sabbath as Saint Hierome turns upon the Iewes wee have small cause to thinke that he should at that very time impose the Sabbath as a Law upon his creatures 4 But to proceed Others that have took part with Catharinus against Tostatus have had as ill successe as he in being forced
of mens secret thoughts yet wee may judge of good mens thoughts by their outward actions Had Ioseph coveted his Masters wife Io● 31. 26. he might have enjoyed her And Iob more home unto the point affirmes expresly of himselfe that his heart was neuer secretly enticed which is the same with this that he did not covet We conclude then that seeing there is particular mention how all the residue of the commandements had been observed and practised by the Saints of old and that no word at all is found which concerns the sanctifying of the Sabbath that certainly there was no Sabbath sanctified in all that time from the Creation to the Law of Moses nor reckoned any part of the Law of Nature or any speciall Ordinance of God CHAP. IV. The nature of the fourth Commandement and that the SABBATH was not kept among the Gentiles 1 The Sabbath first made known in the fall of Mannah 2 The giving of the Decalogue and how farre it bindeth 3 That in the judgement of the Fathers in the Christian Church the fourth Commandement is of a different nature from the other nine 4 The Sabbath was first given for a Law by Moses 5 And being given was proper onely to the Iewes 6 What moved the Lord to give the Israelites a Sabbath 7 Why the seventh day was rather chosen for the Sabbath then any other 8 The seventh day not more honoured by the Gentiles then the eighth or ninth 9 The Attributes given by some Greeke Poets to the seventh day no argument that they kept the Sabbath 10 The Iewes derided for their Sabbath by the Graecians Romans and Egyptians 11 The division of the yeere into weekes not generally used of old amongst the Gentiles 1 THus have wee shewne you how Gods Church continued without any Sabbath the space of 2500. yeares and upwards even till the children of Israel came out of Egypt And if the Saints of God in the line of Seth and the house of Abraham assigned not every seventh day for Gods publick worship it is not to be thought that the posterity of Cain and the sonnes of Canaan were observant of it To proceed therefore in the history of the Lords owne people as they observed no Sabbath when they were in Egypt so neither did they presently after their departure thence The day of their deliverance thence was the seventh day as some conceive it which after was appointed for a Sabbath to them Torniellus I am sure is of that opinion and so is Zanchie two who withall gives it for the reason why the seventh day was rather chosen for the Sabbath In quarium p●acep um then any other Populus die septima liberatus fuit ex Aegypto tunc jussit in hujus rei memoriam diem illam sanctificare Which were it so yet could not that day be a Sabbath or a day of rest considering the ●udden and tumultuous manner of their going thence their sonnes and daughters maid servants and men servants the cattell and the strangers within their gates being all put hardly to it and fain to flie away for their life and ●afety And if Saint Austins note be true and the note be his S●rm de temp 154. that on the first day of the week transgressi sunt filii Israel mare rubrum siccis pedibus the Israelites went dry foot over the Red Sea or Sea of Edom then must the day before if any be the Sabbath day the next seventh day after the day of their departure But that day certainly was not kept as a Sabbath day For it was wholly spent in murmuring and complaints against God and Moses Exod. 14. 11. 12. They cryed unto the Lord and they said to Moses why hast thou brought us out of Egypt to die in the wildernesse Had it not been better farre for us to serve the Egyptians Nothing in all this murmurings and seditious clamours that may denote it for a Sabbath for an holy Festivall Nor do we finde that for the after times they made any scruple of journying on that day till the Law was given unto the contrary in Mount Sinai which was the eleventh station after their escape from Egypt It was the fancy of Rabbi Solomon that the Sabbath was first given in Marah and that the sacrifice of the red Co● mentioned in the nineteenth of Numbers was instituted at that time also Exod. 15. 26. This fancy founded on th●se words in the Booke of Exodus If thou wils diligently hearken to the voice of the Lord thy God c. then will I bring none of those diseases upon thee that I brought on the Egyptians But Torniellus and Tostatus and Lyra though himselfe a Iew count it no other then a Iewish and Rabbinicall folly Sure I am that on the fifteenth day of the second moneth after their departure out of Egypt being that day seven-night before the first Sabbath was discovered in the fall of Mannah we finde not any thing that implies either rest or worship Exod. 16. 2. We read indeed how all the Congregation murmured as they did before against Moses and against Aar●● wishing that they had died in the land of Egypt where they had bread their b●llies full rather then be destroyed with Famine So eagerly they murmured that to content them God sent them Quailes that night and rained downe bread from Heaven next morning Was this thinke you the sanctifying of a Sabbath to the Lord their God Indeed the next seventh day that followed was by the Lord commended to them for a Sabbath and ratified by a great and signall miracle the day before wherein it pleased him to give them double what they used togather on the former dayes that they might rest upon the seuenth with the greater comfort This was a preamble or preparative to the following Sabbath for by this miracle this rest of God from raining 〈◊〉 on the seventh day the people came to know which was precisely the seventh day from the Worlds Creation whereof they were quite ignorant at that present time Philo assures us in his third Booke 〈…〉 that the knowledge of that day on which God rested from his works had been quite forgotten 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by reason of 〈…〉 which had 〈◊〉 the 〈…〉 by this miracle the Lord revived again the remembrance of it And in another place De vita Mosis l. 1. when men had made a long enquiry after the birth day of the World and were yet to seek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. God made it knowne to them by a speciall miracle which had so long beene hidden from their Ancestors The falling of a double portion of Mannah on the sixt day and the not putrifying of it on the seventh was the first light that Moses had to descry the Sabbath which he accordingly commended unto all the people to be a day of rest unto them that as God ceased that day from sending so they should
not of the same condition with the rest is no new invention The Fath●rs joyntly so resolue it It s true that Iren●ns tel● us how God the better to prepare us to eternall life Decalogi verba per somet ipsum omnibus fimiliter locutus est Li● 4. cap. 31. did by himselfe proclaime the Decalogue to all people equally which therefore is to be in full force amongst 〈◊〉 as having rather been inlarged then diss●lued by our S●viours comming in the flesh Which word● of Iren●us if considered rightly must be referred to that part of the fourth Commandement which indeed is Morall or else the fourth Commandement must not be reckoned as 〈◊〉 part or member of the Decalogue because it did receive no such enlargement as did the rest of the Commandements by our Saviours preaching whereof see Math. 5. 6 and 7. Chapters but a dissolution rather by his practice 〈◊〉 Try●●●●● Iustin the Martyr more expresly in his dispu●● with Trypl●● a learned Iew maintain●● the Sabbath to be onely a Mosaicall Ordinance as we shall see anon more fully and that it was imposed upon the Israelites 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because of their hard-heartedn●sse and irregularity Contra Iudaeos Tertullian also in his Treatise against the Iewes ●aith that it was not spiritale aternum mandatum sed temporale quod quandoque cessaret not a spirituall and eternall institution but a temporall onely Saint Austin yet more fully In Epistola ●d Ga●at that it is no part of the morall Law For he divides the Law of Moses into these two parts Sacraments and morall duties accounting Circumcision the new Moo●es Sabbath● and the Sacrifices to appertain unto the first ad mores autem non occides c. and these Commandements Thou shalt not kill nor commit adultery nor beare false witnesse and the rest to be contained within the second Nay more he tels us De Spiritu li● c. 114 that Moses did receive a Law to be delivered to the people writ in two Tables made of stone by the Lords own finger wherein was nothing to be found either of Circumcision or the Ie●ish Sacrifices And then he addes In illis igitur decem pr●ceptis excepta Sabbati observatione dicatur mihi quid non sit observādum à Christiano Tell me saith he what is there in the Decalogue except the observation of the Sabbath day which is not carefully to be observed of a Christian man To this wee may referre all those severall places wherein hee cals the fourth Commandement praeceptum figuratum i● umbra positum a Sacrament a shadow and a figure as Tract the third in Ioh. 1. and Tract 17. and 20. in Ioh. 5. ad Bonifac. l. 3. T. 7. contra Faust. Manich. l. 19. c. 18. the 14. Chapter of the Booke de spiritu lit before remembred and finally to go no further Qu. in Exod. l. 2. qu. 173. where he speaks most home and to the purpose Ex decem praeceptis hoc solum figurate dictum est Of all the ten Commandements this onely was delivered as a signe or figure See also what is said before out of Theodoret and Sedulius Chap. 1. n. 6. Hesychius goes yet further and will not have the fourth Commandement to be any of the ten Etsi decem mandatis insertum sit non tamen exiis esse In Levit. l. 6. ● 26. and howsoever it is placed amongst them yet it is not of them And therefore to make up the number divides the first Commandement in two as those of Rome have done the last to exclude the second But here Hesychius was deceived in taking this Commandement to be onely ceremoniall whereas it is indeed of a mixt or middle nature for so the Schoolemen and other learned Authors in these later times grounding themselues upon the Fathers have resolued it generally Morall it is as to the dutie that there must be a time appointed for the service of God and Ceremoniall as unto the Day to be one of seven and to continue that whole day and to surcease that day from all kinde of worke As morall placed amongst the ten Commandements extending unto all mankind and written naturally in our hearts by the hand of nature as ceremoniall appertaining to the Law Leviticall peculiar onely to the Iewes and to be reckoned with the rest of Moses institutes Aquinas thus 2. 2 ae qu 122. art 4. resp ad primum Tostatus thus in Exod. 20. qu. 11. So Petr. Galatinus also lib. 11. cap. 9. and Bonaventure in his Sermon on the fourth Commandement And so divers others 4 I say the fourth Commandement so farre as it is ceremoniall in limiting the Sabbath day to be one o● seven and to continue all that day and thereon to surcease from all kind of labour which three ingredients are required in the Law unto the making of a Sabbath is to be reckoned with the rest of Moses institutes and proper onely to the Iewes For proofe of this wee have the Fathers very copious And first that it was one of Moses institutes Iustin the Martyr saith expresly Dial. cum Tryph●●e 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. As Circumcision began from Abraham and as the Sabbath Sacrifices Feasts and Offerings came in by Moses so were they all to have an end And in another place of the same Discourse seeing there was no use of Circumcision until Abrahams time 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nor of the Sabbath untill Moses by the same reason there is as little use now of them as had been before So doth Eusebius tell us De Praeparat l. 7. c. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. that Moses was the first Law-giver amongst the Iewes who did appoint them to observe a certaine Sabbath in memory of Gods rest from the Worlds Creation as also divers anniversary Festivals together with the difference of clean and unclean creatures and of other Ceremonies not a few Next Athanasius lets us know that in the Book of Exodus Synopsis sacr● Scripe wee have the institution of the Passeover the sweetning of the bitter waters of Marah the sending down of Quailes and Mannah the waters issuing from the rocke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what time the Sabbath took beginning and the Law was published by Moses on Mount Sin●i Macarius a Contemporary of Athanasius doth affirme as much Hom. 35. viz. that in the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which was given by Moses it was commanded as in a figure or a shadow that every man should rest on the Sabbath day from the workes of labour In Ezech. ●0 Saint Hierome also lets us know though he name not Moses that the observation of the Sabbath amongst other Ordinances was given by God unto his people in the Wildernesse Haec praecepta justificationes observantiam Sabbati Dominus dedit in deserto which is asmuch as if he had expresly told us that it was given unto them
5. Rupertu● harps on the same string that the others did save that hee thinks the sabbath given for no other cause then that the labouring man being wearied with his weekly toyle might have some time to refresh his spirits Sabbatum nihil ali●d est nisi requ●es vel q●am ob ca●sam data est nisi ut operarius fessus caeteris septimanae diebus uno die requiesceret Gaudentius Brixianus in his twelfth Homily or Sermon is of the same minde also that the others were These seeme to ground themselues on the fifth of Deutronomy Vers. 14. where God commands his people to observe his sabbaths that thy man-servant and thy maid-servant may rest as well as thou And then it followeth Vers. 1● Remember that thou wast a servant in the land of Egypt and that the Lord thy God brought thee out thence though with a mighty hand an out-stretched arme therefore the Lord thy God commanded thee to keep the sabbath day The force of which illation is no more then this that as God brought them out of Egypt wherein they were servants so he commands them to take pity on their servants and let them rest upon the sabbath considering that they themselues would willingly have had some time of rest had they been permitted A second motive might be this to make them alwayes mindfull of that spirituall rest which they were to keepe from the acts of sinne and that eternall rest that they did expect from all toyle and misery In reference unto this eternall rest Saint Augustine tels De Gen. ad lit l. 4 c. 11. us that the Sabbath was commanded to the Iewes in umbra futuri quae spiritalem requiem figuraret as a shadow of the things to come in S. Pauls language which God doth promise unto those that doe the works of righteousnesse And in relation to the other the Lord himselfe hath told us that he had given his Sabbath unto the Iewes to be a signe between him and them that they might know that he was the Lord that sanctified them Exod. 31. 13. which is again repeated by Ezech. cap. 20. 12. That they may know that I am the Lord which sanctifieth them For God as Gregory Nyssen notes it seemes onely to propose this unto himself that by all meanes he might at least destroy in man De re●urrect Chr. Orat. 2. his inbred corruption 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This was his ayme in Circumcision and in the Sabbath and in forbidding them some kinde of meates 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for by the Sabbath he informed them of a rest from 〈◊〉 To cite more Fathers to this purpose were a thing unnecessary and indeed s●nsibile super sensum This yet confirmes us further that the Sabbath was intended for the Iewes alone For ●ad God given the Sabbath to all other people as he did to them it must have also been a ●ig●e that the Lord had sanctifi●d all people as hee did the Iewes 7 There is another motive yet to be considered and that concerne● as well the day as the institution God might have given the Iewes a Sabbath and yet not tied the sabbath to one day of seven or to the seventh precisely from the World● Creation Constit●i potuisset quod in die sabb●●i coloretur De●● a●t in die Mar●is aut in altera die God In Exod. 20. qu. 11. saith T●st●tus might have ordered it to have his Sabbath on the Saturday or on the Tuesday or any other day what ever what any other of the weeke and no more then so No hee might have appointed it aut bis aut semel tantum in 〈◊〉 aut in mense once or twice a yeere or every moneth as hee had listed And might not God as well exceed this number as fall short thereof yes say the Protestant Doctors that hee might have done He might have made each third or fourth or fifth day a sabbath In Exod. 20. indeed as many as he pleased Sivol●isset Deu● absolut 〈◊〉 suo pot●itplures dies imper are cultui suo impendendos so faith Doctor Ry●et one of the Professors of Leiden and a great Friend to the antiquity of the sabbath What was the principall motive then why the seventh day was chosen for this purpose and ●one but that Dial. cum Try phone 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to keep God alwayes in their mindes so saith Iustin Martyr But why should that bee rather do●● by a seventh day Sabbath then by any other De fest Paschal ●om 6. Saint Cyrill answeres to that point exceeding fully The Iewes saith hee became infe●ted with the 〈◊〉 of Egypt worshipped the 〈…〉 host of Heaven which seemes to be insinuated in the fourth of Deut. vers 19. Therefore that they might understand the Heavens to be Gods workmanship ●os 〈◊〉 suum 〈◊〉 jubet he willeth them that they imitate their Creatour that resting on the sabbath day they might the better understand the reason of the Festivall Which if they did saith hee in case they rested on that day whereon God had rested it was a plaine confession that all things were made by him and consequently that there were no other Gods besides him Et haec una ratio sabbato indicte quietis Indeed the one and onely reason that is mentioned in the body of the Commandement which re●●ects onely on Gods rest from all his worke which he had made and leaves that as the absolute and sole occasion why the seventh day was rather chosen for the sabbath then the sixt or eighth or any other Which being so it is the more to be admired that Philo being a learned Iew or any learned Christian Writer leaving the cause expressed in the Law it selfe should seeke some secret reason for it out of the nature of the day De Abrahamo or of the number First Philo tels us that the Iewes doe call their seventh day by the name of sabbath which signifieth repose and rest Not because they did rest that day from their weekly labours 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but because seven is found to be both in the world and man himselfe the most quiet number most free from trouble warre and all manner of contention A strange conceit to take beginning from a Iew Problem loc 55. yet that that followes of Aretius is as strange as this Who thinks that day was therefore consecrated unto rest even amongst the Gentiles quod putarent civilibus actionibus ineptum esse fortasse propter frigus planetae contemplationibus vero idoneum because they thought that day by reason of the dulnesse of the Planet Saturne more fit for contemplation then it was for action Some had it seemes conceived so in the former times whom thereupon To●tatus censures in his Comment on the fifth of Deutro●●●y For where it was Gods purpose Qu. 3. as before we noted out of Cyrill to weane the people from Idolatry and Superstition to lay down such a reason
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as before I said they were called Sabbaths so w●re there some of them that had particular adjuncts whereby to know them from the rest whereof the one was consta●t and the other casuall The 〈◊〉 adjunct is that of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈…〉 as the 〈◊〉 tenders it mention whereof is made in Saint Lukes Gospel Our English reades it Cap 6. 1. on the second Sabbath af●er the first A place and passage that much exercised mens wits in the former times and brought forth many strange conceits untill at last this and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and super fluvious manare font●s Cas●ub Exerc. 14. n. 1. came to be reckoned in a Proverbe as preposterous things Scaliger hath of late untied the knot and resolved it thus Eme●d Temp. lib. 6. that all the Weeks or Sabbaths from Pas●h to Pente●●st did take their name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the second day of the Feast of Passeover that being the Ep●che or point of time from which the fifty dayes were to be accompted by the Law and that the first Weeke or Sabbath after the said second day was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the second 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the third 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so the rest According to which reckoning the second Sabbath after the first as we translate it must be the first S●bbath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the second day of the Passeover The casuall adjunct is that sometimes there was a Sabbath that was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the great Sabbath Cap. 19. 31. or as it is in Saint Iohns Gospel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 magnus ille dies Sabbati as the Latine hath it And is so called not for its owne sake Excerc 16. n. 31. for Casaubon hath rightly noted nunquameam appellationem Sabbato tributam reperiri propter ipsum but because then as many other times it did the Passeover did either fall or else was celebrated on a Sabbath Even as in other cases and at other times when any of the greater and more solemne Festivalls did fall upon the Sabbath day they used to call it Epist. 110 l. 3 Sabbatum Sabbatorum a Sabbath of Sabbaths 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Isidore Pelusiotes notes it 2 For that the Annuall F●●sts were called Sabbaths too is most apparant in the Scriptures especially Levit. 23. where both the Passeover the Feast of Trampets the Feast of Expiation and the Feast of Tubernacles are severally entituled by the 〈◊〉 of Sabbaths The Fathers also note the same 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Saint Chysost●me Hom. in M●th 39. and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Isidore in the place before remembred Even the New-moones amongst the Gentiles had the same name also as may appeare by that of Horace who calls them in his Satyres Tricesima Sabbata L. 1. Sat. 9. because they were continually celebrated every thirtieth day The like they did by all the rest Emend Temp. lib. 3. if Ioseph Scaligers note be true as I think it is who hath affirmed expresly Omnem festivitatem Iudaicam non s●lum Iudaeos sed Gentiles sabbatum vocare Nay as the weekly Sabbaths some of them had their proper adjuncts De Sabbat Circumcis so had the annuall Saint Athanasius tels us of the Feast of Expiation that it was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the principall Sabbath for so I take it is his meaning which selfe same attribute is given by Origen to the Feast of Trumpets Clemens In Num. 2● h●m 23. of Alexandria 6. Stromat brings in a difference of those Festivalls out of a supposed worke of Saint Peter the Apostle wherein besides the New-moons and Passeover which are there so named they are distributed into 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the first Sabbath the Feast 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so called Exer. 14. ● 1. and the Great day Casaubon for his part protesteth ipsi obscurum esse quid fit sabbatum primum that he was yet to seek what should the meaning be of that first Sabbath But Scaliger conceives and not improbably that by this first Subbath ●●●nd Temp. ●roleg Edit 2. or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was meant the Feast of Trumpets because it was caput anni or the beginning of the civill yeere the same which Origen cals Sabbatum sabbatorum as before we noted As for the Feast 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so named in Clemens that hee conceives to be the Feast of Pentecost and the great day in him remembred the Feast of Tabernacles for the which last he hath a●thority in the Scriptures who tell of the Great day of this very Feast Ioh. 7. 37. Not that the Feast of Tabernacles was alone so called but in a more especiall manner For there were other dayes so named besides the Sab●aths 〈…〉 Dies 〈◊〉 saith Tertullian sabbata ut opinor coenas puras jej●nia dies magnos Where sabbata dies magni are distinguished plainly Indeed it stood with reason that these annuall Sabbaths should have the honour also of particular adjuncts as the weekly had being all founded upon one the same Commandement Philo affirmes it for the Iewes De Decalog 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. The fourth Command●●ent ●aith he is of the Sabbath and the Festivalls of Vowes of Sacrifices formes of purifying and other parts of divine worship Which is made good by Zanchie for the Christian Writers who in his worke upon the De●alogue doth resolue it thus In Ma●d●t 4 Sabbati nomine ad I●daeos quod attinebat Deus intellexit non solum sabbatum septem dierum sed sabbata etiam annorum item omnia festa quae per Mosen illis explicavit It was the morall part of the fourth Commandement that some time should be set apart for Gods publicke service and in the body of that Law it is determined of that time that it should be one day in seven Yet not exclusively that there should be no other time appointed either by God or by his Church then the seventh day onely God therefore added other times as to him seemed best the list whereof wee may behold in the twenty third of Leviti●us and the Church too by Gods example added also some as namely the Feast of Dedication and that of Purim 3 Now as the Annuall Festivalls ordained by God had the name of Sabbath as the weekly had ●o the observances in them were the ●ame or not m●ch different if in some things the weekly Sabbath seemed to have preheminence the Annuall Sabbaths went beyond thē in some others also For the cōtinuance of these Feasts the weekly Sabbath was to be observed throughout th●ir generations for a perpetuall covenant Exod 31. 16. So for the Passeover you shall observe it throughout your generations by an ordinance for ever Exod. 12. 14. The like of Pentecost it shall be 〈◊〉 for●ver throughout your gen●rations
particular Ordinances which have been severally affixed to the fourth Commandement either by way of Comment on it or addition to it that which is most considerable is that prohibition in the 35 of Exodus viz. Vers. 12. Ye shall kindle no fire throughout your habitations on the sabbath day The Rabbins some of them conceive that hereby is meant that no man must be beaten or put to death upon the sabbath and then it must be thus expounded yee shall kindle no fire i. e. to burne a man upon the sabbath who is condemned by the Law to that kinde of death and consequently not to put him on that day unto any punishment at all Others of late referre that prohibition unto the building of the Tabernacle in that Chapter mentioned and then the meaning will be this that they should make no fire on the sabbath no though it were to hasten on the worke of the holy Tabernacle Philo restraines it chiefly unto manuall Trades 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such whereby men doe get their livings and then it must be thus interpreted yee shall not kindle any fire that is to doe any common ordinary and servile works like as doe common Bakers Smiths and Brewers by making it part of their usuall trade De vit Mos. l. 3. The later Rabbins almost all and many Christian Writers also taking the hint from Vatablus and Tremelius in their Annotations referre it unto dressing of meat according to the latter custome Nay generally the Iews in the later times were more severe and rigid in the exposition of that Text and would allow no fire at all except in sacred matters onely For whereas Rabbi Aben Ezra had so expounded it Tostat. in Iosu● ● q. 2. quod liceat ignem accendere ad calefaciendum si urgeret frigus that it was lawfull to make a fire wherewith to warme ones selfe in the extremity of cold weather though not to dresse meate with it for that dayes expence the Rabbins generally would have proceeded against him as an Hereticke and purposely writ a Booke in confutation of him which they called the Sabbath How this interpretation was thus generally received I cannot say But I am verily perswaded that it was not so in the beginning Ex. 16. 23. and that those words of Moses quae coquenda sunt hodie coquite bake that which yee will bake to day and seeth what ye will seeth which words are commonly produced to justifie and confirme this fancie do prove quite contrary to what some would have them The Text and Context both make it plaine and manifest that the Iewes baked their Mannah on the Sabbath day The people on the sixt day had gathered twice as much as they used to do whereof the Rulers of the Congregation acquainted Moses And Moses said to morrow is the rest of the holy Sabbath unto the Lord bake that which yee will bake to day and seeth what yee will seeth and that which remayneth over lay up to be kept untill the morning i. e. As much as you conceive will be sufficient for this present day that bake or boyle according as you use to doe and for the rest let it be laid by to be baked or boyled to morrow that you may have wherewith to feed you on the Sabbath day That this interpretation is most true and proper I●e●se 24. appeares by that which followeth in the holy Scripture viz. They laid it up as Moses bade and it did not stinke neither was any worme therein as that which they had kept till morning on some day before Verse 20. This makes it evident that the Mannah was laid up unbaked for otherwise what wonder had it been at all that it did neither breed worme nor stinke had it been baked the day before Things of that nature so preserved are farre enough from putrifying in so short a time This I am verily perswaded was the practice then and for this light unto that practice I must ingenuously confesse my selfe obliged to Theophilus Braborne Cha● ● the first that ever looked so neere into Moses meaning And this most likely was the practice of the Iewes in after times even till the Pharisees had almost made the words of God of no effect by their traditions for then came in those many rigid ordinances about this day which made the day and them ridiculous unto all the Heathens Sure I am that the Scriptures call it a day of gladnesse for it was a Festivall and therefore probable it is that they had good cheere And I am sure that D. Bo●nd the Founder of these Sabbatarian fancies 2 Edit p. 137. 138. though he cōceive that dressing meat upon the Sabbath was by the words of Moses utterly unlawfull in the time of Mannah yet hee conceives withall that that Commandement was proper onely unto the time of Mannah in the Wildernesse and so to be restrained unto that time onely Therefore by his confession the Iewes for after times might as well dresse their meat on the Sabbath day as on any other notwithstanding this injunction of not kindling fire Indeed why not as well dresse meat as serve it in the attendance of the servant at his Masters Table being no lesse con●iderable on the Sabbath day then of the Cookes about the Kitchin especially in those riotous and excessive Feasts which the Iewes kept upon this day however probably they might dresse their meat● on the day before 8 I say those riotous and excessive Feasts which the Iewes ●ept upon that day and I have good authoritie for what I say Saint Augustine tels us of them they kept the Sabbath onely * Tract 3. in Ioh. ad luxuriam ebrietatem and that they rested onely * De 10. chordis c. 3. ad nugas luxurias suas that they consumed the day languide luxurioso otio and finally did abuse the same not onely * In Psal 91. deliciis Iudaicis but ad nequitiam * In Psal. 32. even to sinne and naughtinesse Put altogether and we have luxury and drun●ennes●e and sports and pleasures enough to manifest that they spared not any dainties to set forth their Sabbath though on a Pharisaicall prohibition they forbare to dresse their meats upon it Nay Sympo Isac l. 4. Plutarch layes it to their charge that they did feast it on their Sabbath with no small excesse but of wine e●pecially Who thereupon conjectureth that the name of Sabbath had its originall from the Orgies or Feasts of Bacchus whose Priests used often to ingeminate the word Sabbi Sabbi in their drunken Ceremonies Which being so it is the more to be admired that generally the Romans did upbraid this people with their Sabbaths fast Augustus having been at the Bathes Suet●n in Octau c. 76. and fasting there a long time together gives notice of it to Tiberius thus ne Iuda●ns quide● tam dilig●nter sabbatis jej●●ium 〈◊〉 that 〈◊〉 any I●w ●ad
〈◊〉 more exactly on the Sabbaths then he did that day 〈◊〉 Martial reckoning up some things of unsavoury ●●ell names amongst others ●ejunia sabbatariorum for by that name hee did con●emp●ously mean the Iewes as bef●re I noted And where the R●mans in those times bega● some of them to incline to the Iewish Ceremonies and were observant of the Sabbath as wee shall ●ee hereafter in a p●ace more proper Sat. 5. Persius objects against them this 〈◊〉 a monent 〈…〉 i. e. that being Romans as they were they 〈◊〉 out their Prayers as the Iewes accustomed and by observing of the Fast on the Iewish Sabbaths gr●w leane and pale for ●●ry hunger So saith Petroni●● An●●er that the Iewes did celebrate their Sabbath jejunia lege Hist. l. 36. by a legall fast and Iustin yet more generally septimum diem more gentis sabbatum appellatum in omne aevum jejunto sacravit Moses that Moses did ordain● the ●abbath to be a fasting day for ever ●hat the Iewes fasted very often sometimes twice a weeke the Pharisee hath told us in Saint Lukes Gospel and probably the jejunia sabbatariorum in the Poet Martial might reflect on this But that they fasted on the Sabbath is a thing repugnant both to the Scriptures Fathers and all good antiquity except in one case onely which was when their City was besieged Ap. Baron A. 34. n. 156. as Rabbi Moyses Aegyptius hath resolued it N●y if a man had fasted any time upon the Sabbath they used to punish him in this sort ut sequenti etiam die jejunaret to make him fast the next day after Yet on the other side I cannot but conceive that those before remembred had some ground or reason why they did charge the Iewes with the Sabbaths Fast for to suppose them ignorant of the Iewish custome consi●ering how thick they lived amongst them even in Rome it selfe were a strange opinion The rather since by Plutarch who lived not long after Sueton if hee lived not with him the Iewes are generally accused for too much riot and excesse upon that day For my part I conceive it thus I finde in Nehemiah Cap. 8. ● 3. that when the people were returned from the captivity Ezra the Priest brought forth the Law before the Congregation and read it to them from the morning untill mid-day which done they were dismissed by Nehemiah to eat Vers 10. 12. and drinke and make great joy which they did accordingly This was upon the first day ●f the Feast of Tabernacles Vers 18. one of the solemne Annuall Sabbaths and this they did for eight dayes together from the first day unto the last that the Feast continued After when as the Church was s●tled and that the Law was read amongst them in their Synagogu●s on the weekly Sabbaths most probable it is that 〈…〉 the same custome holding the Congregation from morn to noon and that the Iewes came thither Fasting ●s generally men doe now unto the Sacrament the better to prepare themselues and their attention for t●at holy exercise In vit Mosi● Sure I am that Ios●phus tels us that at mid-day they used to dismisse the Assemblies that being the ordinary houre for their repast as also that Buxdorfius saith of the moderne Iewes S●n. Iud. cap. 10. that ultra tempus m●ridianum jejunare non licet it is not lawfull for them to fast beyond the noon-tide on the Sabbath days Besides they which found ●o great fault with our Lords Di●ciples for eating a few eares of Corn on the Sabbath day are not unlikely in my minde to have aimed at this For neither was the bodily labour of that nature that it should any wayes offend them in so high a measure and the defence made by our Lord in their behalfe being that of Davids eating of the S●ew-bread when he was an hungred is more direct and literall to justifie his Disciples eating then it was their working This abstinence of the I●wes that lived amongst them the R●mans noted and being good Trenchermen themselues at all times and seasons they used to hit them in the teeth with their Sabbaths fasting But herein I submit my selfe to better judgements 9 There was another prohibition given by God about the Sabbath which being misinterpreted became as great a snare unto the consciences of men as that before remembred of not kindling fire 〈◊〉 16. and dressing meate upon the Sabbath viz. Let no man goe out of his place on the seventh day Which pr●hibition being a bridle onely unto the people to keepe them in from seeking after Mannah as before they did upon the Sabbath was afterwards extended to restrain them also either from taking any journey or walking forth into the fields on the Sabbath dayes Nay so precise were some amongst them that they accounted it unlawfull to stirre hand or foot upon the Sabbath ne leviter quispi●m se 〈◊〉 quod s● fecerit legis trangressor fit 〈◊〉 5● 13. as Saint Hierom● hath it Others more charitably chalked them out a way how farre they might advent●re and how farre they might not though in this the Doctours were divided Some made the Sabbath dayes journey to be 2000. Cubits 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ep● 151. of whom Orig●n tels us others restrained it to 2000. foot of whom Hierom● speakes and some againe enlarged it unto six furlongs which is three quarters of a mile For where Ios●phus hath informed us that Mount Olivet was sixe furlongs from Hierusalem and where the Scriptures tell us that they were distant about a Sabbath dayes journey wee may perceive by that how much a Sabbath dayes journey was accounted then But of thes● things we may have opportunity to speake hereafter In the mean time if the injunction be so absolute and generall as they say it is we may demand of these great Clerks as their Successours did of our Lord and Saviour by what authoritie they doe these things and warrant that which is not warranted in the Text if so the Text be to be expounded Certaine I am that ab initio non fuit sic from the beginning was it neither so nor so The Scripture tels us that when the people were in the Wildernesse they found a man gathering sticks on the Sabbath day They found him where Not in the Campe hee was not so audacious as to transgres●e the Law in the open view of all the people knowing how great a penalty was appointed for the Sabbath-breaker but in some place farre off where in he might offend without feare or danger Therefore the people were permitted to walke forth on the Sabbath day and to walke further then 2000. foot or 2000. Cubits otherwise they had never found out this unlucky fellow And so saith Philo De vita Mosis l. 3. that they did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Some of the people going out into the wildernesse that they might finde some quiet and retired place in
which to make their Prayers to God saw what they looked not for that wretched and prohited spectacle So that the people were not stinted in their goings on the Sabbath day nor now nor in a long time after as by the course of the ensuing story will at large appeare Even in the time of Mannah they did not thinke themselues obliged not to stirre abroad upon the Sabbath or not to travaile above such and such a compasse in case they did it not out of a meere distrust in God as before they did to gather Mannah but either for their meditation or their recreation 10 What said I for their recreation what was that permitted yes no doubt it was Though the Commandement did prohibit all manner of work yet it permitted questionlesse some manner of pleasures The Sabbaths rest had otherwise been more toylesome then the week-dayes labour and none had gained more by it then the Oxe and Asse Yea this injunction last related Let none g● out of his place on the seventh day had been a greater bondage to that wretched people then all the drudgeries of Egypt Tostatus tels us on that Text non est simpliciter intelligendum c. It is not so to be conceived that on that day the people might not stirre abroad or go out of their doores at all but that they might not goe to labour or trafficke about any wordly businesses Etenim die sa●bati ambulari possunt Hebraei ad solaciandum c. For the Iewes lawfully might walk forth on the Sabbath day to recreate and refresh themselues so it be not in pursuite of profit And this he saith on the confession of the Iews themselves Cop. 10. ut ipsi communiter confitentur Buxdorfius in his Iewish Synagogue informes us further Permissum est juvenibus ut tempore sabbati currendo spatiando saltando sese oblectent c. It is saith he permitted that their young men may walke and run yea and dance also on the Sabbath day and leape and jumpe and use other ma●like Exercises in case they doe it for the honour of the holy Sabbath This speakes he of the moderne Iewes men as tenacious of their Sabbath and the rigours of it as any of the Ancients were save that the Essees and the Pharisies had their private flings above the meaning of the Law Of manly Exercises on the Sabbath wee shall see more anon in the seventh Chapter And as for dancing that used anciently to dance upon the ●ab●at● is a thing unquestionable Saint Austine saith they used it and rebukes them for it not that they danced upon the Sabbath but that they spent wasted the whole day in dancing There is no question an abuse even of lawfull pleasures And this is that which he so often layes unto them I● P●al 32. Melius tota die foderent quam tota die saltarent better the 〈◊〉 did digge all day then dance all day And for the women melius e●rum foeminae lanam facerent quam illo die in neomeniis saltarent ●roct 3. in Iob. 1. better the women spin then waste all that day and the New-moones in dancing as they use to do I have translated it all that day agreeable unto the Fathers words in another place where it is said expresly in tota die Melius foeminae eorum die sabbati lanas facerent quam tota die in neomeniis suis impudice saltarent De decem chordis c. 3. Where note not dancing simply but lascivio●s dancing and dancing all day long without respect to pious and religious duties Ad Mag●esianos are by him disliked Ignatius al●o saith the same where he exhorts the people not to observe the Sabbath in a ●ewish fashion walking a limited space and setting all their mind 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as they did in dancing and in capering They used also on that day to make invitations Feasts and assemblies of good neighbourhood to foster brotherly love and concord amongst one another a thing even by the Pharisees themselues both allowed and practis●d Saint Luke hath given an instance of it Luk● 14. ● how Christ went into the house of a chiefe Pharisee to eat bread on the Sabbath day In plainer termes the Pharisee invited him that day to dinner Wee may as●ure our selves so famous a Professour had not invited so great a Prophet nor had our Saviour Christ accepted of the invitation had they not both esteemed it a lawfull matter It ●eemes it was a common practice for friends to meete and feast together on the Sabbath Finito cultu Dei solebant amici convenire inter se convivia agitare Harmon c. 119. as Chemnitius notes upon the place Lastly they used upon this day as to invite their Friends and Neighbours so to make them welcome oy●ting their heads with oile to refresh their bodies and spending store of wine amongst them to make glad their hearts In which regard whereas all other marketting was unlawfull on the Sabbath dayes there never was restraint of selling wine the Iewes beleeving that therein they brake no Commandement Hebraei faciunt aliquid speciale in vino viz. In Exod 1● quod ●um in sabbato suo à caeteris venditionibus emptionibus cessent solum vinum vendunt credentes se non solvere sabbatum as Tostatus hath it How they abused this lawfull custome of Feasting with their Friends and Neighbours on the Sabbath day into foule riot and excesse we have seen already So having spoken of the weekly and the Ann●all Sabbaths the differenc● and agreement which was betweene the● both in the institution and the observation as also of such severall observances as were annexed unto the same what things the Iewes accounted lawf●ll to be done and what unlawfull and how farre they declared the same in their constant practice it is high time that we continue on the story ranking such speciall passages as occure hereafter in their place and order CHAP. VI. Touching the obse●vation of the SABBATH unto the time the people were established in the Promised Land 1 The Sabbath not kept constantly during the time the people wandred in the Wildernesse 2 Of him that gathered sticks on the Sabbath day 3 Wherein the sanctifying of the Sabbath did consist in the time of Moses 4 The Law not ordered to be read in the Congregation every Sabbath day 5 The sack of Hiericho and the destruction of that people was upon the Sabbath 6 No Sabbath after this without Circumcision and how that Ceremony could consist with the Sabbaths rest 7 What moued the Iewes to preferre Circumcision before the Sabbath 8 The standing still of the Sun at the prayers of Io●uah c. could not but make some alteration about the Sabbath 9 What was the Priests worke on the Sabbath day and whether it might stand with the Sabbaths rest 10 The scattering of the Levites over all the ●ribes had no relation unto the reading of
the Law on the Sabbath dayes 1 WE left this people in the Wildernes where ●he Law was given them and whether this Commandement were there kept or not hath been made a question and that both by the Iewish Doctours and by the Christian. Some have resolved it negatively that it was not kept in all that time which was forty yeares and others that it was at some times omitted according to the stations or removes of Israel or other great and weighty businesses which might intermit it It is affirmed by Rabbi Solomon that there was onely one Passeover observed whiles they continued in the Deserts notwithstanding that it was the principall solemnity of all the yeare Et si illud fuit omissum multo fortius alia minus principalia If that saith he then by an argument à majore ad minus much rather were the lesser Festivals omitted also Ap. Galatin l. 11. c. 10. More punctually Rabbi Eleazar who on those words of Exodus and the people rested the s●venth day Chap. 16. 30. gives us to understand that for the space of forty yeares whilest they were in the Wildernesse non fecerunt nisi duntaxat primum sabbatum they kept no more then that first Sabbath According unto that of the Prophet Amos Have yee offered unto mee sacrifices and offerings in the wildernesse forty yeares O house of Israel Chap. 5. 25. On which authority Ar●tius for the Christian Doctors doth affirme the same Sabbata per annos 40. n●n observavit in deserto populus Dei Amos 5. 25. Probl. loc 35. The argument may be yet inforced by one more particular that Circum●ision was omitted for all that while and yet it had precedency of the Sabbath both in the institution for the times before and in the observation for the times that followed If therefore neither Circumcision nor the daily sacrifices nor the Feast of Passeover being the principall of the Annuall Sabbaths were observed by them till they came to the land of Canaan why may not one conclude the same of the weekly Sabbaths Others conceive not so directly but that it was omitted at ●ometimes and on some occasions Omitted at some times as when the people journied in the Wildernesse many dayes together In Exod. 12 nulla requi●●liquorum dierum habita without rest or ceasing and this the Hebrew Doctours willingly confesse as Tostatus tels us Omitted too on some occasions as when the spi●s were sent to discover the Land what was the strength thereof and what the riches in which discovery they spent fo●ty dayes it is not to be thought that they kept the Sabbath It was a perillous work that they went about not to be discontinued and layed by so often as there were Sabbaths in that time But not to stand upon conjectures the Iewish Doctors say expresly that they did not keepe it Lib. 11. c. 10. So Galatine reports from their owne records that in their latter exposition on the Book of Numbers upon those words Chap. 13. 2. send men that they may search the land of Canaan they thus resolue it Nuncio praecepti licitum est c. A Messenger that goes upon Command may travaile any day at what time hee will And why because he is a Messenger upon command Nuncius autem praecepti excludit sabbatu● The phrase is somewhat darke but the meaning plaine that those which went upon that errand did not keepe the Sabbath Certaine it also is that for all that time no nor for any part thereof the people did not keepe the Sabbath completely as the Law appointed For where there were two things concurring to make up the Sabbath fir●t rest from labour and secondly the sacrifices destinate unto the day however they might rest some Sabbaths from their daily labours yet sacrifices they had none untill they came into the land of Canaan 2 Now that they rested sometimes on the Sabbath day and perhaps did so generally in those forty yeares is manifest by that great and memorable businesse touching the man that gathered sticks upon the Sabbath The case is briefly this Numb 15. Vers. 32. ad 37. the people being in the wildernes found a man gathering sticks on the Sabbath day and brought him presently unto Moses Moses consulted with the Lord and it was resolued that the offender should be stoned to death which was done accordingly The Law before had ordered it that he who so offended should be put to death but the particular manner of his death was not knowne till now The more remarkable is this case because it was the onely time that wee can heare of that execution had been done upon any one according as the Law enacted and thereupon the Fathers have took some pains De vit Mos. l. 3 to search into the reasons of so great severity Philo accuseth him of a double crime in one whereof hee wa● the principall and an Accessar● onely in the other For where it was before commanded that there should be no fire kindled on the Sabbath day this party did not onely labour on the day of rest but also laboured in the gathering of such materials 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which might administer fuell to prohibited fire Saint Basil seemes a little to bemoan the man De judicio D●i in that hee smarted so for his first offence not having otherwise offended either God or Man and makes the motive of his death neither to consist in the multitude of his sinnes or the greatnesse of them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but onely in his disobedience to the will of God But we must have a more particular motive yet then this And first Rupertus tels us In locum per superbiam illud quod videbatur exiguum commisit that he did sinne presumptuously with an high hand against the Lord and therefore God decreed he should die the death God not regarding either what or how great it was sed qua mente fecerat but with what minde it was committed But this is more I think then Rupertus knew being no searcher of the heart Rather I shall subscribe herein unto Saint Chrysostome Hom. 39. in Math. 12. Who makes this Quaere first seeing the Sabbath as Christ saith was made for man why was he put to death that gathered sticks upon the Sabbath And then returns this answere to his owne demand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. because in case God had permitted that the Law should have been slighted in the first beginning none would have kept it for the future Qu 31. ●n Num. Theodoret to that purpose also ne autor fieret leges transgrediendi lest oth●r men encouraged by his example should have done the like the punishment of this one man striking a terrour unto all No question but it made the people farre more observant of the Sabbath then they would have beene who were at first but backwards in the keeping of it as is apparant by that passage
Law unto the people on the Sabbath dayes as after in the Synagogues For where those Cities were but foure in every Tribe one with another the people must needs travaile further then six Furlongs which was a Sabbath dayes journey of the largest measure as before we noted or else that nice restriction was not then in use And were it that they tooke the paines to goe up unto them yet were not those few Cities able to cōtain the multitudes When Ioab not long after this 2 S●m ●4 did muster Israel at the command of David he found no fewer then thirteen hundred thousand fighting men Suppose we then that unto every one fighting man there were three old men women and children fit to heare the Law as no doubt there were Put these together and it will amount in all to two and fifty hundred thousand Now out of these set by foure hundred thousand for Hierusalem and the service there and then there will remayne one hundred thousand just which must owe suite and service every Sabbath day to each severall City of the Levites Too vast a number to be entertained in any of their Cities and much lesse in their Synagogues had each house beene one So that wee may resolue for certain that the dispersion of the Levites over all the Tribes had no relation hitherto unto the reading of the Law or any publick Sabbath duties CHAP. VII Touching the keeping of the SABBATH from the time of David to the Maccabees 1 Particular necessities must give place to the Law of Nature 2 That Davids flight from Saul was upon the Sabbath 3 What David did being King of Israel in ordering things about the Sabbath 4 Elijahs flight upon the Sabbath and what else hapned on the Sabbath in Elijahs time 5 The limitation of a Sabbaths dayes journey not known amongst the Iewes when Elisha lived 6 The Lord becomes offended with the Iewish Sabbaths and on what occasion 7 The Sabbath entertained by the Samaritans and their strange niceties therein 8 Whether the Sabbaths were observed during the Captivitie 9 The speciall care of Nehemiah to reforme the Sabbath 10 The weekly reading of the Law on the Sabbath dayes began by Ezra 11 No Synagogues nor weekly reading of the Law during the Government of the Kings 12 The Scribes and Doctours of the Law impose new rigours on the people about their Sabbaths 1 THus have wee traced the Sabbath from the Mount to Silo the space of forty five yeares or thereabouts wherein it was observed sometimes and sometimes broken broken by publick order from the Lord himselfe and broken by the publick practice both of Priest and people No precept in the Decalogue so controuled and justled by the Legall Ceremonies forced to give place to Circumcision because the younger and to the Legall Sacrifices though it was their Elders t and all this while no blame or imputation to be laid on them that so prophaned it Men durst not thus have dallied with the other nine no no● with this neither had it been a part of the Law of nature Yet had the Sabbath beene laid by in such cases onely wherein the Lord had specially declared his will and pleasure that these and these things should be done upon it or preferred before it there was lesse reason of complaint But we shall see in that which followed that the poore Sabbath was inforced to yeeld up the place even to the severall necessities and occasions of particular men and that without Injunction or Command from the Court of Heaven This further proves the fourth Commandement as farre as it concernes the time one whole day of seven Ryvet in Deca to be no part nor parcell of the Law of Nature for if it were the Law of Nature it were not dispensable no not in any exigent or distresse what euer Nullum poriculum suadet ut qua ad legem natur alem directe pertinent infringamus No danger saith a moderne Writer is to occasion us to breake those bonds wherewith wee are obliged by the Law of Nature Aquinas 1. 2 ae qu. 100. art 9. Nor is this onely Protest●nt Divinitie for that Praecepta decalogi omnino sint indispensabilia is a noted maxime of the Schoolmen And yet it is not onely Schoole Divinitie Qu. 〈◊〉 N. Test. 6● for the Fathers taught it It is a principle of Saint Austins Illud quod omnino non licet semper non licet nec aliqua necessitate mitigatur ut admissum non obsit est enim semper illicitum quod legibus quia criminosum est prohibetur That saith the Father which is unlawfull in it selfe is unlawfull alwayes nor is there any exigent or extremity that can so excuse it being done but that it makes a man obnoxiou● unto Gods displeasure For that is alwayes to be reckoned an unlawfull thing which is forbidden by the Law because simply evill So that in case this rule be true as no doubt it is and that the fourth Commandement prohibiting all manner of worke on the Sabbath day as simply evill be to be reckoned part of the Morall Law they that transgresse this Law in what case soever are in the self-same state with those who to preserve their lives or fortunes renounce their Faith in God and worship Idols which no man ought to do no though it were to gain the world For what will it profit a man to gain the world and to lose his soule 2 But sure the Iewes accounted not the Sabbath of so high a nature as not to venture the transgressing of that Law if occasion were Whereof or of the keeping it we have no monument in Scripture till we come to David The residue of Iosuah and the Booke of Iudges give us nothing of it Nor have wee much in the whole story of the Kings but what we have wee shall present unto you in due place and order And first for David we reade in Scripture how he stood in feare of Saul his Master 1. Sam. 20. how in the Festivall of the New-moon his place was empty how Saul became offended at it and publickly declared his malicious purpose which in his heart he had before conceived against him On the next morning Ionathan takes his bow and arrowes goes forth a shooting takes a boy with him to bring back his arrowes and by a signall formerly agreed between them gives David notice that his Father did seeke his life David on this makes haste and came to Nob unto Abimelech the Priest and being an hungry desires some sustenance at his hands The Priest not having ought else in readinesse sets the Shew-bread before him which was not lawfull for any man to eat but the Priest alone Now if we aske the Fathers of the Christian Church what day this was on which poore David fled from the face of Saul they answere that it was the Sabbath Saint Athanasius doubtingly H●m d● sem●n●● with a peradventure 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
most likely that it was the Sabbath His reason makes the matter surer than his resolution The Iewes saith hee upbraid our Saviour that his Disciples plucked the eares of Corne on the Sabbath day to satisfie which doubt hee tells them what was done by David on a Sabbath also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as that Father hath it Saint Hierome tells us that the day wheron he fled away from Saul was both a Sabbath and New-moone In Ma●h 12. ad sabbati solennitatem accedebant neomeniarum dies Indeed the story makes it plaine it could be no other The Shew-bread was changed every Sabbath in the morning early that which was brought in new not to be stirred off from the Table till the Week was out the other which was taken away being appropriated to the Priests and to be eaten by them onely Being so stale before wee may the easier thinke it lay not long upon their hands and had not David come as he did that morning perhaps hee had not found the Priest so well provided in the afternoon Had David thought that breaking of the Sabbath in what case soever had been a sinne against the eternall Law of Nature he would no doubt have hid himselfe that day in the field 1. Sam. 20. Verse 19 24 by the stone Ezel as he had done two dayes before rather then so have run away as well from God as from the King Especially considering that on the Sabbath day hee might have lurked there with more safetie then before he did none being permitted as some say by the Law of God to walke abroad that day if occasion were Neither had David passed it over in so light a manner had he done contrary to the Law That heart of his which smote him for his murder and adultery and for his numbring of the people would sure have taken some impression upon the breaking of the Sabbath had hee conceived that Law to be like the rest But David knew of no such matter neither did Ionathan as it seemes For howsoever Davids fact might be excused by reason of the imminent perill yet surely Ionathans walking forth with his bow and arrowes was of a very different nature Nor did he doe it fearfully and by way of stealth as if he were affraid to avow the action but tooke his Page with him to bring back his arrowes and called aloud unto him to doe thus and thus according as he was directed as if it were his usuall custome Ionathan might have thought of some other way to give advertisement unto David of his Fathers anger rather then by a publick breaking of the Sabbath to provoke the Lords But then as may from hence be gathered shooting and such like manlike exercises were not accounted things unlawfull on the Sabbath day 3 This act and flight of Davids from the face of Saul hapned in Torniellus computation Anno 2974 and forty six yeares after that being 3020 of the Worlds Creation and the last yeare of Davids life hee made a new division of the sonnes of Levi. For where the Levites were appointed in the times before to beare about the Tabernacle as occasion was the Tabernacle now being fixed and setled in Hierusalem there was no further use of the Levites service 1. Chron 23. 4 5 in that kind Therefore King David thought it good to set them to some new employments and so he did some of them to assist the Priests in the publick Ministery some to be Overseers and Iudges of the people some to be Porters also in the house of God and finally some others to be singers to prayse the Lord with instruments that he had made with Harps with Viols and with Cymballs Of these the most considerable were the first and last The first appointed to assist at the daily Sacrifices Vers. 31. as also at the Offering of all burnt Offerings unto the Lord in the Sabbaths in the moneths and at the appointed times according to the number and according to their custome continually before the Lord. The other were instructed in the songs of the Lord. Chap. 25. 7. The other chiefly which were made for the Sabbath dayes and the other Festivals and one hee made himselfe of his owne enditing entituled a Song or Psalme for the Sabbath day Calvin upon the 92 Psalme is of opinion Psal. 92. that hee made many for that purpose as no doubt hee did and so he did for the Feasts also Antiq Iud. l. 7. c. 10. Iosephus tels us that hee composed Odes and Hymnes to the prayse of God as also that hee made divers kinds of instruments and that hee taught the Levites to prayse Gods Name upon the Sabbath dayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the other Festivals as well upon the Annuall as the weekly Sabbath Where note that in the distribution of the Levites into severall Offices there was then no such Office thought of as to be Readers of the Law which prooves sufficiently that the Law was not yet read publickly unto the people on the Sabbath day Nor did he onely appoint them their Songs and Instruments but so exact and punctuall was hee that he prescribed what habit they should weare in the discharging of their Ministery in singing prayses to the Lord which was a white linnen rayment such as the Surplice 2. Chron. 5. 12 13. now in use in the Church of England Also the Levites saith the Text which were the singers being arrayed in white linnen having Cymbals and Psalteries and Harps stood at the East end of the Altar c. praysing and thanking God for his Grace and mercies And this he did not by commandement from above or any warrant but his own as we finde and that he thought it fit and decent David the Prophet of the Lord knew well what did belong to David the King of Israel in ordering matters of the Church and setling things about the Sabbath Nor can it be but worth the notice that the first King whom God raised up to be a nursing Father unto his Church should exercise his regall power in dictating what hee would have done on the Sabbath day in reference to Gods publick worship As if in him the Lord did meane to teach all others of the same condition as no doubt he did that it pertaines to them to vindicate the day of his publicke service as well from superstitious fancies as prophane contempts and to take speciall order that his name be glorified as well in the performances of the Priests as the devotions of the people This speciall care wee shall find verified in Constantine the first Christian Emperour of whom more hereafter in the next Booke and third Chapter Now what was there ordained by David was afterwards confirmed by Solomon wherof see 2. Chron. 8 14 Who as he built a Temple for Gods publick worship for the New-moones and weekly Sabbaths and the solemne Feasts as the Scripture tels us so hee or some of
began to set at naught the Lord and to forget that God that brought them out of the Land of Egypt when they began to loath his Sabbaths and prophane his Festivals as they did too often the Lord expostulates the matter with them as well for one as for the other When they were weary of the New-moone Am●● 8. 5. and wished it gone that they might sell corn and of the Sabbath because it went not fast enough away that they might set forth wheate to sale the Lord objects against them both the one and the other by his Prophet Amos that they preferred their profit before his pleasure In locum Et Deisolennitates turpis lucri gratia in sua verterent compendia as Saint Hierome hath it When on the other side they did prophane his Sabbaths and the holy Festivals with excesse and furfeiting carowsing wine in bowles 〈◊〉 6. stretching themselues upon their couches and oynting of themselues with the chiefe oyntments the Lord made knowne unto them by his servant Esaiah how much he did dislike their courses The New-moones and Sabbaths Chap. ● ●4 the calling of Assemblies I cannot away with it is iniquity even the solemne meeting It seemes they had exceedingly forgot themselues when now their very Festivals were become a sinne Nay God goes further yet your New-moones and your appointed F●asts my soule hateth Chap. 1. 14. they are a trouble to mee I am weary to beare them Your New-moones and your Feasts saith God are not mine Non enim mea sunt quae geritis they are no Feasts of mine Sermo 12. which you so abuse How so Iudaei enim neglectis spiritualibus negotjis quae pro animae salute agenda deus praeceperat omnia legitima sabbati ad ocium luxuriaemque contulere So ●aid Gaudentius Brixianus The Iewes saith he neglecting those spirituall duties which God commanded on that day abused the Sabbaths rest unto ease and luxury Cyrill in Amos 8. For whereas being free from temporall cares they ought to have employed that day to spirituall uses and to have spent the same in modesty and temperan●e 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and in the repetition and commemoration of Gods holy Word they on the other side did the contrary 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wasting the day in gluttony and drunkennesse and idle delicacies How farre Saint Augustiue chargeth them with the self-same crimes wee have seene before Thus did the house of Israel rebell against the Lord and prophaene his Sabbaths And therefore God did threaten them by the Prophet Hosea Hos. 2. 1● that hee would cause their mirth to cease their Feast dayes their New-moones and Sabbaths and their solemne Festivals that so they might be punished in the want of that which formerly they had abused 7 And so indeed he did beginning first with those of the revolted Tribes whom he gave over to the hand of Salmanassar the Affyrian by whom they were lead Captive unto parts unknowne and never suffered to returne Those which were planted in their places as they desired in tract of time to know the manner of the God of the Land so for the better means to attaine that knowledge they entertained the Pentateuch or five Books of Moses and with them the Sabbath They were beholding to the Lions which God sent amongst them Otherwise they had never knowne the Sabbath nor the Lord who made it Themselues acknowledge this in an Epistle to Antiochus Epiphanes when hee made havock of the Iewes The Epistle thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. To King Antiochus Epiphanes Ioseph Antiq. li. ● 2. c. 7. the mighty God the suggestion of the Sidonians that dwell at Sichem Our Ancestors enforced by a continuall plague which destroyed their Country this was the Lions before spoken of and induced by an ancient superstition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tooke up a custome to observe that day as holy which the Iewes call the Sabbath So that it seemes by this Epistle that when the A●●yrian sent backe one of the Priests of Israel to teach this people what was the manner of the God of the Land that at that time they did receive the Sabbath also which was about the yeare of the Worlds Creation 3315. The Priest so sent is said to have been called Dosthai and as the word is mollified in the Greeke Orig 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 l. 4. it is the same with Dositheus who as hee taught these new Samaritans the observation of the Sabbath so as some say he mingled with the same some nea● devises o● his own For whereas it is said in the Booke of Exodus Let no man go out of his place on the sabbath day this Dositheus if at lest this were hee keeping the letter of the Text did affirme and teach that in what ever posture any man was found 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the beginning of the sabbat● in the self-same he was to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even untill the evening I say if this were hee and as some say because there was another Dositheus a Samaritan too that lived more neere unto the time of Origen and is most like to be the man However we may take it for a Samaritan device as indeed it was though not so ancient as to take beginning with the first entertainment of the Sabbath in that place and people 8 This transportation of the ten Tribes for their many sins was a faire warning unto those of the house of Iudah to turn unto the Lord amend their lives observe his Sabbaths his sabbata annorum Sabbaths of years aswel as either his weekly or his yearly Sabbaths The Iewes had been regardlesse of them all for neglect of all God resolued to punish them First for the weekly Sabbath that God avenged himselfe upon them for the breach thereof is evident by that one place of Nehemiah Did not your Fathers thus Ch. 13. v. 18 saith he and our God brought this plague upon us and upon our Citie yet yee increase the wrath upon Israel in breaking the Sabbath Next for the Annuall Sabbaths God threatned that he would deprive them of them by his Prophet Hosea as before was said And lastly for his Sabbaths of yeares they had been long neglected almost forgotten if observed at all Torniellus finds three onely kept in all the Scripture Nor are more specified in particular but sure more were kept the certain number of the which may easily be found by the proportion of the punishment God tels them that they should remayn in bondage 2. Chron. 36. 〈◊〉 untill the land had enjoyed her Sabbaths for so long as she lay desolate shee kept sabbath to fulfill threescore and ten yeares So that as many yeares as they were in bondage so many sabbaths of yeares they had neglected Now from the yeare 2593 which was the seventh yeare after their possession of the Land of Canaan unto the yeare 3450 which was
therefore there must be some device to expound this Text and make the matter feasible Hereupon Achiba Simeon and Hillel three principall Rabbins of these times found out a shift to satisfie the Text and yet not binde the people to impossible burdens This was to limit out the Sabbaths journey allowing them 2000. foot to stirre up and downe for the ease and comfort of the body by which devise they thought the matter well made up the people happily contented and the Law ●bserved This was the refuge of the Iews when afterwards the Christians pressed them with the not keeping of this Text R. A●hiba Simeon Hillel magistri nostri tradiderunt nobis ut bis mille pedes ambularemus in sabbato Ad Algasium as Saint Hierome tells us But this being somewhat of the least they afterwards improved it to 2000. Cubits then to three quarters of a myle as before we noted and this with this inlargement too that in their Townes and Cities they might walke as much and as farre as they listed though as bigge as Nineveh This Rab. Hillel above named lived in the yeare 3928. which was some fifteene yeares after Ionathans death and therefore to be reckoned of these times in the which we are The other two for ought we know were his Coaetanei and lived about the same times also So for the other Text Thou shalt not kindle fire on the Sabbath day this also must be literally understood and then comparing this with that in Exodus Bake that which ye will bake to day it needs must follow that no meat must be made ready on the Sabbath We shewed before that generally the people did use to fast on the Sabbath day till they came from Church that so they might be more attent unto the reading of the Law this might suggest a plausible pretence unto the Pharisee to teach the people that they should forbeare from dressing meate that so their servants also might be present when the Law was read Hence came the saying used amongst them Qui parat in parasceve vescetur in Sabbato hee that doth cooke it on the Eve may cate upon the Sabbath There is a Tex● in Ieremy Ch. 17. v. 〈◊〉 expresly against bearing of burdens on the Sabbath day This by the Christian Fathers is interpreted of the burden of sinne Custodit animam suam qui non portat pondera peccatorum in die quietis sabbati as Saint Hierome hath it on the place See the same Father also on the 58 of Esay and Basil on the first of the same Prophet And certainly had Gods intent beene plaine and peremptory that whosoever did beare any burden on the Sabbath day should never enter into the Kingdome of Heaven our Saviour never had commanded the poore lame man to take up his bed upon the Sabbath But for the Pharisees they have so dallied with this Text that they have made both it and themselues ridiculous For finding it impossible that men should carry nothing at all about them to salue the matter they devised some nice absurdities A man might weare no nailed shooe● on the Sabbath day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because the nailes would be a burden 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that which a man did carry on one shoulder onely was a burden to him not what he carried upon both as Origen informs us of them So where they fonnd it in the Law that thou shall doe no manner of worke they would have no worke done at all no though it were to save ones life neither to heale the wounded or to cure the sick both which they did object against Christ our Saviour nor finally to take sword in hand for the defence either of mens persons or their Country And though their rigour herein had been over-ruled by Mattathias and that it was concluded lawfull to fight against their enemies on the Sabbath day yet they f●und out a way to elude this order teaching the people this that they might fight that day against their enemies if they were assaulted but not molest them in their preparations for assault and batterie This is now made the meaning of the former law and this cost them deare As good no Law at all as so bad a Comment 3 For when that Pompey warred against them and besieged their Temple hee quickly found on what foot they halted and did accordingly make use of the occasions which they gave unto him Had not the Ordinance of the Country as Iosephus tels it commanded us to keepe the Sabbath Antiq. Iud. l. 14. c. 8. and do no labour on that day the Romans never had been able to have raised their Bulwarks How so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Because the Law permits us to defend our selves in case at any time we are assailed and urged to fight but not to set upon them or disturbe them when they have other worke in hand Which when the Romans found saith he they neither gave assault or proferd any skirmish on the Sabbath dayes but built their Towers and Bulwarks and planted Engines thereupon and the next day put them in use against the Iewes It seemes they were not well resolued on the former point whether they might defend themselues on the Sabbath day Hist. l. 56. though they were assault●d For on that day it was that Pompey tooke the City and enslaved the people So Dio tells us touching the use the Romans made of that advantage addes for the close of all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that at the last they were surprised upon the Saturday not doing any thing in their owne defence Strabo therein concurres with Dio 〈…〉 in making Saturday the day but takes it for a solemne fast 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wherin it is not lawfull to do any worke And so it was a Fast indeed but such a Fast as fell that time upon the Sabbath Iosephus tels us onely that the Temple was taken in the third moneth on a fasting day Exerc. 16. 108. which C●saubon conceives to be the seventh and Scaliger the seventeenth of the moneth called Tamur Em. Temp. edit 2. l. 3. but both agree upon it that it was the Sabbath As for their fasting on that day it was permitted in this case and in this case onely when as their City was besieged as before wee shewed Yet could not this unfortunate rigour be any warning to the Iewes but needs they must offend again in the self-same kind For just upon the same day seven and twenty yeares the City was againe brought under by Sosius and Herod who had then besieged it in the same moneth and on the same day L. 14. ● 24. l 49. as Ios●phus t●ls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and on the day called Saturday as Dion hath it So fatall was it to the Iewes to perish in the folly of their superstitions The first of these two actions is placed in Anno 3991. therefore the last being just 27 years after
strictest time of the Pharisaicall rigours was accounted lawfull Indeed the maruaile is the lesse that they are so uncharitable to poore Brut● creatures when as they take such little pitty upon themselves Crantzi●● reports a story of a Iew of Magdeburg who falling on the Saturday into a Prioy would not be taken out because it was the Sabbath day and that the Bishop gave command that there hee should continue on the Sunday also so that betweene both the poore Iew was poysoned with the very stinke The like our Annals do relate of a Iew of Tewkesbury whose story being cast into three riming Verses according to the Poetry of those times I have here presented and translated Dialog●ewise as they first made it Tende manus Solomon ut te de stercore tollam Sabbata nostra colo de stercore surgere nolo Sabbata nostra quidem Solomon celebrabis ibidem Friend Solomon thy hands up-reare And from the jakes I will thee beare Our Sabbath I so highly prize That from the place I will not rise Then Solomon without more adoe Our Sabbath thou shalt keepe there too For the continuance of their sabbath as they begin it early on the day before so they prolong it on the day till late at night And this they do in pitie to the souls in Hell w●o all the while the Sabbath lasteth have free leave to play For as they tell us silly wretches upon the Eve before the Sabbath it is proclaimed in Hell that every one may goe his way and take his pleasure and when the Sabbath is concluded they are recalled againe to the house of torments I am ashamed to meddle longer in these trifles these dreames and dotages of infatuated men given over to a reprobate sense Nor had I stood so long upon them but that in this Anatomie of the Iewish follies I might let some amongst us see into what dangers they are falling For there are some indeed too many who taking this for granted which they cannot proove that the Lords Day succeeds into the place and rights of the Iewish sabbath and is to be observed by vertue of the fourth Commandement have trenched too neere upon the Rabbins in binding men to nice and scrupulous observances which neither we nor our Fore-fathers were ever able to endure But with what warrant they have made a sabbath day in the Christian Church where there was never any knowne in all times before or upon what authoritie they have presumed to lay heavy burthens upon the consciences of poore men which are free in Christ wee shall the better see by tracing downe the story from our Saviours time unto the times in which wee live But I will here set down and rest beseeching God who enabled me thus farre to guide me onwards to the end Tu qui principio medium medio adjice finem THE HISTORY OF THE SABBATH The second Book From the first preaching of the Gospell to these present times By Pet. Heylyn COLOSS. 2. 16 17. Let no man judge you in meate or in drinke or in respect of an holy day or of the new Moone or of the SABBATH dayes which are a shadow of things to come but the body is of Christ. LONDON Printed by Thomas Harper for Henry Seyle at the Tygers head in Saint Pauls Church-yard 1636. To the Christian Reader ANd such I hope to meet with in this point especially which treating of the affaires of the Christian Church cannot but be displeasing unto t●em which are not Christianly affected Our former Book wee destinated to the Iewish part of this enquiry wherein though long it was before we found it yet at the last we found a Sabbath A Sabbath which began with that state and Church and ended also when they were no longer to be called a Nation but a dispersed and scattered ruine of what once they were In that which followeth our enquirie must be more diffused of the same latitude with the Church a Church not limited and confined to some Tribes and Kindreds but generally spreading over all the world We may affirme it of the Gospel what Florus somtimes said of the state of Rome Ita late per orbem terrarum arma circumtulit ut quires ejus legunt non unius populi sed generis humani facta discunt The historie of the Church and of the World are of like extent So that the search herein as unto me it was more painf●ll in the doing so unto thee will it be more pleasing being done because of that varietie which it will afford thee And this Part wee have called the History of the Sabbath too although the institution of the Lords Day and entertainment of the same in all times and Ages since that insti●ution be the chiefe thing whereof it treateth For being it is said by some that the Lords Day succeeded by the Lords appointment into the place and rights of the Iewish Sabbath so to be ca●●ed and so to be observed as the Sabbath was this booke was wholy to b● spent in the search thereof whether in all or any Ages of the Church either such doctrine had bin preached or such practice pressed upon the conscience of Gods people And search indeed we did with all care and diligence to see if wee could finde a Sabbath in any evidence of Scripture or writings of the holy Fathers or Edicts of Emperours or Decrees of Councels or finally in any of the publick Acts Monuments of the Christian Church But after serverall searches made upon the alias and the pluries wee still returne Non est inventus and thereupon resolve in the Poets language Et quod invenis usquam esse putes nusquam that which is no where to be found may very strongly be concluded not to be at all Buxdorfius in the 11. Chapter of his Synagoga Iudaica out of Antonius Margarita tels us of the Iews quod die sabbatino praeter animam consu●tam praediti sunt alia that on the Sabbath day they have an extraordinary soule infused into them which doth enlarge their hearts and rowze up their spirits Vt Sabbatum multo honorabilius peragere possint that they may celebrate the Sabbath with the greater honour And though this sabbatarie soule may by a Pythagoricall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seeme to have transmigrated from the Iewes into the bodies of some Christians in these later dayes yet I am apt to give my selfe good hopes that by presenting to their view the constant practise of Gods Church in all times before and the consent of all Gods Churches at this present they may be dispossessed thereof without great difficulty It is but anima superflua as Buxdorfius cals it and may be better spared then kept because superfluous However I shall easily perswade my selfe that by this generall representation of the estate and practise of the Church of Christ I may confirme the wavering in a right perswasion and assure such as are already well affected by shewing them the
perfect harmonie and agreement which is betweene this Church and the purest times It is our constant prayer to almighty God aswell that he would strengthen such as do stand and confirme the weake as to raise up those men which are fallen into sinne and errour As are our prayers such should be also our endeavours as universall to all sorts of men as charitable to them in their severall cases and distresses Happy those men who do aright discharge their duties both in their prayers and their performance The blessing of our labours we must leave to him who is all in all without whom all Pauls planting and Apollos watering will yeeld poore increase In which of these three states soever thou art good Christian Reader let me be seech thee kindly to accept his pains which for thy sake were undertaken that so be might in some poore measure be an instrument to strengthen or confirme or raise thee as thy case requires This is the most that I desire and lesse then this thou couldst not do did I not desire it And so fare thee well THE HISTORY OF THE SABBATH The second Booke CHAP. I. That there is nothing found in Scripture touching the keeping of the LORDS DAY 1 The Sabbath not intended for a perpetuall ordinance 2 Preparatives unto the dissolution of the Sabbath by our Saviour Christ. 3 The Lords day not enjoyned in the place thereof either by Christ or his Apostles but instituted by the authority of the Church 4 Our Saviours resurrection on the first day of the weeke and apparitions on the same make it not a Sabbath 5 The comming downe of the Holy Ghost upon the first day of the weeke makes it not a Sabbath 6 The first day of the weeke not made a Sabbath more than ●thers by Saint Peter Saint Paul or any other of the Apostles 7 Saint Paul frequents the Synagogue on the Iewish Sabbath and upon what reasons 8 What was concluded against the Sabbath in the Councell holden in Hieru●alem 9 The preaching of Saint Paul at Troas upon the first day of the weeke no árgument that then that day was set apart by the Apostles for religious exercises 10 Collections on the first day of the week 1. Cor. 16. conclude as little for that purpose 11 Those places of Saint Paul Galat. 4. 10. Coloss. 2. 16. doe prove invincibly that there is no Sabbath to be looked for 12 The first day of the week not called the Lords day untill the end of this first age and what that title addes unto it 1 WEe shewed you in the former book what did occurre about the Sabbath from the Creation of the World to the destruction of the Temple which comprehended the full time of 4000 years and upwards in the opinion of the most and best Chronologers Now for five parts of eight of the time computed from the Creation to the Law being in all 2540 yeares and somwhat more there was no Sabbath knowne at all And for the fifteene hundred being the remainder it was not so observed by the Iewes themselves as if it had been any part of the Law of Nature but sometimes kept and sometimes broken either according as mens private businesses or the affaires of the republicke would give way unto it Never such conscience made thereof as of adultery murder blasphemy or idolatrie no not when as the Scribes and Pharisees had most made it burdensome there being many casus reservati wherein they could dispense with the fourth Commandement though not with any of the other Had they beene all alike equally natural moral as it is conceived they had been all alike observed all alike immutable no jot nor syllable of that law which was ingraft by nature in the soule of man being to fall unto the ground Luk 16. 17. till heaven and earth shall passe away and decay together till the whole frame of Nature for preservation of the which that Law was given be dissolved for ever The Abrogation of the Sabbath which before we spake of shews plainly that it was no part of the Morall law or Law of Nature there being no law naturall Contr. Marc. l. 2 which is not perpetuall Tertullian takes it for confest or at least makes it plaine and evident Temporale fuisse mandatum quod quand●que cessaret that it was onely a temporarie constitution which was in time to have an end c. 16. And after him Procopius Gaz●eus in his notes on Exodus layes downe two severall sorts of laws whereof some were to be perpetuall and some were not of which last sort were Circumcision and the Sabbath Quae d●raverunt usque in adventum Christi which lasted till our Saviours comming and he being come I● Col. 2 16. went out insensiblie of themselues For as S. Ambrose rightly tels us Absente imperatore imag● ejus habet autoritatem praesente non habet c. What time the Emperour is absent we give some honour to his State or representation but none at all when he is present And so saith he the Sabbaths and new-moones and the other festivals before our Saviours comming had a time of honour during the which they were observed but he being present once they became neglected But he●eof wee have spoke more fully in our former booke 2 Neglected not at once and upon the sudden but leasurely and by degrees There were preparatives unto the sabbath as before we shewed before it was proclaimed as a Law by Moses and there were some preparatives required before that law of Moses was to be repealed These we shall easiliest discover if we shall please to looke on our Saviours actions who gave the first hint unto his disciples for the abolishing of the sabbath amongst other ceremonies It 's true that he did frequently repaire unto the synagogues on the sabbath dayes and on those dayes did frequently both reade and expound the Law unto the people Luk. 4. 16. And he came to Nazareth saith the Text where he had beene brought up and as his custome was he went into the Synagogue on the sabbath day and stood up to reade It was his custome so to do both when he lived a private life to frequent the Synagogue that other men might do the like by his good example and after when he undertooke the ministerie to expound the Law unto them there that they might be the better by his good instructions Yet did not be conceive that teaching or expounding the word of God was annexed onely to the Synagogue or to the sabbath That most divine and heavenly Sermon which takes up three whole Chapters of S. Matthews Gospell was questionlesse a weeke dayes worke and so were most of those delivered to us in S. Iohn as also that which he did preach unto them from the ship-side and divers others Nay the text tells us Luk 8. 1. that he went through every Citie and Village preaching and shewing the glad tydings of God Too great a
can be drawne from a casuall fact and that the falling of the Pentecost that yeare upon the first day of the weeke be meerly casuall the comming of the Holy Ghost upon that day will be no argument nor authority to state the first day of the weeke in the place and honour of the Iewish sabbath There may be other reasons given why God made choice of that time rather then of any other as first because about that very time before he had proclaimed the Law upon Mount Sinai and secondly that so hee might the better countenance and grace the Gospel in the sight of men and adde the more authority unto the doctrine of the Apostles The Feast of Pentecost was a great and famous Festivall at which the Iewes all of them were to come unto Hierusalem there to appeare before the Lord and amongst others those which had their hands in our Saviours ●●●ud And therefore as S. Chrysostome notes it did God send down the Holy Ghost at that time of Pentecost In Act. 2. because those men that did consent to our Saviours death might publickly receive rebuke for that bloudy Act and so beare record to the power of our Saviours Gospel before all the World 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as that Father hath it So that the thing being casuall as unto the day and speciall as unto the businesse then by God intended it will afforde us little proofe as before I said either that the Lords Day was as then observed or that the Holy Ghost did select that day for so great a worke to dignifie it for a sabbath 6 As for Saint Peters preaching upon that day and the baptizing of so many as were converted to the faith upon the same it might have been some proofe that now at lest if not before the first day of the weeke was set apart by the Apostles for religious exercises had they not honoured all dayes with the same performances But if we search the Scriptures we shall easily find that all dayes were alike to them in that respect no day in which they did not preach the word of life and administer the Sacraments of their Lord and Saviour to such as either wanted it or did desire it Or were it that the Scriptures had not told us of it yet naturall reason would informe us that those who were imployed in so great a worke as the conversion of the World could not confine themselues unto times and seasons but must take all advantages whensoere they came But for the Scripture it is said in termes expresse first generally that the Lord added daily to the Church such as should be saved Act● 2. 47. and therefore without doubt the meanes of their salvation were daily ministred unto them Vers● 42. and in the fifth Chapter of the Acts that daily in the Temple and in every house they ceased not to teach and preach Iesus Christ. Acts 8. So for particulars when Philip did baptize the Eunuch either he did it on a working day as we now distinguish them and not upon the first day of the weeke and so it was no Lords day dutie or else it was not held unlawfull to take a journey on that day as some thinke it is Saint Peters preaching to Corne●ius and his baptizing of that house was a weeke dayes worke as may be gathered from Saint Hierome That Father tels us that the day whereon the vision appeared to Peter was probably the Sabbath or the Lords Day as we call it now fieri p●tuit ut vel sabbatum ess●t vel dies Dominicus Adv●rs Iovini an l. 2. as the ●ather hath it and 〈◊〉 you which you will we shall find little in it 〈…〉 Sabbath In case it was on the Sabbath then Peter 〈…〉 keep the Lords day holy as he should have done in case that day was then selected for Gods worship for the Text tells us that the next day he did begin his journey to Cornelius house In case it was upon the Lords day as wee call it now then neither did Saint Peter sanctifie that day in the Congregation Acts 10 24. as he ought to do had that day then been made the Sabbath and his conversion of Corne●elius being three dayes after must of necessity be done on the Wednesday following So that we find no Lords day Sabbath either of S. Peters keeping or of S. Philips or els● the preaching of the Word and the administring the Sacraments were not affixed at all unto the first day of the weeke as the peculiar markes and characters thereof So for Saint Paul the Doctour of the Gentiles who laboured more abundantly then the other Apostles besides what shall be said particularly in the following section it may appeare in generall that hee observed no Lords-day-sabbath but taught on all dayes travailed on all dayes and wrought according to his Trade upon all dayes too when he had no employment in the Congregation That he did teach on all dayes is not to be questioned by any that considers how great a worke hee had to doe and how little time That hee did trauaile upon all dayes is no lesse notorious to all that looke upon his life which was still in motion And howsoever he might rest sometimes on the Lords Day as questionlesse he did on others as often as upon that day he preached the Gospel yet when hee was a Prisoner in the hands of the Roman souldiers th●re is no doubt but that he travailed as they did Lords Dayes and sabbaths all dayes equally many dayes together In Dominica●● 17. post Tri●it Of this see what Saint Luke hath written in the last Chapters of the Acts. Lastly for working at his Trade which was Tent-making on the Lords D●y as well as others Conradu● Diatericus proves it out of Hierome that when hee had none unto whom to preach in the Congregation hee followed on the Lords Day the works of his Occupation Hieronymus colligit ex Act. 18. vers 3. 4. quod die etiam Dominica quando quibus in publico conventu concionaretur non habebat manibus suis laboravit So Dietericus speaking of our Apostle Now what is proved of these Apostles and of S. Philip the Evangelist may be affirmed of all the rest whose lives and actions are not left upon record in holy Scripture Their Ministery being the same and their worke as great no question but their liberty was correspondent and that they tooke all times to be alike in the advancing of the businesse which they went about and cherished all occasions presented to them on what day soever What further may be said hereof in reference to Saint Iohn who lived longest of them and saw the Church established and her publicke meetings in some 〈◊〉 we shall see hereafter in his owne place and time Mean while we may conclude for certaine that in the 〈…〉 of the Church he used all dayes equally kept 〈…〉 holy then another and after
when the Church was setled how ever he might keep this holy and honour it for the use which was made therof yet he kept other days so used as holy but never any like a sabbath 7 Proceed wee next unto Saint Paul in his particular of whom the Scripture tells us more then of all the rest and wee shall finde that hee no sooner was converted Act●● 2● but that forth-with hee preached in the Synagogues that Iesus was the Christ. If in the Synagogues most likely that it was on the Iewish sabbath the Synagogues being destinate especially to the ●abba●h dayes So after he was called to the publick Mi●ist●rie he came to Antiochia and went into the Synagogue on the sab●ath day and there preached the Word What was the issue of his sermon That the Text in●●rmes us 〈…〉 And when the I●wes were gone out of the 〈◊〉 the Gentiles besought that these words might be preached againe the next sabbath Vers● 〈◊〉 Saint Paul assented thereunto and the next sabbath day as the Text tells us came almost the whole Citie together to heare the Word of God Vers. 44. It seemes the Lords day was not growne as yet into any credit especially not into the repute of the Iewish sabbath for if it had Saint Paul might easily have told these Gentiles that is such Gentiles as had been converted to the Iewish Church that the next day would be a more convenient time and indeed opus diei in die suo the doctrine of the resurrection on the day thereof This hapned in the forty sixt yeare of Christs Nativity some twelue yeares after his Passion and Resurrection and often after this did the Apostle shew himselfe in the Iewish Synagogues on the sabbath dayes which I shall speake of here together that so wee may go on unto the rest of this discourse with lesse interruption And first it was upon the Sabbath that he did preach to the Philippians and baptized Lydia with her houshold Acts 16. Amongst the Thessalonians he reasoned three sabbath dayes together out of the Scriptures Acts 17. At Corinth every sabba●h day with the Iewes and Greeks Acts 18. besides those many texts of Scripture when it is said of him that he went into the Synagogues and therefore probably that it was upon the Sabbath as before wee said Not that Saint Paul was so affected to the Sabbath as to preferre that day before any other but that he found the people at those times assembled and so might preach the Word with the greater profit In Acts 13. 14. Saint Chrysostome for the Ancients hath resolved it so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Father hath it So Calvin for the moderne Writers makes this the speciall cause of Saint Pauls resort unto the places of assembly on the Sabbath day quod profectum aliquem sperabat In Acts 16. 13. because in such concourse of people he hoped the Word of God would find the better entertainment Any thing rather to be thought then that S. Paul who had withstood so stoutly those false Apostles who would have circumcision and the law observed when there was nothing publickly determined of it would after the decision of so great a Councel wherein the Law of Moses was for ever abrogated either himselfe observe the sabbath for the sabb●ths sake or by his owne example teach the Gentiles how to Iudaize which he so blamed in S. Peter The sabbath with the legall ceremonies did receive their doome as they related to the Gentiles in that great Councell holden in Hierusalem which though it was not untill after he had preached at Antiochia on the sabbath day yet was it certainly before he had done the like either at Philippos Thessalonica or at Corinth 8 For the occasion of that Councell it was briefly this Amongst those which had joyned themselves with the Apostles there was one Cerinthus a f●llow of a turbulent and unquiet spirit and a most eager enemy of all those counsels whereof himselfe was not the Author This man had first begun a faction against S. Peter for going to Cornelius and preaching life eternall unto the Gentiles and finding ill successe in t●at goes downe to Antiochia and there begins another against Saint Paul This Epiphanius tells us of him Lib. l. baet 28. n. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The like Philaster doth affirme De haeres i● Cerin●ha Seditionem sub Apostolis commovisse that he had raised a faction against the Apostles which was not to be crushed but by an Apostolicall and generall Councell This man and those that came downe with him were so inamoured on the ceremonies and rites of Moses that though they entertained the Gospel yet they were loath to leave the Law and therefore did resolve it seemes to make a mixture out of both Hence taught they that except all men were circumcised after the manner of Moses they could not be saved Act 15. ● Where note that though they spake onely of circumcision ●et they intended all the law●● sabbaths and other legall ordinances of what sort soever Docuit Cerinthus observationem legis Mosaisae necessariam esse circumcs●●nem Sabbata observanda as Philaster hath it The like ●aith Calvin on the place Sola quidem circumcisio hic nominatur sed ex contextu facile patet ●os detota lege movisse controversiam The like Lori●us also amongst the Iesuites Nomine circumcisionis reliqua lex tot●intelligitur Indeed the Text affirmes as much where it is said in termes expresse Acts 15. 5. that they did hold it needfull to circumcise the people and to command them to keepe the Law of Moses whereof the Sabbath was a part For the decision of this point and the appeasing of those controversies which did thence arise it pleased the Church directed by the holy Ghost to determine thus that such amongst the Gentiles as were converted to the ●aith should not at all be burdened with the laws of Moses but onely should observe some necessary things viz. that they abstaine from thing● offered unto idols Vers. 29. and from bloud and that which is strangled and from f●r●ication And here it is to be observed that the decree or Canon of this Councell did onely reach unto the Gentiles as is apparant out of the proeme to the Decretall which is directed to the brethren which are of the Gentiles and from the 21 Chapter of the Acts where it is said that as concerning the Gentiles which beleeve we have written and determined that they observe no such thing as the law of Moses So that for all that was determined in this Councell those of the Iews which had embraced the faith of Christ were not prohibited as yet to observe the Sabbath and other parts of Moses law as before they did in which regard S. Paul caused Timothie to be circumcised Act. ●6 3. because he would not scandalize and offend the Iewes The
Iewes were very much affected to their antient ceremonies and Calvin rightly hath affirmed In Act. 〈…〉 Corr●ctionem ut difficilis ●ra● ita subitam esse non potuisse that a full reformation of that zeale of theirs as it was full of difficultie so could it not be done upon th● s●dden Therefore it pleased the 〈◊〉 as it is co●ceived Concil● To●●● 〈◊〉 in their fo●rth Councell hol●●●●● Hierusalem mention whereof is made in the 21. of the Acts to make it lawfull for the Iews to retaine circumcision and such legall rites together with the faith in Christ Quamdiu templum sacrifi●ia legis in Hier●salem stabant as long as the Iewish Temple and the legall sacrifices in Hierusalem should continue standing Not that the faith of Christ was not sufficient of it selfe for their salvation Sed ●t mater Synagoga paulatim ●um honore s●p●liretur but that the Synogogue might be layed to ●●eepe with the greater honour But this if so it was was for no long time For when the third Councell holden in Hierusalem against Cerinthus and his partie was held in Ann. 51. and this which now we speake of Ann. 58. the final ruine of the Temple was in 72. So that there was but one and twenty yeares in the largest reckoning wherein the Christian Iewes were suff●red to observe their Sabbath and yet not as before they did as if it were a necessarie dutie but as a thing indifferent onely But that time come the Temple finally destroyed and the legall ceremonies therein buri●d it was accounted afterwards both dangerous and hereticall to observe the Sabbath or mingle any of the Iewish leaven with the bread of life S. Hierome roundly so proclaimes it Ceremonias Iudae●rum perniciosus pestiferas esse Christianis that all the Ceremonies of the Iewes whereof before he named the Sabbath to be one were dangerous yea and deadly too to a Christia● man Sive e● Iudaeis esset sive ex Gentibus whether he were originally of the Iews or Gentiles To which S. Austin gives allowance Eg● ha●c vocem tuam omnino confirmo in his reply unto Saint Hierome That it was also deemed hereticall to celebrate a sabbath in the Christian Church we shall see hereafter 9 In the meane time we must proceed in search of the Lords day and of the duties then performed whereof we can finde nothing yet by that name at least The Scripture tels us somewhat that S. Paul did at Troas upon the first day of the weeke Which happening much about this time comes in this place to be considered The passage in the Text stands thus Vpon the first day of the weeke when the disciples came together to breake bread Act. 20. 7. Paul preached unto them ready to depart on the morrow and continued his speech untill midnight Take notice here that Paul had tarried there seven dayes before this happened Now in this Text there are two things to be considered first what was done upon that day and secondly what day it was that is there remembred First for the action it is said to be breaking of bread which some conclude to be administring the Sacrament of the Lords Supper and Pauls discourse which followed on it to be a Sermon But sure I am Saint Chrysost●me tells us plainly otherwise I● locum who relates it thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Their meeting at that time saith he was not especially to receive instruction from Saint Paul but to eate bread with him and there upon occasion given he discoursed unto them See saith the Father how they all made bold with S. Pauls table as it had beene common to them all and as it seemes to me saith he Paul sitting at the table did discourse thus with them Therefore it seemes by him that as the meeting was at an ordinary supper so the discourse there happening was no Sermon properly but an occasionall dispute Lyra affirmes the same and doth glosse it thus They came together to breake bread i. e. saith he Pro refectione corporali for the refection and support of their bodies onely and being there Paul preached unto them or as the Greeke and Latine have it hee disputed with them prius eos reficiens pane verbi divini refreshing of them first with the bread of life This also seemes to be the meaning of the Church of England 〈◊〉 80. who in the margin of the Bible allowed by Canon doth referre us unto the second of the Acts vers 46. where it is said of the disciples that they did breake their bread from house to house and eate their meat together with joy and singlenesse of heart which plainly must be meant of ordinarie and common meats Calvin not onely so affirmes it but censures those who take it for the holy Supper Nam quod hic fractionem panis nonnulli interpretantur sacram coenam I● Act. 〈◊〉 al●enum mihi videtur à mente Lucae c. as he there discourseth Then for the time our English reades it upon the first day of the weeke agreeablie unto the 〈◊〉 exposition of most ancient Writers and the vulgar Latine which here as in the foure Evangelists doth call the first day of the weeke una Sabbati Yet since the Greeke phrase is not so perspicuous but that it may admit of a various exposition Erasmus renders it by uno die sabbatorum quodam die sabbatorum that is upon a certaine Sabbath and so doth Calvin too and Pellican and Gualter all of them noted men in their translations of that Text. Nor do they onely so translate it but frame their expositions also unto that translation and make the day there mentioned to be the Sabbath I● lo●um Calvin takes notice of both readings Vel proximum sabbat● diem intelligit vel unum quodpiam sabbatum but approves the last Quod dies ille ad habendum conventum aptior fuerit because the Sabbath day was then most used for the like assemblies Gualter doth so conceive it also that they assembled at this time on the Sabbath day Qui propter veterem morem haud dubie tunc temporis celebrior habebatur Hom. as that which questionlesse was then of most repute and name amongst them So that the matter is not cleare as unto the day if they may j●dge it But take it for the first day of the weeke as the English reade● it yet doth S. Austin put a scruple which may perhaps disturbe the whole expectation though otherwise he be of opinion that the breaking of the bread there mentioned might have some reference or resemblance to the Lords Supper Now this is that which S. Austin tells us Aut post peractum diem Sabbat● ●p 86. nocti● initio fuerunt congregati quae utique nox ad diem Dominicum h●e ad unū Sabbat● pertin●bat c. Either saith he they were assembled on the beginning of the night which did immediately follow the Sabbath day
Apostolicall Mandate no Sabbath set on foot by them upon the first day of the weeke as some would have it much lesse that any such Ordinance should be henc● collected out of these words of the Apostle 11 Indeed it is not probable that hee who so opposed himselfe against the old Sabbath would erect a new This had not been to abrogate the ceremony but to change the day whereas hee laboured what he could to beat down all the difference of dayes and times which had been formerly observed In his Epistle to the Galatia●s written in Anno 59 he layes it home unto their charge that they oberued dayes and moneths Cap. 4 v. 10. and times and years and seemes a little to bewaile his own misfortune as if he had bestowed his labour in vain amongst them I know it is conceived by some that Saint Paul spake it of the observation of those dayes and times that had been used among the Gentiles and so had no relation to the Iewish Sabbath or any difference of times observed amongst them Saint Ambrose so conceived it and so did Saint Augustine In lo●um Dies observant qui dicunt crastino non est pro●iciscendum c. They observe dayes who say I will not goe abroad to morrow or begin any worke upon such a day because of some unfortunate aspect as Saint Ambrose hath it it seem● Saint A●gustine learnt it who in his ●19 Epistle directly falls upon the very same expression E●s inculpat qui dicunt non proficiscor quia posterus dies est aut quia l●na sic fertur vel proficiscar ut prospere cedat quia ita se habet positio syderum c. The like conceit he hath in his Ench●i●idi●n ad Laurentium cap. 79. But whatsoever S. Ambrose did Saint Augustine lived I am sure to correct his errour observing very rightly that his former doctrine could not consist with Saint Pauls purpose in that place which was to beat down that esteeme which the Iewes had amongst them of the Mosaicall Ordinances their New-moons and Sabbaths I shall report the place at large for the better cleering of the point Vulgatissimu● est Gentilium error nt vel in agendis rebus vel expectandis eventibus vitae ac negotiorum su●rum ab Astrologis Chalda●is notatos dies observent This was the ground whereon he built his former errour Then followeth the correction of it Fortass● tamen non ●pus est ut haec de Gentilium errore intelligamus ne intentionem ca●sae mark that quam ab exordio susceptam ad fi●em usque perducit ●ubit● in aliud temere detorquere velle videamur sed de his 〈◊〉 de quibus ●avendis ●um agere per t●tam Epistolam app●●et Nam Iudae iserviliter observant dies menses annos tempora in carnali observatione sabbati ne●meniae c. But yet perhaps saith hee it is not necessary that we should understand this of the Gentiles lest so we vary from the scope and purpose o● the Apostl● but rather of those men of the avoyding of whose Doctrines hee seemes to treat in all this Epistle which were the Iewes who in their carnall keeping of New-moones and Sabbaths did observe dayes and yeares Cap. 8. n. 33. and times as he here objecteth Compare this with Saint Hieromes preface to the Galathians and then the matter will be cleere that Saint Paul meant not this of any Heathenish but of the Iewish observation of dayes and times So in the Epistle to the Colossia●s writ in the six●teth yeare after Christs Nativity he layes it positively downe that the Sabbath was now abrogated with the other ceremonies which were to vanish at Christs comming Co●o●● 2. 16. Let no man judge you saith the Apostle in meat and drinke or in respect of an holy-day or of the New-moon or of the Sabbath dayes which are a shadow of things to come but the body is of Christ. In which the Sabbath is well matched with meats drinks new-mones and holy-dayes which were all temporary ordinances and to go off the stage at our Saviours entrance Now whereas some that would be thought great sticklers for the Sabbath conceive that this was spoken not of the weekly morall Sabbath as they call it which must be perpetuall but of the annuall ceremoniall Sabbaths which they acknowledge to be abrogated this new devise directly crosseth the whole current of the ancient Fathers who do apply this Text to the weekly Sabbath It is sufficient in this point to note the places The Reader may peruse them as leisure is and looke on Epiphan lib. 1. h●●res 33. n. 11. Ambrose upon this place Hieromes Epistle ad Algas qu. 10. Chrysost. hom 13 in Hebr. 7. August cont Iudaeos cap. 2. cont Faust Manich. l. 16. c. 28. I end this list with that of Hierome Praefat. in Gala● Apocal. 10. Nullus Apostoli ser●o est vel per Epistolam vel prae●entis in quo non laboret docere antiquae legis onera deposita omnia illa quae in typis imaginibus praecessere i. e. otium Sabbati circumcisionis injuriam Kalendarum trium per annum solennitatum recursus c. gratia Evangelii subrepente cessasse There is saith he no Sermon of the Apostles either delivered by Epistle or by word of mouth wherein he labours not to prove that all the burdens of the Law are now laid away that all those things which were before in types and figures namely the Sabbath Circumcision the New-moones and the three solemne Festivals did cease upon the preaching of the Gospell 12 And cease it did upon the preaching of the Gospell insensibly and by degrees as before wee fore we said not being afterwards observed as it had bin formerly or counted any necess●ry part of Gods publick worship Onely some use was made thereof for the enlargement of Gods Church by reason that the people had been accustomed to meet together on that day for the performance of religious spirituall duties This made it more regarded then it would have been especially in the Easterne parts of Greece and A sia where the Provinciall Iewes were somewhat thick dispersed and being a great accession to the Gospell could not so suddenly forsake their ancient customes Yet so that the first day of the weeke began to grow into some credit towards the ending of this Age especially after the finall desolation of Hi●rusalem and the Temple which hapned Anno 72 of Christs Nativity So that the religious observation of this day beginning in the Age of the Apostles no doubt but with their approbation and authoritie and since con●●nuing in the same respect for so many Ages may be very well accounted amongst those Apostolicall traditions which have been universally received in the Church of God For being it was the day which our Redeemer hono●●●d with his resurrection it easily might attain unto that esteeme as to be honoured by the
Christians with the publick meetings that so they might with greater comfort preserve and cherish the memoriall of so great a mercie in reference unto which the Worlds Creation seemed not so considerable By reason of which work wrought on it it came in time to be entituled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lords day Apocal 10. which attribute is first found in the Revelation writ by Saint Iohn about the 94 ye●re of our Saviours birth So long it was before wee finde the Church tooke notice of it by a proper name For I perswade my selfe that had that day been destm●te at that time to religious duties or honoured with the name of the Lords day when Paul preached at Troas or write to the Corinthi●ns which as before wee shewed was in the fifty ●eventh neither Saint Luke nor the Apostle had so passed it over and called it onely the first day of the weeke as they both have done And when it had this attribute affixed unto it it onely was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as before we said by reason of our Saviours resurrection performed upon it and that the Congregation might not be assembled as well on them as on the other For first it was not called the Lords Day exclusively but by way of eminencie in reference to the resurrection onely all other dayes being the Lords In Psal. 23. aswell as this Prima sabbati significat diem Dominicum quo Dominus resurrexit resurgendo isti seculo subvenit mu●dumque ipso die creavit qui ob excellentiam tanti miraculi propri● dies Dominica appellatur i.e. dies Domini quamvis omnes sunt Domini So Bruno Herbipolensis hath resoluted it And next it was not so designed for the publick meetings of the Church as if they might not be assembled as well on every day as this For as Saint Hierome hath determined In Gal. ● omnes dies aequales sunt nec per parasceven tantum Christum cruci●igi die Dominica resurgere sed semper sanctum resurrectionis esse diem semper ●um ca●rne vesci Dominica c. All dayes are equall in themselues as the Father tells us Christ was not crucified on the Friday onely nor did hee rise onely upon the Lords Day but that wee may make every day the holy-day of his resurrection and every day eat his blessed body in the Sacrament When therefore certain days were publickly assigned by Godly men for the assemblies of the Church this was done onely for their sakes qui magis seculo vacant quam Deo who had more minde unto the World then to him that made it and therefore either could not or rather would not every day assemble in the Church of God Vpon which ground as they made choice of this even in the Age of the Apostles for one because our Saviour rose that day from amongst the dead so chose they Friday for another by reason of our Saviours passi●n and Wednesday on the which he had beene betrayed the Saturday or ancient Sabbath being mean-while retained in the Eastern Churches Nay in the primitive times excepting in the heat of persecution they met together every day for the receiving of the Sacrament that being fortified with that viaticum they might with greater courage encounter death if they chanced to meet him So that the greatest honour which in this Age was given the first day of the week or Sunday is that about the close th●●of they did begin to honour it with the name or title of the Lords Day and made it one of those set dayes whereon the people met together for religious exercises Which their religious exercises when they were performed or if the times were such that their assemblies were prohibited and so none were performed at all it was not held unlawfull to apply themselues unto their ordinary labours as we shall see annon in the following Ages For whereas some have gathered from this Text of the Revelation from S. Ioh●● being in the sp●rit on the Lords Day as the phrase there is that the Lords Day is wholy to be spent in spirituall exercises that their conceit might probably have had some shew of likelihood had it been said by the Apostle that he had been in the spirit every Lords Day But being as it is a particular case it can make no rule unlesse it be that every man on the Lords Day should have dreames and visions and be inspired that day with the spirit of prophecie no more then if it had beene told us upon what day Saint Paul had beene rapt up into the third Heaven every man should upon that day expect the like celestiall raptures Adde here how it is thought by some that the Lords Day here mentioned is not to bee interpreted of the first d●y of the weeke 〈…〉 as wee use to take it but of the day of his last comming of the day of judgement wherein all flesh shall come together to receive their sentence which being called the Lords Day too in holy Scripture that so the spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord 1. Cor. 5. 5. S. Iohn might see it being rapt in spirit as if come already But touching this we will not meddle let them that owne it looke unto it the rather since S. Iohn hath generally beene expounded in the other sence by Aretas and Andra●as Caesariensis upon the place by Bede de rat temp c. 6. and by the suffrage of the Church the best expositour of Gods Word wherein this day hath constantly since the time of that Apostle beene honoured with that name above other dayes Which day how it was afterwards observed and how farre different it was thought from a Sabbath day the prosecution of this story will make cleare and evident CHAP. II. In what estate the Lords day stood from the death of the Apostles to the reigne of Constantine 1 Touching the orders setled by the Apostles for the Congregation 2 The Lords day and the Saturday both festivals and both alike observed in the East in Ignatius time 3 The Saturday not without great difficulty made a fasting day 4 The Controversie about keeping Easter and how much it conduceth to the present businesse 5 The feast of Easter not affixed to the Lords day without much opposition of the Easterne Churches 6 What Iustin Martyr and Dionysius of Corinth have left 〈◊〉 of the Lords day Clemens of Alexandria his dislike thereof 7 Vpon what grounds the Christians of the former times used to pray standing on the Lords day and the time of Pentecost 8 What is recorded by Tertullian of the Lords day and the assemblies of the Church 9 Origen as his master Clemens had done before dislikes set dayes for the assemblie 10 S. Cyprian what he tells us of the Lords day and of the reading of the Scriptures in S. Cyprians time 11 Of other holy dayes established in these three first ages and that they were observed as solemnely as the
for a Sabbath day 1 The Lords day first established by the Emperour Constantine 2 What labours were permitted and what restrained on the Lords day by this Emperours Edict 3 Of other holy dayes and Saints dayes instituted in the time of Constantine 4 That weekely other dayes particularly the Wednesday and the Friday were in this Age and those before appointed for the meetings of the Congregation 5 The Saturday as highly honoured in the Easterne Churches as the Lords day was 6 The Fathers of the Easterne Churches cry downe the Iewish Sabbath though they held the Saturday 7 The Lords day not spent wholy in religious exercises and what was done with that part of it which was left at large 8 The Lords day in this Age a day of feasting and that it hath beene alwayes deemed haereticall to hold fasts thereon 9 Of recreation on the Lords day and of what kind those dancings were against the which the Fathers enveigh so sharpely 10 Other Imperiall Edicts about the keeping of the Lords day and the other holy daies 11 The Orders at this time in use on the Lords day and other dayes of publick meeting in the Congregation 12 The infinite differences betweene the Lords day and the Sabbath 1 HItherto have we spoken of the Lords day as taken up by the common consent of the Church not instituted or established by any text of Scripture or Edict of Emperour or decree of councell save that some few particular Counsels did reflect upon it in the point of Easter In that which followeth wee shall finde both Emperours and Co●ncels very frequent in ordering things about this day and the service of it And first wee have the Emperour Constantine who being the first Christian Prince that publickely profest the Gospell was the first also that made any law about the keeping of the Lords day or Sunday De vit const lib. 4. ● 18. Of him E●sebi●s tells us that thinking that the chiefest and most proper day for the devotion of his subjects he presently declared his pleasure 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that every one who lived in the Roman Empire should take their ease or rest in that day weekely which is instituted to our Saviour Now where the souldiers in his campe were partly Christians and partly the Gentiles it was permitted unto them who professed the Gospell upon the Sunday so he calls it freely to goe unto the Churches and there offer up their prayers to Almighty God But such as had continued still in their auntient errours were ordered to assemble in the open fields upon those dayes and on a signall given to make their prayers unto the Lord after a forme by him prescribed The forme being in the Latine tongue was this that followeth Te solum Deum agnoscimus Cap. 20. te regem profitemur te adjutorem invocamus per te victorias consecuti sumus per te hostes superavimus a te praesentem felicitatem consecutos fatemur futuram adepturos speramus tui omnes supplices sumus a tepetimus ut Constantinum Imperatoren no strum una cum piis ejus liberis quam diutissime nobis salvum victorem `conserves In English thus We doe acknowledge thee to be the onely God we confesse thee to be the King we call upon thee as our helper and defender by thee alone it is that we have got the victory and subdued our enemies to thee as we referre all our present happinesse so from thee also do we expect our future Thee therefore we beseech that thou wouldest please to keepe in all health and safety our noble Emperour Constantine with his hopefull progeny Nor was this onely to be done in the fields of Rome in patentibus suburbiorum campis as the Edict ranne but after by another proclamation he did command the same over all the Provinces of the Empire Cap. 23. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Eusebius hath it So naturall a power it is in a Christian Prince to order things about religion that he not onely tooke upon him to command the day but also ●o prescribe the service to those I meane who had no ●ublicke Liturgie or set forme of Prayer 2 Nor did he onely take upon him to command or appoint the day as to all his subjects and to prescribe ● forme of prayer as unto the Gentiles but to decree what workes should be allowed upon it and what intermitted In former times though the Lords day had got the credit as to be honoured with the publicke meetings of the Congregation yet was it not so strictly kept no not in time of Divine service but that the publicke magistrates Iudges and other Ministers of state were to attend those great imployments they were called unto without relation to this day or cessation on it and so did other men that had lesse employments and those not so necessary These things this pious Emperour taking into consideration and finding no necessity but that his Iudges and other publicke ministers might attend Gods service on that day at least not bee a meanes to keepe others from it and knowing that such as dwelt in Citties had sufficient leisure to frequent the Church and that Artificers without any publicke discommodity might for that time forbeare their ordinary labours hee ordered and appointed that all of them in their severall places should this day lay aside their owne businesse to attend the Lords But then withall con●idering that such as followed husbandry could not so well neglect the times of seede and harvest but that they were to take advantage of the fairest and most seasonable weather as God pleased to send it he left it free to them to follow their affaires on what day soever lest otherwise they might lose those blessings which God in his great bounty had bestowed upon them This mentioned in the very Edict he set forth about it First for his Iudges Citizens or inhabitants of the greater townes and all Artificers therein dwelling Omnes Iudices L. Omnes cap. ●e feri●s urbanaeque plebes cunctarum artium officia venerabili die Solis quiescant Next for the people of the Country Rure tamen positi libere licenterque agrorum culturae inserviant quoniam frequenter evenit ut non aptius alio die frumenta sulcis vinea scrobibus mandentur And then the reason of this followes Ne occasione moment● pereat commoditas 〈◊〉 provisione concessa This Edict did beare date in the Nones of March Anno 321 being the 11 yeare of that Princes Empire and long it did not stand till hee himselfe was faine to explaine his meaning in the first part of it For whereas hee intended onely to restraine lawsuites and contentious pleadings as being unfit for such a day his Iudges and like officers finding a generall restraint in the law or Edict durst not ingage themselves in the Cognizance of any evill cause what ever no not so much as in the Manumission of a Bondslave This comming
to the Emperours notice who was a friend of liberty and could not but well understand how acceptable a thing it was to God that workes of charity and mercy should not be restrained on any dayes it pleased him to send out a second Edict in the Iuly following directed to Elpidius who was then Praefectus Praetorio as I take it wherein hee authorized his Ministers to performe that Office any thing in the former Law unto the contrary notwithstanding For so it remaines Ibid. Sicut indignissimum videbatur diem Solis venerationis suae celebrem altercantibus jurgijs noxijs partium contentionibus occupari ita gratum est jucundum eo die quae sunt maxime votiva compleri Atque ideo emancipandi manumittendi die festo cuncti licentiam habeant super his rebus Acta non prohibeantur So that not onely husbandry was permitted in small Townes and Villages but manumission being a meere civill Act and of no small care many was by him suffered and allowed in the greater Citties The first great worke done by the first great Christian Prince was to declare his royall pleasure about this day what things he thought most proper to permit and what to disallow upon it teaching all other Kings and Princes which have since succeeded what they should also doe on the same occasion 3 Nor did this pious Prince confirme and regulate the Lords day onely but unto him we are indebted for many of these other Festivalls which have beene fince obferved in the Church of God It had beene formerly a custome in the Christian Church carefully to observe the times and dayes of their departure who had preferred the Gospel before their lives and suffered many torments and at last death it selfe for the faith of Christ. Eus●● hist. l. 4. c. 14. The Church of Smyrna and that 's the highest we neede goe testifieth in an Epistle writ ad Philomelienses that they did celebrate the day wherein their Reverend Bishop Polycarp did suffer Martyrdome with joy and gladnesse and an holy Convocation This was in Anno 170. or there abouts And in the following Age S. Cyprian taking notice of such men as were imprisoned for the testimony of a good conscience appointed that the dayes of their decease should be precisely noted that so their memories might be celebrated with the holy Martyrs Epl. 8. l. 3. Denique dies eorum quibus excedunt annotate ut commemorationes eorum inter memorias martyrum celebrare possimus as there he hath it But hitherto they were onely bare memorialls for more they durst not doe in those times of trouble their sufferings onely ●ignified to the Congregation and that they did unto this end that by exhibiting the people their infinite indurances for the truth and testimony of Religion they also might bee nourished in an equall constancie After when as the Church was in perfect peace it pleased the Emperour Constantine to signifie to all his Deputies a●d Leivtenants in the Roman Empire Euseb. l 4. cap. 23. that they should have a care to see those the memorialls of the Martyrs duly honoured and solemne times or Festivalls to be appointed in the Churches to that end and purpose 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And though these Festivalls and Saints dayes became not forthwith common over all the world but were observed in those parts chiefly wherein the memorie of the Saint or Martyr was in most esteeme in which respect Saint Hierome calls them In Gal. 41 tempora in honore Martyrum pro diversa regionum varietate constituta yet in a little tract of time such of them as had beene most eminent as the Apostles and Evangelists were universally received and celebrated even as now they are I say as now they are as they are now observed in the Church of England De Martyr l 8. and this I say upon the credit and authority of Theodoret. Who though hee gives another reason and originall of these institutions informes us of these Festivalls that they were modestae castae temperantia plenae performed with modestie chastitie and sobrietie not as the Festivalls of the Gentiles were in excesse and riot And not so onely but he affirmes this of them divinis canticis personantis sacrisque sermonibus audiendis intentae that they were solemnized with spirituall Hymnes and religious Sermons and that the people used to emptie out their soules to God in fervent and affectionate Prayers non sine lachrymis suspirijs even with sighes and teares As for Theodoret he lived and flourished in the yeare 420. and speakes of these Festivalls S. Peter and S. Thomas and S. Paul with others which he names particularly as things which had beene setled and established a long time before and therefore could not be much after the time of Constantine who dyed not till the up yeare 341. or thereabouts As for the eighth booke de Martyrib Where this passage is it is the 12. of those entituled de curandis Graec. affect And howsoever some exception hath beene made against them as that they were not his whose names they carry yet finde I no just proofe thereof amongst our Criticks 4 Now as the Emperour Constantine did adde the Annuall Festivalls of the Saints unto those other Anniversarie feasts which formerly had beene observed in the Christian Church so by his royall edict did he settle and confirme those publicke meetings which had beene formerly observed on each Friday weekely the Wednesday standing on the same Basis as before it did which was the custome of the Church De vit Const. l. 4. c. 18. Eusebius having told us of this Emperours Edict about the honouring of the Sunday addes that he also made the like about the Friday 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as that Author hath it Sozomen addes that he enjoyned also the like rest upon it the like cessation both from iudicature Hist. l. 1. c. 8. and all other businesses and after gives this reason of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hee honoured the one saith he as being the day of our Redeemers resurrection the other as the● day of our Saviours passion So for the practise of the Church in the following times that they used other dayes besides the Sundayes is evident by many passages of Cyrill of Hierusalem where hee makes mention of the Sermon preached the day before 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in his owne Language Catech. orat 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the morrow after the Lords day Cat. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Catech. Mystag 2. The like is very frequent in S. Ambrose also Hesterno die de fonte disputavimus De Sacram. lib. 3. cap. 1. Hesternus noster sermo ad sancti altaris sacramentum deductus est lib. 5. cap. 1. and in other places The like in Crysostome as in many other places too many to bee pointed at in this place and time so in his 18. Hom. on the 3. of Gen.
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. But this perhaps was onely in respect of Lectures or Expositions of the Scriptures such as were often used in the greater Citties where there was much people and but little businesse for I conceive not that they met every day in these times to receive the Sacraments Of Wednesday and of Friday it is plaine they did not to say any thing of the Saturday till the next Section Epl. 289. S. Basil names them all together 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is saith he a profitable and pious thing every day to communicate and to participate of the blessed body and blood of Christ our Saviour he having told us in plaine termes that Whosoever eateth his flesh and drinketh his blood hath eternall life We notwithstanding doe communicate but foure times weekely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 viz. on the Lords day the Wednesday the Friday and the Saturday unlesse on any other dayes the memory of some Martyr be perhaps observed E●pos ●●d ●ath 11. 22. Epiphanius goeth a little further and he deriveth the Wednesdayes and the Fridayes Service even from the Apostles ranking them in the same Antiquity and grounding them upon the same authority that he doth the Sunday 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Onely it seemes the differenc● was that whereas formerly it had beene the custome not to administer the Sacrament on these two dayes being both of them fasting dayes and so accounted long before untill towards evening It had beene changed of late and they did celebrate in the mornings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as on the Lords day was accustomed Whether the meetings on these dayes were of such antiquity as Epiphanius saith they were I will not meddle Certaine it is that they were very antient in the Church of God as may appeare by that of Origen and Tertullian before remembred So that if wee consider eyther the preaching of the word the ministration of the Sacraments or the publicke Prayers the Sunday in the Easterne Churches had no great prerogative above other dayes especially above the Wednesday and the Friday save that the meetings were more solemne and the concourse of people greater than at other times as it is most likely The footesteps of this antient custome are yet to be observed in this Church of England by which it is appointed that no Wednesdayes and Fridayes weekely Can. 25. though they be not holy dayes the Minister at the accustomed houres of Service s●all resort to Church and say the Letanie prescribed in the Booke of Common prayer 5 As for the Saturday that retained its wounted credit in the Easterne Church little inferiour to the Lords day if not plainely equall not as a Sabbath thinke not so but as a day designed unto sacred meetings The Constitutions of the Apostles said to be writ by Clemens one of Saint Peters first successours in the Church of Rome appoint both dayes to be observed as solemne Festivalls both of them to be dayes of rest that so the servant might have time to repaire unto the Church for his education Lib 8. c. 3● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So the Constitution Not that they should denote them wholy unto rest from labour but onely those se● times of both which were appointed for the meetings of the Congregation Yet this had an exception too the Saturday before Easter day Lib. 5 cap. 19. whereupon Christ rested in the Grave being exempt from these assemblies and destinated onely unto griefe and fasting And though these constitutions in all likelihood were not writ by Clemens there being many things therein which could not be in use of a long time after yet ancient sure they were as being mentioned in Epiphanius De Scrip. Ecc. in Clemente and as the Cardinall confesseth à Graecis veteribus magni factos much made of by the ancient Graecians though not of such authoritie in the Church of Rome How their authoritie in this point is countenanced by Ignatius we have seene already and wee shall see the same more fully throughout all this Age. And first beginning with the Synod held in Laodicea Can 16. a towne of Phrygia Anno 314. there passed a Canon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 touching the reading of the Gospels with the other Scriptures upon the Saturday or Sabbath that in the time of Lent Canon 49. there should be no oblation made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but on the Saturday and the Lords day onely neither that any Festivall should be then observed in memory of any Martyrs Canon 51. but that their names onely should be commemorated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 upon the Lords day and the Sabbaths Nor was this onely the particular will of those two and thirty Prelates that there assembled it was the practise too of the Alexandrians S. Athanasius Patriarch there affirmes that they assembled on the Sabbath dayes not that they were infected any whit with Iudaisius which was farre from them H●mi● de Seme●te but that they came together on the Sabbath day to worship Iesus Christ the Lord of the Sabbath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Father hath it So for the Church of Millaine which as before I said in some certaine things followed the Churches of the East it seemes the Saturday was held in a farre esteeme and joyned together with the Sunday Crastino die Sabbato De Sacrament Lib 4. cap. 6. dominico de orationis ordine dicemus as S. Ambrose hath it And probablie his often mention of hesternus dies remembred in the former Section may have relation to the joynt observance of these two dayes and so may that which is reported then out of S. Chrysost. and S. Cyril Easterne Doctors both Hist. Eccles. Lib. 6. cap. 8. Sure I am Socrates counts both dayes for weekely Festivalls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and addes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that on them both the Congregation used to be assembled and the whole Liturgie performed Which plainely shewes that in the practise of those Churches they were both regarded both alike observed Gregory Nyssen speakes more home and unto the purpose Some of the people had neglected to come unto the Church upon the Saturday and on the Sunday he thus chides and rebukes them for it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 De Cast●g●tione c. with what face saith the Father wilt thou looke upon the Lords day which hast dishonoured the Sabbath knowest thou not that these dayes are sisters and that who ever doth despise the one doth affront the other Sisters indeed and so accounted in those Churches not onely in regard of the publicke meetings but in this also that they were both exempt from the Lenten Fast of which more annon In the meane time we may remember how Saturday i● by S. Basil made one of those foure times whereon the Christians of those parts did assemble weekely to receive the Sacrament as before wee noted And finally it is sayd
abstinence Conc. Tom. 2. Can. 18. A folly presently condemned in a Provinciall Synod held at Gangra of Paphlagonia wherein it was determined thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if any fasted on the Lords day on pretence of abstinence he should be anathema Next sprung up one Aerius no good Sundayes man but one that went not on so good a ground as Eutactus did He stood good man upon his Christian liberty and needes must fast upon the Lords day onely because the Church had determined otherwise De haeres ● 53. Of him S. Austin tells us in the generall that hee cryed downe all setled and appointed fasts and taught his fellowes this that every man might fast as he saw occasion ne videatur sub lege lest else he should be thought to be under the Law More punctually Epiphanius tells us Haeres 75. n. 3. that to expresse this liberty they used to fast upon the Sunday and feast it as some doe of late upon the Wednesday and the Friday antient fasting dayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as that Author hath it Adde that S. Austin tells us of this Aerius that amongst other of his heresies he taught this for one Presbyterum ab Episcopo nulla differentia discerni debere that there should be no difference betweene Priests and Bis●ops A pregnant evidence that those who set themselves against the Hi●rarchie of the Church are the most likely men of all to overthrow all orders in the civill state Now as the Manichees did use to fast the Sunday so were they therein imitated by the Priscillianists manichaeorum simillimos the very pictures of the Manichees Epl. 86. as S. Austin calls them save that these last did use to fast on the Christmasse also therein went beyond their patterne And this they did as Pope Leo tells us quia Christum dominum in vera hominis natura natum esse non credunt Epl. 93. c. 4. because they would not be perswaded that Christ the Lord had tooke upon him our humane nature To meete with these proude sectaries for such they were there was a councell called at Saragossa Caesarea Augusta the Latines call it wherein the Fathers censured and anathematized all such as fasted on the Lords day causa temporis aut persuasionis aut superstitionis whether it were in reference unto any time Con. Tom. 1. can 2. or misperswasion or superstition In reference unto any times this seemes to make the Sundayes fast unlawfull in the time of Lent and so it was accounted without all question For this looke Epiphanius Expos. fid Cathol Num. 22. S. Ambr. de Elia jejunio cap. 10. S. Hierome epl ad Lucinum S. Chrysostome Hom. 11. in Gen. 2. In two of which Foure-fathers Chrysostome and Ambrose the Saturday is excepted also S Austin Epl. 86. Concil Agathens can 12. Aurelianens 4. can 2. Humberti Resp. ad libellum Nicetae and last of all Rupertus who lived in the beginning of the 12. De divinis Offic. l. 4. c. 9. Centurie to descend no lower who withall tells us that from the first Sunday in Lent unto Easter day are 42. dayes just whereof the Church fasteth onely the 36. it being prohibited by the Canon to fast upon the day of the Resurrection Vt igitur nostri solennit as jejunij dominico magis coaptetur exemplo quatuor dies qui hanc d●minicam proecedunt superadditi sunt Therefore saith he that the solemnity of our fast might come more neere the Lords example the 4 dayes which occurre betweene Shrove-tuesday and the first Sunday in Lent were added to make up the number But to come backe unto the times where before we left partly in detestation of the heretickes before remembred but principally in honour of the resurrection the councell held at Carthage Anno 398 did decree it thus Can. 64. Qui die dominico studiose jejunat non credatur Catholicus that he which of set purpose did fast the Sunday should be held no Catholicke 9 For honest recreations next I finde not any thing to perswade me that they were not lawfull since those which in themselves were of no good name no otherwise were prohibited in this present Age then as they were an hindrance to the publicke service of the Church Can. 88. For so it was adjudged in the Councell of Carthage before remembred Qui die solenni praetermisso ecclesiae solenni conventu ad spectacula vadit excommunicetur Hee that upon a solemne day shall leave the service of the Church to goe unto the common shewes be hee excommunicate where by the way this Canon ●eacheth unto those also who are offenders in this kinde as well on any of the other f●stivalls and solemne dayes as upon the Sunday and therefore both alike considerable in the present businesse But hereof and the spectacula here prohibited wee shall have better opportunitie to speake in the following Age. And here it is to bee observed that as Saint Chrysostome before confessed it to be lawfull for a man to looke unto his worldly businesse on the Lords day after the congregation was dismissed so here the Fathers seeme to dispense with those who went unto the common shewes being worldly pleasures though otherwise of no good name as before we sayd in case they did not pretermit Gods publicke service Therefore wee safely may conclude that they conceived it not unlawfull for any man to follow his honest plea●ures such as were harmelesse in themselves and of good report after the breaking up of the congregation Of this sort questionlesse were shooting and all m●nly exercises walking abroad or riding forth to take the aire civill discourse good company and ingenuous mirth by any of which the spirits may be qui●kned and the body strengthned Whether that dancing was allowed is a thing more questionable and probably as the dauncings were in the former times it might not be suffered nay which is more it had beene infinite scandall to the Church if they had permitted it For we may please to know that in the dancings used of old throughout the principall Citties of the Roman Empire there was much impurity and immodesty such as was not to bee beheld by a Christian eye Some times they danced starke naked and that not privately alone Orat. in Pis. Art 3. in verrem but in publicke feasts This Cicero objects against Lucius Piso quod in convivio saltaret nudus the same he also casts in the teeth of verres and Deiotarus was accused of the like immodesty whereof perhaps he was not guilty As for the Women they had armed themselves with the like strange impudency and though they daunced not naked in the open streetes yet would be hired to attend naked at publicke feasts and after prostitute themselves unto those guests for enterteinment of the which they were thither brought whereof see Athenaeus Dipnos l. 12. Sueton. in Tiberio cap 42. 43. And for their dancings in the
publicke they studied all those cunning and provoking Arts by which they might entice young men to wantonnesse and inflame their lusts using lascivious gestures and mingling with their dances most immodest songs nay which is more than this sometimes of purpose laying open to the eye and view of the spectatour those parts which womanhood and common honesty would not have uncovered Saint Ambrose so describes them and from him we take it An quicquam est tam pronum ad libidines quam inconditis m●tibus De virginib lib. 3. ea qua natura abscondit vel disciplina nudavit membrorum operta nudare ludere oculis rotare cervicem comam spargere And in another place he is more particular Mulieres in plateis inverecundos sub conspectu adolesc●ntulorum intemperantium choros ducunt jactantes comam tra●entes tunicas scissae amictus 〈◊〉 l●certos De Elia jeiunio c. 18. plaudentes manibus personantes vocibus saltantes pedibus irritantes inse juvenum libidines motu histrionico petulanti oculo dedecoroso ludibrio The women saith the father even in the sight of wanton and lascivious youthes da●nce immodest dances tossing about their hayre drawing aside their coates that so they might lay open what should not be seene their garments open in many places for that purpose also their armes quite bare clapping their hands capering with their feete chanting obscene and filthy songs for afterwards he speakes de obscoenis cantibus finally stirring up the lusts of ungoverned men by those uncomely motions wanton lookes and shamefull spectacles Saint Basil in his tract de luxi● ebrietate describes them much after the same manner whereof see that father Yet thinke not that all women were so lewdly given or so immodest in their dancings but only common women which most used those arts to increase their custome such as were mustered up by a Athen. Dipnos l. 12. c 13. Struto King of the Sdonians to attend his banquetings or such loose trulls as Messalina and others mentioned in the b Iuvenal Sat. 6. 11. Poet who practised those lascivious dances to inflame their paramou●s Now to these common publicke dancings the people in the Roman Empire had beene much accustomed especially in their height of fortune wherein they were extreamely riotous and luxurions And unto these too many innocent soules both young men and women in the first ages of the Church used to repare sometimes for their recreation onely to looke upon the sport and seeing those uncomely gestures and uncivill sights went backe sometimes possessed with unchaste desires and loose affections which might perhaps breake out at last in dishonest actions This made the Fathers of this Age and of some that followed inveigh as generally against all dancings as most unlawfull in themselves so more particularly against the sport it selfe and beholding of the same upon those dayes which were appointed to Gods worship And to these kinde of dancings and to none but these must we referre those declamations which are so frequent in their writings whether in reference to the thing or unto the times Two onely in this Centurie have spoke of dancing as it reflects upon the day S. Chrysostome and Ephrem Syrus Saint Chrysostome though last in time shall be first in place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Therefore saith he De ele●mos orat 2. T. 6. we ought to solemnise this day with spirituall honour not making riotous feasts thereon swimming in wine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 drinking to drunkennesse or in wanton dancings but in releeving of our poore and distressed brethren Where note that I have rendred 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not simply dancing but wanton dancing according to the nature of the word which signifieth such dancings as was mixt with Songs according to the fashion at this time in use Stephan in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 choros agito salto tripudio proprie cum cantu as in the Lexicon and for the quality of the songs which in those times they used in dancing that is shewne before so that not dancing simply but immodest dancing such as was then in use is by him prohibited And to that purpose Ephrem Syrus if the worke be his Serm. de dieb Festis Festivitates dominicas honorare contendite c. Endeavour earnestly saith he to honour the Lords day not in a wordly sort but after a spirituall manner not as the Gentiles keepe their feasts but as Christians should Amongst which customes of the Gentiles that are there forbidden one and the principall is this non choreas ducamus that we use no dance● tha● is no such immodest and unseemely dancings as were most practised by the Gentiles and could not stand with that discreete which pertained to Christians This evident by that which Saint Ambrose tell 's us De Elia jei●nioc 18. Notum est omnibus nugaces turpes saltationes ab episcopis solere compesci it is well knowne saith he how carefully the Bishops doe restraine all toying light and beastly kinde of dances So that in case the dauncings be not toying light nor beastly as were the daunces of the Gentiles whom they reprehended neither the fathers did intend them nor the rulers of the Church restraine them 10 For the Imperiall constitutions of this present Age they strike all of them upon one and the selfe same string with that of Constantine before remembred save that the Emperour Gratian Valentinian and Theodosius Cod. Theod. who were all partners in the Empire set out an edict to prohibit all publicke shewes upon the Sunday Nullus die Soli● spectaculum praebeat nec divinam venerationem confecta solennitate confundat Such was the Letter of the Law which being afterwards enlarged by Theodosius the younger who lived in the next Centurie we shall meete with their The other Edicts which concerne the businesse that is now in hand were onely explanations and additions unto that of Constantine one in relation to the matter the other in reference to the time First in relation to the matter whereas all Iudges were restrained by the law of Constantine Cod. Theodos. from sitting on that day in the open Court there was a clause now added touching Arbitrators that none should arbitrate any litigious cause or take cognizance of any pee●uniary businesse on the Sunday Debi●um publicum privatumue nullus efflagitet nec apud ipsos quidem arbitros vel in judicijs flagitatos vel sponte delectos ●lla sit agnitio jurgiorum a penalty being in●●icted upon them that transgressed herein This published by the same three Emperours Honorius and Evodius Cod. Theodos. ● 8. 〈◊〉 8. being that yeere consulls which was in Anno 384 as the former was Afterwards Valentinian and Valens Emperours were pleased to adde neminem christianum ab exactoribus conveniri volumus that they would have no Christians brought upon that day before the officers of the
Cathol conversationis adviseth us to be attent and silent all the time of Divine Service not telling tales nor falling into jarres and quarrells as being to answer such of us as offend therein for a double fault Dum nec ipse verbum Dei audit nec alios audire permittit as neyther hearkening to the Word of God our selves nor permitting others In the 251. Sermon inscribed De tempore wee are commanded to lay aside all worldly businesses in solennitatibus sanctorum maxime in dominicis diebus upon the festivalls of the Saints but the Lords day specially that wee may be the readier for divine imployments Where note that whosoever made the Sermon it was his purpose that on the Saints dayes men were to forbeare all worldly businesses and not upon the Lords day onely though on that especially And in the same it is affirmed that the Lords day was instituted by the Doctors of the Church Apostles and Apostolicall men the honours of the Iewish Sabbath being by them transferred unto it Sanctieccle●●● Doctores omnem Iudaici Sabbatismi gloriam in illam transferre decreverunt It seemes some used to hunt on the Lords day then for there it is prohibited as a devilish exercise Nullus in die dominico in venatione se occupet diabolico mancipetur officio with command enough Nay in the 244. of those de tempore it is injoyned above all things with an ante omnia that no man meddle with his wife eyther upon the Lords day or the other holy dayes Ante omnia quoties dies dominicus aut aliae festivitates veniunt vxorem suam nullus agnoscat which ● the rather note though not worth the noting that those who are pressed with so poore a fancie and some such there be would please to be as carefull of the holy dayes as of the Sundayes being alike expressed in the Prohibition One may conjecture easily both by the stile and by the state of things then being in the Christian Church that neyther of these Sermons not to say any thing of the rest which concerne us not could be writ by Austin the latter every thing therein considered by no man of wisedome 2 I say as things then were in the Christian Church that Sermon was not likely to bee Saint Austines It had beene too much rashnesse to prohibit hunting being in it selfe a lawfull sport when such as in themselves were extreamely evill and an occasion of much sinne were not yet put downe The Cirque and Theater were frequented hitherto aswell upon the Lords day as on any other and they were first to be removed before it could be seasonable to inhibit a lawfull pleasure Somewhat to this effect was done in the Age before the Emperours Gratian Valentinian and Theodosius having made a law that no man should exhibit any publicke shew upon the Sunday as before we noted But this prevailed not at the first And thereupon the Fathers of the Councell of Carthage in the first yeare of this first Centurie did then and there decree by publicke order to make petition to the Emperour then being ut spectacula theatrorum coeterorumque ludorum die dominica vel coeteris religionis Christianae diebus solennibus amoveantur c. Their suite was double first that the shewes exhibited on the theaters and other plaies then used might no more be suffered on the Lords day or any other festivall of the Christian Church especially on the Octaves of the feast of Easter what time the people used to goe in greater numbers unto the Cirque or shew-place than the house of God Then that for other dayes no man might bee compelled to repare unto them as they had beene formerly as being absolutely repugnant unto Gods commandements but that all people should be left at liberty to goe or not to goe as they would themselves Nec oportere quenquam christianorum ad haec spectacula cogi c. Sed uti oportet homo in libera voluntate subsistat sibi divinitus concessa so the Canon The Emperour Theodosius thereupon enacted that on the Lords day on the feast of Christs Nativity and after to the Epiphanie or twelfth day as we call it commonly as also on the feast of Easter and from thence to Whitsontide the Cirques Theaters in all places should be shut up that so all faithfull Christian people might wholy bend themselves to the service of God Cod. Theodos. Dominico qui totius septimanae primus est dies Natale atque Epiphaniorum Christi Paschae etiam Quinquagesimae diebus c. Omni theatrorum atque Circensium voluptate per universas urbes earundem populis denegata totae Christianorum fidelium men●es dei cultibus occupentur So farre the letter of the law which was enacted at Constantinople the first of February Anno 425. Theodosius the second time and Valentinian being that yeare Consuls Where still observe how equally the principall festivities and the Lords day were matched together that being held unlawfull for the one which was conceived so of the other And so it stood untill the Emperour Leo by two severall Edicts advanced the Lords day higher than before it was and made it singular above other festivalls as in some other things of which more annon so in this particular For in an Edict by him sent unto Amasius at that time Captaine of his Guard or Praefectus pretorio he enacts it thus Cod. l. 3. tit 12. de ●●riis First generally Dies festos dies altissimae malestati dedicatos nullis volumus voluptatibus occupari that he would have holy dayes which had beene dedicated to the supreame majesty not to be taken up with pleasures What would he have no pleasures used at all on the holy dayes No he saith not so but onely that they should not wholy be taken up with sports and pleasures no time being spared for pious and religious duties Nor doth he barre all pleasures on the Sunday neither as wee shall see anon in the law it selfe but onely base obscene and voluptuous pleasures Then more particularly for the Lords day thus in reference to the point in hand that neither theater nor Cirque●ight nor combatings with wilde beasts should be used thereon and if the birth day or inauguration of the Emperour fell upon the same that the solemnities thereof should be referred to another day no lesse apenalty than losse of dignity and confiscation of estate being layd on them that should offend against his pleasure But for the better satisfaction take so much of the law it selfe as concernes this businesse Nihil eadem die vendicet scena theatralis aut Circense certamen aut ferarum lachrymosa spectacula Etiam si in nostrum ortum aut natalem celebranda solennitas inciderit differatur Amissionem militiae proscriptionemque patrimonij sustinebit si quis unquam spectaculis hoc die interesse praesumpscrit Given at Constantinople Martian and Zeno being consuls 469 of our Saviours birth 3
to be no ordinance of the Lords that he exacteth no such duty from us and that it is an ecclesiasticall exhortation onely and no more but so And if no more but so it were too great an undertaking to bring all nations of the world to yeeld unto the prescript of a private and particular Canon made onely for a private and particular cause and if no more but so it concludes no Sabbath 8 Yet notwithstanding these restraints from worke and labour the Church did never so resolve it that any worke was in it selfe unlawfull on the Lords day though to advance Gods publicke service it was thought good that men should bee restrained from some kinde of worke that so they might the better attend their prayers and follow their devotions It s true these centuries the fifth and sixth were fully bent to give the Lords day all fit honour not onely in prohibiting unlawfull pleasures but in commanding a forbearance of some lawfull business● such as they sound to yeeld most hinderance to religious duties Yea and some workes of pietie they affixt unto it for its greater honour The Prisoners in the common Gaoles had formerly beene kept in too strictly It was commanded by Honorius and Theodosius at that time Emperous Anno 412. that they should be permitted omnibus diebus dominicis every Lords day to walke abroade with a guard upon them as well to crave the charity of well disposed persons as to repaire unto the Bathes for the refreshing of their bodies Nor did he onely so command it but set a mulct of 20 pound in gold on all such publicke ministers as should disobey the Bishops of the Church being trusted to see it done Where note that going to the Bathes on the Lords day was not thought unlawfull though it required no question corporall labours for had it beene so thought as some thought it afterwards the Prelates of the Church would not have taken it upon them to see the Emperours will fulfilled and the law obeyed A second honour affixt in these Ages to the Lords day is that it was conceived the most proper day for giving holy Orders in the Church of God and a law made by Leo then Pope of Rome and generally since taken up in the Westerne Church that they should bee conferred upon no day else There had beene some regard of Sunday in the times before and so much Leo doth acknowledge Quod ergo a patribus nostris propensiore cura novimus servatum esse Epl. decret 81. a vobis quoque volumus custodiri ut non passim diebus omnibus sacerdotalis ordinatio celebretur But that which was before a voluntary Act is by him made necessary and a law given to all the Churches under his obedience Vt his qui consecrandi sunt nunquam benedictiones nisi in die resurrectionis dominicae tribuantur that ordinations should bee celebrated on the Lords day onely And certainely he gives good reason why it should be so except in extraordinarie and emergent cases wherein the law admits of a dispensation For on that day saith he The holy Ghost descended upon the Apostles and thereby gave us as it were this celestiall rule that on that day alone we should con●erre spirituall orders in quo ●ollata sunt omnia dona gratiarum in which the Lord conferred upon his Church all spirituall graces Nay that this busines might be done with the more solemnity and preparation it was appointed that those men who were to be invested with holy Orders should continue fasting from the Eve before that spending all that time in prayer and humbling of themselves before the Lord they might be better ●itted to receive his Graces For much about these times the service of the Lords day was enlarged and multiplyed the Evenings of the day being honoured with religious meetings as the Mornings formerly Yea and the Eves before were reckoned as a part or parcell of the Lords day following Cui a vespere sabbati initium constat ascribi as the same Decretall informes us The 251 Sermon de tempore ascribed unto Saint A●stine doth affirme as much but we are not sure that it is his Note that this Leo entred on the chaire of Rome Anno 440 of our Saviours birth and did continue in the same full 20 years within which space of time he set out this decretall but in what yeare particularly that I cannot finde 10 I say that now the Evenings of the Lords day began to have the honour of religious meetings for ab initio non fuit sic it was not so from the beginning Nor had it beene so now but that almost all sorts of people were restrained from worke aswell by the Imperiall Edicts as by the constitutions of particular Churches by meanes where of the afternoone was left at large to bee disposed of for the best increase of Christian Pietie Nor probably had the Church conceived it necessary had not the admiration which was then generally had of the Monasticke kinde of life facilitated the way unto it For whereas they had bound themselves to set houres of prayer Epitaphium Paul● matr Mane hora tertia sexta nona vespere noctis medio at three of the clocke in the morning at sixe at nine and after in the evening and at midnight as S. Hierome tells us the people generally became much affected with their strict devotions and seemed not unwilling to conforme unto them as farre at least as might consist with their vocations upon this willingnesse of the people the service of the Church became more frequent then before and was performed thrice every day in the greater Churches where there were many Priests and Deacons to attend the same namely at sixe and nine before noone and at sometime appointed in the evening for the afternoone accordingly as now wee use it in our Cathedrall and Collegiate Churches But in inferiour townes and pettit villages where possibly the people could not every day attend so often it was conceived sufficient that they should have the morning and the evening prayer sung or sayd them that such as would might come to Church for their devotions and so it is by the appointment of the Rubricke in ou● Common Prayer Booke Onely the Sundayes and the holy● dayes were to be honoured with two severall meetings in the morning the one at sixe of the Clocke which simply was the morning service the other at nine for the administration of the holy Sacrament and Preaching of the Word to the congregation This did occasion the distinction of the first and second Service as we call them still though now by reason of the peoples sloth and backwardnesse in comming to the Church of God they are in most places joyn'd together So whereas those of the monasticke life did use to solemnize the Eve or Vigils of the Lords day and of other festivals with the peculiar and preparatory service to the day it selfe that profitable and pious custome
be done in any part why then necessity requiring is it unlawfull for the whole It seemes then by Saint Gregories doctrine that in hot weather one may lawfully goe into the water on the Lords day and there wade or swimme either to wash or coole his body as well as upon any other Note also here that not the quality of the day but the condition of the thing is to be considered in the denominating of a lawfull or unlawfull act that things unlawfull in themselves or tending to unlawfull ends are unfit for all dayes and that what ever thing is fit for any day is of it selfe as fit for Sunday Finally he concludes with this Dominicorum vero die a labore terreno cessandum est c. We ought to rest indeede on the Lords day from earthly labours and by all meanes abide in prayers that if by humane negligence any thing hath escaped in the sixe former dayes it may be expiated by our prayers on the day of the resurrection This was the salve by him applied to those dangerous sores and such effect it wrought upon them that for the present and long after we finde not any that prohibited working on the Saturday But at the last it seemes some did who thereupon were censured and condemned by another Gregory of that name the seventh Damnavit docentes non●licere die Sabbati operas fac●re as the Law informes us De consecratione distinct 3. cap. Pervenit But this was not till Anno 1074. or after almost 500. yeares after the times where now we are As for the other fancie that of not going to the Bathes on the Lords day it seemes he crushed that too as for that particular though otherwise the like conceits did breake out againe as men beganne to entertaine strange thoughts and superstitious doctrines about this day especially in these declining Ages of the Church wherein so many errours both in faith and manners did in fine defile it that it was blacke indeed but with little comlinesse The Church as in too many things not proper to this place and purpose it did incroach upon the Iew much of the ceremonies and Priestly habit in these times established being thence derived so is it not to be admired if in some things particular both 〈◊〉 and Synods beganne to Iudaize a little in our present businesse making the Lords day no lesse rigidly to be observed than the Iewish Sabbath if it were not more 2 For in the following Age and in the latter end thereof when learning was now almost come to its lowest ebbe there was a Synod held at Friuli by the command of Pepin then King of France a towne now in the territorie of the State of Venice The principall motive of that meeting was to confirme the doctine of the holy Trinity and the incarnation of the word which in those times had bin disputed The President thereof Pa●linus Patriarke of Aquilegia Anno 791. of our Redemption There in relation to this day it was thus decreed Diem dominicum inchoante noctis initio i. e. vespere Sabbati quando signum insonuerit c. Wee constitute and appoint that all Christian men that is to say all Christian men who lived within the Canons ●each should with all reverence and devotion honour the Lords day beginning on the evening of the day before at the first ringing of the bell and that they doe abstaine therein especially from all kinde of sinne as also from all carnall acts Etiam a proprijs conjugibus even from the company of their wives and all earthly labours and that they goe unto the Church devoutly laying aside all suites of Law that so they may in love and charitie praise Gods name together You may remember that some such device as this was fathered formerly on Saint Austine but with little reason Such trimme conceits as these had not then beene thought of And though it be affirmed in the preamble to these constitutions nec novas regulas instituimus nec supervacuas rerum adinventiones inhianter sectamur that they did neither make new rules or follow vaine and needlesse fancies Sed sacris paternorum Canonum recensitis folijs c. but that they tooke example by the antient Canons yet looke who will into all Canons of the Church for the times before and he shall find no such example For my part I should rather thinke that it was put into the Canon in succeeding times by some misadventure that some observing a restraint ab omni opere carnali of all carnall acts might as by way of question write in the Margin etiam a proprijs conjugibus from whence by ignorance or negligence of the Collectours it might be put into the text Yet if it were so passed at first and if it chance that any be so minded and some such there be as to conceive the Canon to be pure and pious and the intent thereof not to be neglected they are to be advertised that the holy dayes must be observed in the selfe same manner It was determined so before by the false Saint Austine And somewhat to this purpose saith this Synod now that all the greater festivalls must with all reverence be observed and honoured and that such holy dayes as by the priests were bidden in the Congregation Omnibus modis sunt custodienda were by all wayes and meanes to be kept amongst them that is by all those wayes and means which in the said Conon were before remembred In this the Christian plainely outwent the Iew amongst whose many superstitions Ap. Ainsw in Ex. 20. 10. there is none such found true indeede the Iewes accounted it unlawfull to marrie on the Sabbath day or on the evening of the Sabbath or on the first day of the weeke lest say the Rabbins they should pollute the Sabbath by dressing meate Conformably whereunto it was decreed in a Synod held in Aken or Aquis granum Ca● 17. Anno 833. nec nuptias pro reverentia tantae solennitatis celebrari visum est that in a reverence to the Lords day it should no more be lawfull to marrie or be married upon the same The Iewes as formerly wee shewed have now by order from their Rabbins restrained themselves on their Sabbath day from knocking with their hands upon a table to still a child from making figures in the aire or drawing letters in the ground or in dust and ashes and such like niceties And some such teachers Olaus King of Norway had no question met with Anno 1028. For being taken up one Sunday in some serious thoughts and having in his hands a small walking sticke he tooke his knife and whitled it as men doe sometimes when as their mindes are troubled or intent on businesse And when it had beene ●old him as by way of jest how he had ●respassed therein against the Sabbath he gathered the small chippes together put them upon his hand and set fire unto them Vt viz. in se
certainely devout and therefore the lesse question to be made but that the holy dayes were employed as they ought to be in hearing of the Word of God receiving of the Sacraments and powring forth their prayers unto him The sixt generall counsell holden at Constantinople appointed that those to whom the cure of the Church was tr●sted should on all dayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 especially on the Lords day instruct the Clergie and the people out of the holy Scripture in the wayes of godlinesse I say the Clergie and the people for in these times the Revenue of the Church being great and the offerings liberall there were besides the Parish Priest who had Cure of soules many assisting ministers of inferiour Orders which lived upon Gods holy Altar Somewhat to this purpose of preaching every Sunday yea and Saints dayes too in the Congregation we have seene before established in the Councell at Mentz Anno 813. So for receiving of the Sacrament whereas some would that it should be administred every day singulis in anno diebus as Bertram hath it lib de corp sangu Christi Rabanus Maurus who lived 824 leaves it as a thing indifferent advising all men notwithstanding De Sermon proprieta● l 4 10. in case there be no lawfull let to communicate every Lords day Quotidie Eucharistiae communionem percipere nec vitupero nec laudo omnibus tamen dominicis diebus communicandum hortor sitamen mens in affectu peccandi non sit as his words there are And whereas this good custome had beene long neglected it was appointed that the Sacrament should be administred every Lords day Can. 2● by the Councell at Aken Anno 836. Ne forte qui longe est a sacramentis quibusest redemptus c least saith the councell they which keepe so much distance from the Sacraments of their redemption be kept as much at distance from the fruition of their Salvation As for the holy dayes or Saints dayes there needed no such Canon to enjoyne on them the celebration of the Sacrament which was annexed to them of course So likewise for the publicke prayers besides what scatteringly hath beene sayd in former places the Councell held at Friburg Anno 895 hath determined thus Conc. Friburiens Can. 26. Diebus dominicis sanctorum festis vigilis orationibus nisistendumest ad missas cuilibet Christiano cum oblationibus currendum that on the Lords day and the festivalls of the Saints every Christian was to be intent upon his devotions to watch and pray and goe to Masse and there make his offering It s true the Service of the Church being in the Latine and in these times that language being in some Provinces quite worne out and in some others growne into a different dialect from what it was that part of Gods worship which was publicke prayer served not so much to comfort and to ●dification as it should have done As for the outward adjuncts of Gods publicke service on the Churches part the principall was that of Musicke which in these Ages grew to a perfect height We shewed before that vocall musicke in the Church is no lesse antient than the liturgie of the Church it selfe which as it was begunne in Ignatius time after the manner of plaine-song or a melodious kinde of pronunciation as before was sayd so in S. Austins time it became so excellent that it drew many to the Church and consequently many to the faith Now to that vocall musicke which was then in use and of which formerly we spake it pleased the Church in the beginning of these Ages to adde instrumentall the organ being added to the voyce by Pope Vitalian Anno 653 almost 1000 yeares agoe and long before the aberration of the Church from its pristine piety And certainely it was not done without good advise there being nothing of that kinde more powerfull than melody both vocall and instrumentall for raising of mens hearts and sweetning their affections towards God Not any thing wherein the militant Church here on Earth hath more resemblance to the Church in heaven triumphant then in that sacred and harmonious way of singing prayse and Allelujahs to the Lord our God which is and hath of long beene used in the Church of Christ. 13 To bring this Chapter to an end in all that hath beene sayd touching the keeping of the Lords day wee finde not any thing like a Sabbath either in the practise of the Church or writings of particular men however these last Ages grew to such an height in restraint of labours on this day that they might seeme to have a minde to revive that part of the fourth Commandement Thou shalt doe no manner of worke upon it For where they tell us of this day as before was sayd that it was taken up by custome on the authority of the Church at most on Apostolicall tradition this makes it plaine that they intended no such matter as a Sabbath day though that the Congregation might assemble in the greater numbers and men might joyne together in all christian dueties with the greater force it pleased the Church and principall powers thereof to restraine men from corporall labours and binde them to repaire to the house of God Or if they did intend the Lords day for a Sabbath day its plaine they must have made more Sabbaths than one day in seven those holy dayes which universally were observed in the Christian Church being no otherwise to be kept than the Lords day was and those increasing in these Ages to so great a number that they became a burden to the common people Nor is it likely that being once free from the bondage of the Iewish Sabbath they would submit themselves unto another of their owne devising and doe therewith as the Idolaters of old with their woodden gods first make them and then presently fall downe and worship them Rather they tooke a course to restraine the Iewes from sanctifying their Sab●ath and other legall festivals as before they used Statutum est de Iudoeis in the 12 Councell of Tolledo Anno 681 Can. 10. Ne Sabbata coeterasque festivitates ritus sui celebrare praesumant and not so onely Sed ut diebus dominicis ab opere cessent but that they should refraine from labour on the Lords day also Of any Sabbath to be kept in the Christian Church some few might dreame perhaps such filthy dreamers as Saint Iude speakes of but they did onely dreame thereof they saw no such matter They which had better visions could perceive no Sabbath but in this life a Sabbath or a rest from sinne and in the life to come a Sabbath or a rest from misery Plainely Rupertus so conceived it as great a Clerke as any in the times wherein hee lived which was in the beginning of the twelfth Century Nam sicut signum circumcisionis inc●rnationem c. For as saith he the signe of Circumcision foreshewed the incarnation of our Lord and
fitting every legall festivall with some that were observed in the Christian Church laying this ground that ours succeeded in the place of theirs 〈…〉 qu. 103 Art 3. ad 4● Sabbatum mutatur in diem d●minicum similiter alijs solennitatibus veteris legis novae solennitates succedunt as his words there are Vpon which ground of his the doctrines now remembed were no question raised and howsoever other men might thinke all dayes alike in themselves considered yet those of Rome will have some holier than the rest even by a naturall and inherent holinesse 4 And in this state things stood both for the doctrine and the practise untill such time as men began to looke into the errours and abuses in the Church of Rome with a more serious eye then before they did the Canonists being no lesse nice in the point of practise then were the Schoolemen and the rest exhorbitant in the point of doctrine Whose niceties especially in matter of restraint In Exod. 12. we have most fully represented to us by ●ostatus one that had runne through all the parts of learning at that time on foote and was as well studied in the Canon as in the Schooles He then determineth of it thus ●tinerando pro negotijs p●ccatum esse mortale c. Q● 25. Hee that doth travaile on the holy dayes for in that generall name the Lords day and the other festivalls are comprehended about worldly businesse commits mortall sinne as also if he Trade or Traffick in the place wherein he liveth But this hath two exceptions or reservations First if the businesse by him done bee but small and light quae quictem Sabbati non impediunt such as are no great hinderance to the Sabbaths rest and secondly nisi hoc sit in causa pia unlesse it were on some devou● and pious purpose To reade unto or teach a man to deale in actions of the Law Qu. 26. or determine suites or to cast accounts si quis doceret ut lucretur if it be done for hire or for present gaine become servile workes and are forbidden Otherwise if one doe it gratis Qu. 27. If a Musitian waite upon a Gentleman to recreate his minde with Musicke and that they are agreed on a certaine wages or that hee be hired onely for a present turn● he sinnes in case hee play or sing unto him on the holy dayes but not if his reward be doubtfull Qu. 28. and depends onely upon the bounty of the parties who enjoy his musicke A Cook that on the holy dayes is hired to make a feast or to d●esse a dinner doth commit mortall sinne sed non pro toto mense aut anno but not if he be hired by the moneth or by the yeare Meat may be dressed upon the Lords day Qu. 29. or the other holy dayes but to wash dishes on those dayes was esteemed unlawfull et differi in diem alteram and was to bee def●rred till another day Qu 32. Lawyers that doe their clients businesse for their wonted fee were not to draw their bills or frame their answers or peruse their evidences on the holy dayes Secus si causam agerent pro miserabilibus personis c. But it was otherwise if they dealt for poore indigent people such as did sue in forma pauperis as we call it or in the causes of a Church or hospitall in which the Popes had pleased to grant a dispensation A man that travailed on the holy dayes Qu. 34. to any speciall shrine or Saint did commit no sinne Si autem in redeundo peccatum est mortale but if he did the like in his comming backe Qu. 35. he then sinned mortally In any place where formerly it had beene the custome neither to draw water nor to sweepe the house but to have those things ready on the day before the custome was to bee observed where no such custome is there they may bee done Actions of a long continuance if they were delightfull or if one played three or foure houres together on a Musicall instrument were not unlawfull on the holy dayes yet possibly they might be sinfull ut si quis hoc ageret ex lascivia as if one played onely out of wantonnesse Qu 36. or otherwise were so intent upon his musicke that he went not to Masse ●rtificers which worke on the holy dayes for their owne profit onely are in mortall sinne unlesse the worke be very small quia modicum non facit solennitat●m dissolui because a little thing dishonours not the Festival De minimis non curat lex as our saying is Contrary Butchers Vintners Bakers Coster-mongers sinned not in selling their commodities because more profit doth redound to the Common wealth which cannot be without such commodities than to them that ●ell yet this extended not to Drapers Shoomakers or the like because there is not such a present necessity for cloathes as meate Yet where the custome was that Butchers did not sell on the holy dayes but specially not upon the Lords day that commendable custome was to be observed though in those places also it was permitted to the Butcher that on those dayes at some convenient times thereof hee might make ready what was to be sold on the morrow after as kill and skinne his bestiall which were fit for sale in case he could not doe it with so much convenience non ita congrue at another time Qu. 3● To write out or transcribe a booke though for a mans owne private use was esteemed unlawfull except it were exceeding small because this put no difference betweene the holy dayes and the other yet was it not unlawfull neither in case the Argument were spirituall nor for a preacher to write out his sermons or for a Student to provide his lecture for the day following Windmils were suffered to be used on the holy dayes Q● 3● not Watermils because the first required lesse labour and attendance than the other did This is the reason in Tostatus though I can see no reason in it the passage of the water being once let runne being of more certainty and continuance then the changeable blowing of the winde But to proceed Ferry-men were not to transport port such men in their boates or wherries as did begin their journey on an holy day Qu. 39. unlesse they went to M●sse or on such occasions but such as had begunne their journey and now were in pursuite thereof might be ferried over quia forte carebunt victu because they may perhaps want victuals if they doe not passe To repaire Churches on the Lords day and the other holy dayes Qu. 41. was accounted lawfull in case the workemen did it gratis and that the Church were poore not able to hire workemen on the other dayes not if the Church were rich and in case to doe it Qu 42 So also to build bridges repaire the walls of Townes and Castles or other publicke edifices
it being no where to be ●ound that it was commanded Gualten more generally that the Christians first assembled on the Sabbath day as being then most famous and so most in use but when the Churches were augmented pr●ximus à sabbat● dies robus sacris destinatus the next day after the Sabbath was des●gned to those holy uses If not before then certainly not so commanded by our Saviour Christ and if designed onely then not enjoyned by the Apostles Yea Beza though herein hee differ from his Master C●lvin Apoc. 1 10. and makes the Lords day meetings to be Apostolicae verae divinae traditionis to be indeed of Apostolicall and divine tradition yet being a tradition onely although Apostolicall it is no commandement And more then that In Act. ●0 he tels us in another place that from Saint Rauls preaching at Troas and from the Text. 1. Corinth 16. 2. non inepte colligi it may be gathered not unfitly that then the Christians were accustomed to meete that day the ceremony of the Iewish Sabbath beginning by degrees to vanish But sure the custome of the people makes no divine traditions and such conclusions as not unfitly may be gathered from the Text are not Text it selfe Others there be who attribute the changing of the day In Gen. to the Apostles not to their precept but their practice So Mercer Apostoli in Dominicum converterunt the Apostles changed the Sabbath to the Lords day in Gen. 2. Parae●s attributes the same Apostolicae Ecclesia unto the Apostolicall Church or Church in the Apostles time quo modo autem facta fit haec mutatio in sacris literis expressum non habemus but how by what authoritie such a change was made In Thesi● p. 733. is not delivered in the S●ripture And Iohn Cuchlinus though hee call it an consuetudinem Apostolicam an Apostolicall custom● yet hee is peremptory that the Apostles gave no such Commandement Apostolos prae●ptum reliquisse constanter negamus So Simler calls it onely consuetudinem tempore Apostolorum receptam Def●stis Chr p. 24. a custome taken up in the Apostles time And so Hospinian although saith hee it be apparant that the Lords day was celebrated in the place of the Iewish Sabbath even in the times of the Apostles non invenitur tamen vel Apostolos vel alios leg● aliqua praecepto observationem ejus instituisse yet find we not that either they or any other In 4. praecep● did institute the keeping of the same by any law or precept but left it free Thus Zanchius nullibi legimus Apostoles c. we doe not read saith hee that the Apostles commanded any to observe this day Wee onely read what they and others did upon it liberum ergo reliquerunt which is an argument that they left it to the Churches power In 〈◊〉 ●alat To those adde Vrsin in his exposition on the fourth Commandement liberum Ecclesiae reliquit alios dies eligere and that the Church made choice of this in honour of our Saviours resurrection Arctius in his Common-places Christiani●● Dominicum transtulerunt Gomarus and Ryvet in the ●racts before remembred Both which have also there determined that in the choosing of this day the Church did exercise as well her wisdome as her freedome her freedome being not obliged unto any day by the Law of God her wisdome ne majori mutatione Iudaeos offenderet that by so small an alteration she might the lesse offend the Iewes who were then considerable As for the Lutheran Divines it it is affirmed by Doctour Bound that 〈◊〉 the most part they ascribe too much unto the liberty of the Church in appointing dayes for the assembly of the people which is plain confession But for particulars Brentius as Doctour Prideaux tells us calls it civilem institutionem a civill institution and no commandement of the Gospell which is no more indeed then what is elsewhere said by Calvin when he accounts no otherwise thereof then ut remedium retinendo ordini necessarium as a fit way to retaine order in the Church And sure I am Chemnitius tells us that the Apostles did not impose the keeping of this day as necessary upon the consciences of Gods people by any law or precept whatsoever sed libera fuit observatio ordinis gratia but that for orders sake it had been voluntarily used amongst them of their own accord 8 Thus have we proved that by the D●ctrine of the Protestants of what side soever and those of greatest credit in their severall Churches eighteene by name and all the Lutherans in generall of the same opinion that the Lords Day is of no other institution then the authoritie of the Church Which proved the last of the three Theses that still the Church hath power to change the day and to transferre it to some other will follow of it selfe on the former grounds the Protestant Doctours before remembred in saying that the Church did institute the Lords day as we see they doe confessing tacitely that still the Church hath power to change it Nor do they tacitely confesse it as if they were affraid to speak it out but some of them in plaine termes affirme it as a certaine truth Zuinglius the first reformer of the Switzers hath resolved it so in his Discourse against one Valentine Gentilis a new Arian heretick Audi mi Valentine quibus modis rationibus sabbatum ceremoniale reddatur Tom. 1 p 254 ● Harken now Valentine by what wayes and means the Sabbath may be made a ceremony if either we observe that day which the Iewes once did or thinke the Lords day so affixed unto any time ut nefas sit illum in aliud tempus transferre that wee conceive it an impietie it should be changed unto another on which as well as upon that we may not rest from labour and harken to the Word of God if perhaps such necessity should be this would indeed make it become a ceremony Nothing can be more plaine then this Yet Calvin is as plain when hee professeth that hee regarded not so much the number of seven ut ejus servituti Ecclesias astringeret as to enthrall the Church unto it Sure I am Doctour Prideaux reckoneth him as one of them who teach us that the Church hath power to change the day and to transfer it to some other In Orat. de Sab. and that Iohn Barclaie makes report how once hee had a Consultation de transferenda Dominica in feriam quintam of altering the Lords day unto the Thursday Bucer affirmes as much as touching the authoritie and so doth Bullinger and Brentius Vrsine and Chemnitius as Doctour Prideaux hath observed Of Bullinger Bucer Brentius I haue nought to say because the places are not cited but take it as I think I may upon his credit But for Chemnitius he saith often that it is libera observatio a voluntatie observation that it is an especiall part of our Christian
libertie not to be tyed to dayes and times in matters which concerne Gods service and that the Apostles made it manifest by their example Singulis diebus vel quocunque die That every day or any day may by the Church be set apart for religious exercises 〈◊〉 qu. 103. §. 2. ●nd as for Vrsine he makes this difference betweene the Lords day and the Sabbath that it was utterly unlawfull to the Iewes either to neglect or change the Sabbath without expresse Commandement from God himselfe as being a ceremoniall part of divine worship but for the Christian Church that may designe the first or second or any other day to Gods publicke service Eccl●sia vero Christiana primum vel al●um diem trib●it ●inisterio salva s●a libertate sine opinione cultus vel necessitatis 〈◊〉 17 post Tr●●it as his words there are To these adde Dietericus a Lutheran Divine who though he makes the keeping of one day in seven to be the morall part of the fourth Commandement yet for that day it may be dies Sabbati or dies Solis or quicunque alius Sunday or Saturday or any other be it one in seven And so Hospinian is perswaded D●minicum diem mutare in alium transferre licet That if the occasions of the Church do so require the Lords day may be changed unto any other provided it be one of seven and that the change be so transacted that it produce no scandall or confusion in the Church of God Nay by the doctrine of the Helvetian Churches if I conceive their meaning rightly every particular Church may destinate what day they please to religious meetings and every day may be a Lords day or a Sabbath For so they give it up in their C●nfession 〈…〉 Deligit ergo qu●vis Ecclesia sibi certum tempus ad preces publicas Evangelii praedicati●ne● nec n●n sacramentorum celebrationem though for their parts they kept that day which had beene set apart for those holy uses even from the time of the Apostles yet so that they conceived it free to keepe the Lords day or the Sabbath Sed Dominicum non Sabbatum libera observatione celebra●us Some Sectaries since the Reformation have gone further yet and would have had all dayes alike as unto their use all equally to be regarded and reckoned that the Lords day as the Church continued it was a Iewish ordinance thwarting the doctrine of Saint Paul who seemed to them to abrogate that difference of dayes which the Church retained This was the fancie or the frenzie rather of the Anabaptist taking the hint perhaps from something which had beene formerly delivered by some wiser men and after them of the Swinckfeildian and the Familist as in the times before of the Petro-Brusians and if Waldensis wrong him not of Wiclef also 9 Such being the doctrine of those Churches the Protestant and those of Rome it is not to be thought but that their practise is according Both make the Lords day onely an Ecclesiasticall constitution and therefore keepe it so farre forth as by the Canons of their Churches they are enjoyned These what they are at Rome and those of her obedience we have seene already and little hath beene added since It hath not beene of late a time to make new restraints rather to mitigate the old to lay downe such which were most burdensome and grievous to be borne withall And so it seemes they do Azorius the Iesuite being more remisse in stating and determining the restraints imposed on the Lords day and the other holy dayes then Tostatus was who lived in safer times by farre then these now present nor is their discipline so severe as their Canon neither So that the Lords day there for ought I could observe when I was amongst them is solemnized much after the same manner as with us in England repairing to the Church both at Masse and Vespers ryding abroad to take the ayre or otherwise to refresh themselues and following their honest pleasures at such leasure times as are not destinate to the publicke meetings the people not being barred from travelling about their lawfull businesse as occasion is so they reserve some time for their devotions in the publicke Which is indeed agreeable to the most antient and most laudable custome in the Church of God Now for the Protestant Churches the Lutherans do not differ much from that which we have said before of the Church of Rome and therefore there is nothing to be said of them But for the rest which follow Calvin think themselves the only orthodox and reformed Churches w● will consider them in ●h●ee severall circumstances first in the exercise of religious d●ties secondly in restraint from labours and 〈◊〉 in permission of recreations And first for the exercise of religious duties they use it in the morning onely the afternoone being left at large for ●ny and for every man to dispose thereof as to him seemes fitting So is it in the Churches of high Germany those of the Palatinate and all the others of that mould For I have heard from Gent. of good repute that at the first reception of the Ladie Elizabeth into that Countrey on Sunday after dinner the Coaches and the horses were brought forth and all the Pri●ces Court betooke themselves unto their pleasures hunting or hawking as the season of the yeare was fit for either Which when it seemed strange at first to those English Lords and Gentlemen which did attend the Princesse thither answer was made it was their custome so to do and that they had no Eve●ing-service but ended all the duties of the day with the Morning Sermon Nor is this custome onely and no more but so There is a Canon for it in some places it must be no otherwise A●t 46. For in the first Councell of Dort Ann. 1574 it was decreed Publicae vespertinae preces non sunt introducendae ubi non sunt introductae ubi sunt tollantur that in such Churches where publicke Evening Prayer had not beene admitted it should continu● as it was and where they were admitted they should bee put downe So Doctor Smith relates the Canon if so irregular a decree may deserve that name in his Collat. doctr Cathol protest cap. 68. Art 1. And so it stood till the last Synod of Dort Ann. 1618. what time to raise the reputation of the Palatine Catechisme Sess. 14 being not long after to be admitted into their Canon it was concluded that Catechisme-lectures should be read each Sunday in the afternoone nor to be layed aside propter auditorum infrequentiam for want of Auditors Now to allure the people thither being before staved off by a former Synod it was provided that their M●nisters should reade howsoever Coram paucis auditoribus immo vel coram suis famulis tantum Though few were present or none but their domesticke servants in hope by little and little to attract the people
And here to take things as they lie in order we must beginne with a narration concerning Westminster which for the prettinesse of the story I will here insert Sebert the first Christian King of the East Saxons having built that Church unto the honour of God and memory of Saint Peter Adredus de Ge●●is Edwardi invited Mellitus Bishop of London on a day appointed unto the consecration of it The night before S. Peter comming to the further side crosseth the ferrie goes into the Church and with a great deale of celestiall musick lights and company performes that office for the dispatch of which Mellitus had beene invited This done and being wafted backe to the further side hee gives the ferri-man for his fare a good draught of fishes onely commanding him to carry one of them which was the best for price and beauty for a present from him to Mellitus in testimony that the worke was done to his hand already Then telling who hee was hee addes that hee and his posterity the whole race of fishermen should bee long after stored with that kinde of fish tantum ne ultra piscari audeatis in die Dominica provided alwayes that they fished no more upon the Sunday Aldredus so reports the st●ry And though it might be true as unto the times wherein hee lived which was in the declining of the twelfth Century that fishing on the Lords day was restrained by Law yet sure hee placed this story ill in giving this injunction from Saint Peter in those early dayes when such restraints were hardly setled if in a Church new planted they had yet beene spoke of Leaving this therefore as a fable let us next looke on Beda what hee hath left us of this day in reference to our Ancestors of the Saxons ●●●ce and many things wee finde in him worth our observation Before wee shewed you how the Sunday was esteemed a festivall that it was judged hereticall to hold fasts thereon This ordinance came in amongst us with the faith it selfe Hist. l. 3. c. 23. S. Chadd having a place designed him by King Oswald to erect a monastery did presently retire unto it in the time of Lent In all which time Dominica excepta the Lords day excepted hee fasted constantly till the evening as the story tells us The like is told of Adamannus one of the monastery of Coldingham now in Scotland Hist. l. 4. c. 25. but then accounted part of the Kingdome of Northumberland that hee did live in such a strict and abstemious manner ut nil unquam cibi vel potus excepta die Dominica quinta Sabbati percipere● that hee did never eate nor drinke but on the Sunday and Thursday onely This Adamannus lived in Anno 690. Before wee shewed you with what profit musicke had beene brought into the Church of God and hither it was brought it seemes Eccl. hist. l. 2. c. 20. with the first preaching of the Gospell Beda relates it of Paulinus that when hee was made Bishop of Rochester which was in An. 631 he left behind him in the North one Iames a Deacon cantandi in Ecclesia peritissimū a man exceeding perfect in Church musicke who taught them there that forme of singing divine service which hee learnt in Canterbury And after in the yeere 668 what time Archbishop Theodorus made his Metropoliticall visitation the Art of singing service which was then onely used in Kent for in the North it had not beene so setled but that it was againe forgotten was generally taken up over all the Kingdome ●ib 4. c. 2. Sonos cantandi in Ecclesia quos catenus in Cantia tantum noverant ab hoc tempore per omnes Anglorum Ecclesias discere coeperunt as that Author hath it Before wee shewed how Pope Vitalianus anno 653. added the Organ to that vocall musicke which was before in use in the Church of Christ. In lesse then 30 yeeres after and namely in the yeere 679. were they introduced by Pope Agatho into the Churches of the English and have continued in the same well neer● 1000 yeeres without interruption Before wee shewed you how some of the greater festivalls were in esteeme before the Sunday and that it was so even in the primitive times And so it also was in the primitive times of this Church of England Bed Eccl. hist. l. 4. c. 19. it being told us of Queene Etheldreda that after shee had put her selfe into a monastery she never went unto the Bathes praeter imminentibus solenniis majoribus but on the approach of the greater festivalls such as were Easter Pentecost and Christmasse for so I thinke hee meanes there by Epiphani● as also that unlesse it were on the greater festivalls she did not use to eat above once a day This plainely shewes that Sunday was not reckoned for a greater festivall that other dayes were in opinion esteeme above it and makes it evident withall that they conceived not that the keeping of the L●rds day was to be accoūted as a part of the law of natur● or introduced into the Church by divine authority but by the same authority that the others were For Lawes in these times made Ap. Lambert ●●chai●n wee meete with none but those of Ina a West-Saxon King who entred on his reigne anno 712 A Prince exceedingly devoted to the Church of Rome and therefore apt inough to embrace any thing which was there concluded By him it was enacted in this forme that followeth Servus si quid operis patrarit die Dominico ex praecepto Domini sui liber esto c. If a servant worke on the Lords day by the appointment of his master hee was to be set free and his master was to forfeit 30 shillings but if hee worked without such order from his master to bee whipped or mulcted Liber si hoc die operetur injussu Domini sui c. So if a free-man worked that day without direction from his master hee either was to bee made a Bond-man or pay 60 shillings As for the doctrine of these times wee may best judge of that by Beda In Luc. 19. First for the Sabbath that hee tells us ad Mosis usque tempora caeterorum dierum similis erat was meerely like the other dayes untill Moses time no difference at all betweene them therefore not institute and observed in the beginning of the world as some teach us now Next for the Lords day that hee makes an Apostolicall sanction onely no divine commandement as before wee noted and how farre Apostolicall sanctions binde wee may cleerely see by that which they determined in the Councell of Hierusalem Of these two specialties wee have spoke already 3 This is the most wee finde in the Saxon Heptarchie and little more then this we finde in the Saxon Monarchie In this wee meete with Alured first Lamber Archaion the first that brought this Realme in order who in his lawes cap. de diebus festis
looke a while on the Contents which I shall render with as much brevity as the thing requires Ego Dominus qui praecepi vobis ut observaretis diem sanctum Dominicum non custodistis ●um c. I am the Lord which hath commanded to keepe holy the Lords day and you have not kept it neither repented of your sinnes c. I caused repentance to bee preached unto you and you believed not Then sent I Pagans amongst you c. and because you did not keepe the Lords day holy I punished you a while with famine c. Therefore I charge you all that from the ninth houre on the saturday untill Sunne-rising on the monday no man presume to doe any worke but what is good or if hee doe that hee repent him of the same Verily I say and sweare unto you by my Seate and Throne and by the Cherubins that keepe my seate that if you doe not harken to this my Mandat I will no more send to you any other Epistle but I will open the heavens and raine upon you stones and wood and scalding water c. This I avow that you shall dye the death for the Lords day and other festivalls of my Saints which you have not kept and I will send amongst you beasts with the heades of Lyons and the haire of women and the tayles of Camels and they shall eate you and devoure you There is a great deale more of this wretched stuffe but I am weary of abusing both my paines and patience Onely I cannot choose but wi●h that those who have enlarged their Lords day Sabbath to the same extent would either shew us some such letter or bring us any of the miracles which hereafter follow or otherwise bee pleased to lengthen out the festivals of the Saints in the selfe same manner as by this goodly Script they are willed to doe 6 But to proceed the said Eustathius thus furnished and having found but ill successe the former yeere in the Southerne parts where hee did A●gliae Praelatos praedicatione sua● molestare disturb●●● Prelates by his preachings as my Author hath it hee●●nt up to Yorke There did hee preach his doctrines and absolve such as had offended● conditioned that hereafter they did shew more reverence unto the Lords day and the other holy dayes doing no servile works upon them nec in di●bus Dominicis exercerent for●m rerum venalium particularly that on the Lords day they should hold no marketts The people hereunto assented and promised they would neither buy nor sell on the Lords day nisi forte cibum potum praetereuntibus excepting meate and drinke to passengers Whereby it seemes that notwithstanding all this terrour men were permitted yet to travaile on the Lords day as they had occasion This comming to the notice of the King and Councell my men were all fetched up such specially qui in di●bus Dominicis forum rerum venalium dejecerant which had disturbed the marketts and overthrowne the boothes and merchandise on the Lords day and made to fine unto the King for their misdemeanour Then were they faine to have recourse to pretended miracles A Carpenter making a wooden pinne and a woman making up her webbe both after three on Saturday in the afternoone are suddenly smitten with the Palsey A certaine man of Nafferton baking a cake on Saturday night and keeping part untill th● morrow no sooner brake it for his breakfast but it gushed out blood A Miller of Wakefield grinding Corne on Saturday after three of the clocke insteed of meale found his binne full of blood his mill-wheele standing still of its owne accord One or two more there are of the same edition And so I thinke is that related in the Acts and Monuments out of an old booke entituled de Regibus Angliae which now I am fallen upon these fables shall bee joyned with them King Henry the second saith the story being at Cardiffe in Wales and being to take horse there stood a certaine man by him having on him a white coate and being barefoote who looked upon the King and spake in this wise Good old King Iohn Baptist and Peter straightly charge you that on the Sundaies throughout all your dominions there bee no buying or selling nor any other servile businesse those onely except which appertaine to the preparation of meat and drinke which thing if thou shalt observe whatsoever thing thou takest in hand thou shalt happily finish Adding withall that unlesse he did these things and amend his life hee should heare such newes within the twelve moneth as would make him mourne till his dying day But to conclude what was the issue of all this this terrible letter and forged miracles That the historian tells us with no small regreate Hou●den informing us that notwithstanding all these miracles whereby God did invite the people to observe this day populus plus timens regiam potestatem quàm divinam the people fearing more the Kings power then Gods returned unto their marketting as before they did 7 I say that the historian tells it with no small regreate for in that passionate discontent he had said before that inimicus humani generis the Divell enjoying the proceedings of this holy man so farre so possessed the King and the Princes of darkenesse so hee calls the Councell that they forthwith proceeded against them who had obeied him Which makes me thinke that this Eustathius was a familiar of the Popes sent hither for the introducing of those restraints which had been formerly imposed on most parts of Christendome though here they found no entertainement the Popes had found full well how ill their justlings had succeeded hitherto with the Kings of England of the Norman race and therefore had recourse to their wonted arts by prodigies and miracles to insnare the people and bring them so unto their bent And this I doe the rather thinke because that in the following yeere Anno 1203 there was a Legate sent from Rome to William King of Scots with severall presents and many indulgences Quae quoniam grato accepit anim● ●odem concilio approbante dec●etum est c. He●t Boet. lib. 23. Which hee accepting very kindly it pleased him with the approbation of his Parliament at that time assembled to passe a Law that Saturday from twelve at noone should bee counted holy and that no man should deale in such worldly businesses as on the feast-dayes were forbidden As also that at the sounding of the bell the people should bee busied only about holy actions going to sermons hearing the Vespers or the Evensong idque usque in diem Lunae facerent and that they should continue thus untill munday morning a penalty being layed on those who should doe the contrary So passed it then and in the yeare 1214 some eleven yeares after it was enacted in a Parliament at Scone under Alexander the third King of the Scots that none should fish in any waters Lex
c. as their bounden dutie doth require therefore to call men to remembrance of their dutie and to helpe their infinnitie it hath beene wholesomely provided that there should be some certaine times and dayes appointed wherein the Christians should cease from all kind of labour and apply themselves only and wholly unto the aforesaid holy works properly pertaining to true Religion c. Which workes as they may well be called Gods Service so the times especially appointed for the same are called holy dayes Not for the matter or the nature either of the time or day c. for so all dayes and times are of like holinesse but for the nature and condition of such holy workes c. whereunto such times and dayes are sanctified and hallowed that is to say separated from all prophane uses and dedicated not unto any Saint or Creature but onely unto God and his true worship Neither is it to bée thought that there is any certaine time or definite number of dayes prescribed in holy Scripture but the appointment both of the time and also of the number of dayes is left by the authoritie of Gods Word unto the libertie of Christs Church to bée determined and assigned orderly in every Countrey by the discretion of the Rulers and Ministers thereof as they shall iudge most expedient to the true setting forth of Gods glorie and edification of their people Nor is it to be thought that all this Preamble was made in reference to the holy dayes or Saints dayes onely whose being left to the authoritie of the Church was never questioned but in relation to the Lords Day also as by the Act it selfe doth at full appeare for so it followeth in the Act Bee it therefore enacted c. That all the dayes hereafter mentioned shall bee kept and commanded to be kept holy dayes and non● other that is to say all Sundayes in the yeere the Feasts of the Circumcision of our Lord Iesus Christ of the Epiphanie of the Purification with all the rest now kept and there named particularly and that none other day shall be kept and commanded to bee kept holy day and to abstaine from lawfull bodily labour Nay which is more there is a further Clause in the selfe-same Act which plainly shewes that they had no such thought of the Lords day as that it was a Sabbath or so to bee ob●erved as the Sabbath was and therefore did provide it and enact by the authoritie aforesaid That it shall be lawfull to every Husbandman Labourer Fisherman and to all and every other person and persons of what estate degree or condition he or they be upon the holy dayes aforesaid in Harvest or at any other times in the yeere when necessitie shall so require to labour ●ide fish or worke any kind of worke at their free-wills and pleasure any thing in this Act unto the contrary notwithstanding This is the totall of this Act which if examined well as it ought to bee will yeeld us all those propositions or conclusions before remembred which we collected from the writings of those three particular Martyrs Nor is it to be said that it is repealed and of no authoritie Repealed indeed it was in the first yeere of Queene Mary and stood repealed in Law though otherwise in use and practice all the long Reigne of Queene El●zabeth but in the first yeere of King Iames was revived againe Note here that in the selfe-same Parliament the Common Prayer-Book● now in use being reviewed by many godly Prelates was confirmed and authorized wherein so much of the said Act as doth concerne the names and number of the holy dayes is expressed and as it were incorporate into the same Which makes it manifest that in the purpose of the Church the Sunday was no otherwise esteemed of than another holy day 3 This Statute as before wee said was made in anno 5. 6. of Edward the sixt And in that very Parliament as before wee said the Common Prayer-Booke was confirmed which still remaines in use amongst us save that there was an alteration or addition of certaine Lessons to be used on every Sunday of the yéere 1. Eliz. cap. 2. the forme of the Letanie altered and corrected and two Sentences added in the deliverie of the Sacrament unto the Communicants Now in this Common Prayer-Booke thus confirmed in the fift and sixt yeeres of King Edward the sixt Cap. 1. it pleased those that had the altering and revising of it that the Commandements which were not in the former Liturgie allowed of in the second of the said Kings Reigne should now be added and accounted as a part of this the people being willed to say after the end of each Commandement Lord hav● mercie upon us and incline our hearts to keepe this Law Which being used accordingly as well upon the hearing of the fourth Commandement as of any others hath given some men a colour to perswade themselves that certainely it was the meaning of the Church that wee should keepe a Sabbath still though the day be changed and that wee are obliged to doe it by the fourth Commandement Assuredly they who so conclude conclude against the meaning of the Booke and of them that made it Against the meaning of the Booke for if the Booke had so intended that that ej●culation was to be understood in a literall sence according as the words are layd downe in terminis it then must be the meaning of the Booke that wee should pray unto the Lord to keepe the Sabbath of the Iewes even the seventh day precisely from the Worlds Creation and keepe it in the selfe-same manner as the Iewes once did which no man I presume will say was the meaning of it For of the changing of the day there is nothing said nor nothing intimated but the whole Law laid downe in terminis as the Lord delivered it Against the meaning also of them that made it for they that made the Booke and reviewed it afterwards and caused these Passages and Prayers to be added to it Cranmer Archbishop of Canterbury Ridley Bishop of London and certaine others of the Prelates then and there assembled were the same men by whose advice and counsaile the Act before remembred about keeping holy dayes was in the selfe-same Parliament drawne up and perfected And is it possible wee should conceive so ill of those reverend persons as that they would erect a Sabbath in the one Act and beat it downe so totally in the other to tell us in the Service-Booke that wee are bound to keepe a Sabbath and that the time and day of Gods publike worship is either pointed out in the fourth Commandement or otherwise ordained by D●vine Authoritie and in the selfe-same breath to tell us that there is neither certaine time nor definite number of dayes prescribed in Scripture but all this left unto the libertie of the Church I say as formerly I said it is impossible wee should thinke so ill of such
what is appertaining to the law of Nature Now it pertaines unto the law of Nature that for the times appointed to Gods publicke worship we wholy sequester our selves from all worldly businesses Id. ib. naturale est quod dum Deum colimus ab ali●s abstineamus as Tostatus hath it and then the meaning of the Homilie will be briefely this that for those times which are appointed by the Church for the assembly of Gods people we should lay by ou● daily businesse all worldly thoughts wholy give our selves to the heavenly exercises of Gods true Religion and Service But to encounter them at their own weapon it is expressely said in the Act of Parliament about keeping holy dayes that on the dayes and times appointed as well the other holy dayes as the Sunday Christians should cease from all kinde of labour and only wholy apply themselves to such holy workes as appertaine to true Religion the very same with that delivered in the Hamilie If wholy in the Homilie must bee applied unto the day then it must bee there and then the Saints dayes and the other holy dayes must bee wholy spene in religious exercises When once we see them doe the one wee will bethinke our selves of doing the other As for the residue of that Homilie which consists in popular reproofes and exhor●ations that concernes not us in reference to the point in hand The Homilies those parts thereof especially which tend to the correction of manners and reformation of abuses were made agreeable to those times wherein they were first published If in those times men made no difference between the working day holy day but kept their faires and markets and bought and sold and rowed and f●rried and drove and carryed and rode and iourneyed and did their other businesse on the Sunday as well as on the other dayes when there was no such need but that they might have tarryed longer they were the more to blame no doubt in trespassing so wilfully against the Canons of the Church Acts of Parliament which had restrained many of the things there specified The Homilie did well to reprove them for it If on the other side they spent the day in ungodlinesse and filthinesse in gluttony and drunkennesse and such like other crying sinnes as are there particularly noted the Prelates of the Church had very ill discharged their duetie had they not tooke some course to have told them of it But what is that to us who doe not spend the Lords day in such filthy steshlinesse what ever one malicious Sycophant hath affirmed therein or what is that to dancing shooting leaping vau●ting may-games and meetings of good neighbourhood or any other recreation not by law prohibited being no such ungodlie and filthie Acts as are therein mentioned 7 Thus upon due search made and full examination of all parties we finde no Lords day Sabbath in the booke of Homilies no nor in any writings of particular men in more then 33 yeeres after the Homilies were published I find indeed that in the yeere 1580 the Magistrates of the Cittie of London obtained from Queene Elizabeth that playes and enterludes should no more bee acted on the Sabbath day within the liberties of their Cittie As also that in 83. on the 14 of Ianuary being Sunday many were hurt and eight killed outright by the suddaine falling of the Scaffolds in Paris-garden This shewes that Enterludes and Beare-baitings were then permitted on the Sunday and so they were a long time after though not within the Cittie of London which certainely had not beene suffered had it beene then conceived that Sunday was to bee accounted for a Sabbath But in the yeere 1595 some of that faction which before had laboured with small profit to overthrow the Hierarchy and government of this Church of England now set themselves on worke to ruinate all the orders of it to bea●e downe at one blow all dayes and times which by the wisdome and authority of the Church had beene appointed for Gods service and in the steed thereof to erect a Sabbath of their owne devising These Sabbath speculations and presbyterian directions as mine Authour calls them they had beene hammering more then ten yeeres before though they produced them not till now and in producing of them now they introduced saith hee a more then either Iewish or Popish superstition into the Land Rogers in preface to the Articles to the no small blemish of our Christian profession and scandall of the true servants of God and therewith doctrine most erroneous dangerous and Antichristian Of these the principall was one Doctor Bound who published first his Sabbath Doctrines Anno 1595 and after with additions to it and enlargements of it Anno 1606. Wherein he hath affirmed in generall over all the booke that the Commandement of sanctifying every seaventh day as in the Mosaicall decalogue is naturall morall and perpetuall that where all other things in the Iewish Church were so changed that they were cleane taken away as the Priesthood the sacrifices and the Sacraments this day the Sabbath was so chāged that it still remaineth p. 91 that there is great reason why we Christians should take our selves as straitly bound to rest upon the Lords day as the Iewes were upō their Sabbath for being one of the morall Commandments it bindeth us as well as them being all of equall authority p. 247. And for the Rest upon this Day that it must be a notable and singular Rest a most carefull exact and precise Rest after another manner than men were accustomed p. 124. Then for particulars no buying of Victuals Flesh or Fish Bread or Drinke 158. no Carriers to travaile on that Day 160. nor Parkmen or Drovers 162. Schollers not to studie the liberall Arts nor Lawyers to consult the Case and peruse mens Evidences 163. Sergeants Apparitours and Sumners to be restrained from executing their Offices 164. Iustices not to examine Causes for preservation of the Peace 166. no man to travaile on that Day 192. that Ringing of more Bells than one that Day is not to be justified p. 202. No solemne Feasts to be made on it 206. nor Wedding Dinners 209. with a permission notwithstanding to Lords Knights and Gentlemen hee hoped to finde good welcome for this dispensation p. 211. all lawfull Pleasures and honest Recreations as Shooting Fencing Bowling but Bowling by his leave is no lawfull pleasure for all sorts of people which are permitted on other dayes were on this Day to be forborne 202. no man to speake or talke of Pleasures p. 272. or any other worldly matter 275. Most Magisterially determined indeed more like a Iewish Rabbin than a Christian Doctor Yet Iewish and Rabbinicall though his Doctrine were it carried a faire face and shew of Pietie at the least in the opinion of the common people and such who stood not to examine the true grounds thereof but tooke it up on the appearance such who did judge
stand or fall by the statute of King Edward the sixt before remembred A Canon of an excellent composition For by enjoyning godly and sober conversation and diligent repaire to Church to heare the Word of God and receive the Sacrament they stopped the course of that prophanenesse which formerly had beene complained of and by their ranking of the holy dayes in equall place and height with Sunday and limiting the celebration of the same unto the Orders in that case prescribed by the Church of England shewed plainely their dislike of those Sabbath doctrines which had beene latelie set on foote to the dishonour of the Church and diminution of her authoritie in destinating other dayes to the service of God than their new Saint Sabbath Yet did not this the Churches care either so satisfie their desires or restraine the follies of those men who had embraced the new Sabbath doct●ines but that they still went ●orwards to advance that businesse which was now made a part of the common cause no booke being published by that partie either by way of Catechisme or Comment on the ten Commandements or morall pietie or systematicall divinity of all which these last times have produced too many wherein the Sabbath was not pressed upon the consciences of Gods people● with violence as formerly with authority upon the ●ewes And hereunto they were incouraged a great deale the rather because in Ireland what time his Majesties Commissioners were employed about the setling of that Church Anno 1615. there passed an Article which much confirmed them in their Courses and hath beene often since alleaged to justifie both them and their proceedings The article is this Ar● 56. The first day of the weeke which is the Lords day is whollie to bee dedicated to the service of God and therefore wee are bound therein to rest from our common and daily businesse and to bestow that leysure upon holy exercises both private and publicke What moved his Majesties Commissioners to this strict austeritie that I cannot say but sure I am that till that time the Lords day never had attained such credit as to bee thought an Article of the Faith though of some mens fancies Nor was it like to bee of long continuance it was so violently followed the whole booke being now called in and in the place thereof the Articles of the Church of England confirmed by Parliament in that Kingdome Anno 1634. 10 Nor was this all the fruit neither of such dangerous doctrines that the Lords day was growne into the reputation of the Iewish Sabbath but some that built on their foundations and ploughed with no other then their heifers endeavoured to bring backe againe the Iewish Sabbath as that which is expressely mentioned in the fourth Commandement and abrogate the Lords day for altogether as having no foundation in it nor warrant by it Of these one Thraske declared himselfe for such in King Iames his time and therewithall tooke up another Iewish doctrine about meates and drinkes as in the time of our dreade Soveraigne now being Theophilus Braborne grounding himselfe on the so much applauded doctrine of the morality of the Sabbath maintained that the Iewish Sabbath ought to bee observed and wrot a large booke in defence thereof which came into the world 1632. For which their I●wish doctrines the first received his censure in the Starre-Chamber and what became of him I know not the other had his doome in the High-Commission and hath since altered his opinion being misguided onely by the principles of some noted men to which hee thought hee might have trusted Of these I have here spoke together because the ground of their opinions so far as it concerned the Sabbath 〈◊〉 the very same they onely making the conclusions which of necessitie must follow from the former premisses iust as the Brownists did before when they abhominated the Communion of the Church of England or the Puritan principles But to proceede This of it selfe had beene sufficient to bring all to ruine but this was not all Not only Iudaisme did beginne but Popery tooke great occasion of increase by the precisenesse of some Magistrates and Ministers in severall places of this Kingdome in hindring people from their recreations on the Sunday the Papists in this Realme being thereby perswaded that no honest mirth or recreation was tolerable in our religion Which being noted by King Iames K. Iames De●●arat in his progresse through Lancashire it pleased his Majestie to set out his Declaration May 24. Anno 1618. the Court being then at Greenewich to this effect that for his good peoples lawfull recreations his pleasure was that after the end of divine service they should not be disturbed letted or discouraged from any lawfull recreations such as dancing either men or women Archery for men leaping vaulting or any other such harmelesse recreations nor from having of Ma●-games Whitsun-Ales or Morrice-dances and setting up of May-poles or other sports therewith used so as the same bee had in due and convenient time without impediment or let of divine service and that women should have leave to carrie rushes to the Church for the decoring of it according to their old custome withall prohibiting all unlawfull Games to bee used on the Sundayes onely as beare-baiting bull-baiting enterludes and at all times in the meaner sort of people by law prohibited bowling A Declaration which occasioned much noyse and clamour and many scandalls spreade abroade as if these Counsells had been put into that Princes head by some great Prelates which were then of most power about him But in that point they might have satisfied themselves that this was no Court-doctrine no newdivinity which that learned Prince had beene taught in England He had declared himselfe before when he was King of the Scots onely to the selfe-same purpose as may appeare in his Basilicon Doron published anno 1598. This was the first Blow in effect which had beene given in all his time to the new Lords-Day-Sabbath then so much applauded 11 For howsoever as I said those who had entertained these Sabbatarian Principles spared neither care nor paines to advance the businesse by being instant in season and out of season by publike Writings private Preachings and clandestine insinuations or whatsoever other meanes might tend to the promotion of this Catholike cause yet finde wee none that did oppose it in a publike way though there were many that disliked it Onely one M. Loe of the Church of Exeter declared himselfe in his Effigiatio veri Sabbatismi ann● 1606. to be of different judgement from them and did lay downe indeed the truest and most justifiable Doctrine of the Sabbath of any Writer in that time But being written in the Latine Tongue it came not to the peoples hands many of those which understood it never meaning to let the people know the Contents thereof And whereas in the yeere 1603. at the Commencement held in Cambridge this Thesis or Proposition Dies Domi●●cus
fomer plaine-song the adding of particular restrictions as occasion was which were before conteined though not plainely specified both in the Edicts of the former Emperours and Constitutions of the Churches before remembred Yet all this while we finde not any one who did observe it as Sabbath or which taught others so to doe not any who affirmed that any manner of worke was unlawfull on it further than as it was prohibited by the Prince or Prelate that so the people might assemble with their greater comfort not any one who preached or published that any pastime sport or recreation of an honest name such as were lawfull on the other dayes were not fit for this And thereupon we may resolve aswell of lawfull businesse as of lawfull pleasures that such as have not beene forbidden by supreme authority whether in proclamations of the Prince or Constitutions of the Church or Acts of Parliament or any such like declaration of those higher powers to which the Lord hath made us subject are to be counted lawfull still It matters not in case we finde it not recorded in particular termes that wee may lawfully apply our selves to some kinde of businesse or recreate our selves in every kinde of honest pleasure at those particular houres and times which are le●t at large and have not beene designed to Gods publicke service All that we are to looke for is to see how farre we are restrained from labour or from recreations on the holy dayes and what authority it is that hath so restrained us that wee may come to know our dutie and conforme unto it The Canons of particular Churches have no power to doe it further then they have beene admitted into the Church wherein we live for then being made a part of her Canon also they have power to binde us to observance As little power there is to be allowed unto the declarations and Edicts of particular Princes but in their owne dominions onely Kings are Gods Deputies on the Earth but in those places onely where the Lord hath set them their power no greater than their empire and though they may command in their owne estates yet is it extra sphaeram activitatis to prescribe lawes to nations not subject to them A King of France can make no law to binde us in England Much lesse must wee ascribe unto the dictates and directions of particular men which being themselves subject unto publicke order are to bee hearkned to no further then by their life and doctrine they doe preach obedience unto the publicke ordinances under which they live For were it otherwise every private man of name and credit would play the tyrant with the liberty of his Christian brethren and nothing should be lawfull but what he allowed of especially if the pretence be faire and specious such as the keeping of a Sabbath to the Lord our God the holding of an holy convocation to the King of heaven Example we had of it lately in the Gothes of Spaine and that strange bondage into which some pragmaticke and popular men had brought the French had not the councell held at Orleans gave a checke unto it And with examples of this kinde must we begin the story of the following Ages CHAP. V. That in the next six hundred yeares from Pope Gregory forwards the Lords day was not reckoned of as of a Sabbath 1 Pope Gregories care to set the Lords day free from some Iewish rigours at that time● obtruded on the Church 2 Strange fancies taken up by some about the Lords day in these darker ages 3 Scriptures and Miracles in these times found out to justifie the keeping of the Lords day holy 4 That in the judgement of the most learned in these six ages the Lords day hath no other ground then the authority of the Church 5 With how much difficulty the people of these times were barred from following their Husbandry and Law-dayes on the Lords day 6 Husbandry not restrained on the Lords day in the Easterne parts untill the time of Leo Philosophus 7 Markets and Handicrafts restrained with no lesse opposition then the plough and pleading 8 Severall casus reservati in the Lawes themselves wherein men were permitted to attend those businesses on the Lords day which the lawes restrained 9 Of divers great and publicke actions done in these ages on the Lords day 10 Dancing and other sports no otherwise prohibited on the Lords day then as they were an hinderance to Gods publicke service 11 The other holy dayes as much esteemed of and observed as the Lords day was 12 The publicke hallowing of the Lords day and the other holy dayes in these present ages 13 No Sabbath all these ages heard of either on Saturday or Sunday and how it stood with Saturday in the Easterne Churches 1 WEe are now come to the declining ages of the Church after the first 600. yeares were fully ended and in the entrance on the seaventh some men had gone about to possesse the people of Rome with two dangerous fancies one that it was not lawfull to doe any manner of worke upon the Saturday or the old Sabbath it a ut die Sabbati aliquid operari prohiberent the other ut dominicorun die nullus debeat lavari that no man ought to bathe himselfe on the Lords day or their new Sabbath With such a race of Christned Iewes or Iudaizing Christians was the Church then troubled Against these dangerous doctrines did Pope Gregory write his letter to the Roman Citizens Epl. 3. l. 11. stiling the first no other then the Preachers of Antichrist one of whose properties it shall be that he will have the Sabbath and the Lords day both so kept as that no manner of worke shall be done on eyther qui veniens diem Sabatum atque dominicum ab omni faciet opere custodire as the Father hath it Where note that to compell or teach the people that they must doe no manner of worke on the Lords day is a marke of Antichrist And why should Antichrist keepe both dayes in so strict a manner Because saith he he will perswade the people that he shall die and rise againe therefore he meanes to have the Lords day in especiall honour and hee will keepe the Sabbath too that so he may the better allure the Iewes to adhere unto him Against the other he thus reasoneth Et si quidem pro luxuria voluptate qu●s lavari appetit hoc fieri nec reliquo quolibe● die concedimus c. If any man desires to bathe himselfe only out of a luxurious and voluptuous purpose observe this well● this we conceive not to be lawfull upon any day but if he doe it onely for the necessary refreshing of his body then neither is it fit it should be forbidden upon the Sunday For if it be a sinne to bathe or wash all the body on the Lords day then must it be a sinne to wash the face upon that day if it be lawfull to