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A65408 The practical Sabbatarian, or, Sabbath-holiness crowned with superlative happiness by John Wells ... Wells, John, 1623-1676. 1668 (1668) Wing W1293; ESTC R39030 769,668 823

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so is the sugar at the bottom When the plummets Egressus Isaac in agrum ad m●ditandum accepit praemium pietatis sponsam scil gratissimam of our souls have been running down in worldly affairs and businesses in the day time then in the Evening to draw up that weight of the Clock in holy meditation is most suitable and commendable nor can any thing better become a Christian then in this duty to give God the Alpha and the Omega of every day The third season for holy Meditation is the night time when nature hath rockt every thing asleep and silenced the world from interrupting noyses This David leaves as The third season for meditation the matter both of his command and example Psal 63. 6. The night season is sequestred from worldly affairs and is Psal 63. 6. not checkt with their clamorous importunity nor is it a time Psal 4. 4. distracted with the incursions of sensible objects it is likewise a time not accosted or besieged with frivolous or dangerous temptations There are two things which do much fit and dispose the soul for Meditation viz. Rest and Silence Sancti laetantur dei patefactionibus sed timore et tremore both which are to be found in the night And to this may be added when the curtains of darkness are drawn over the world we are then filled with a religious fear of God our hearts are more composed and we entertain more solemn and awfull apprehensions of the Divine Majesty Stulte quid est somnus gelidae nisi mortis imago there is then a holy terrour struck upon the soul And when we lie upon our beds the bed is an image and representation of the Grave and at such a time a man may be more serious and composed for the duty But above all let us consider the Sabbath is the fittest time for meditation On that day our Saviour arose from the The fourth season for meditation Earth and our souls should ascend and raise themselves towards Heaven And meditation doth not onely become the morning but the whole day of a Sabbath it must not onely be our morning dress but the attire we must wear all the day We should think with our selves the Lords day it is a type of Heaven and contemplation is the work of Heaven The Heb. 4. 9. present Sabbath is onely the abridgement of that eternal rest which the Saints shall enjoy with God And they which disrelish this duty how can they expect that glorious reward which principally consists in the view and contemplation of God A gracious soul upon the Lords day by meditation may converse with God and with the inhabitants of another world he may enjoy as much of God as this interposing vail of flesh will admit of And thus much for the proper seasons of meditation The next thing which will further illustrate this blessed duty of meditation is the evidencing of the great advantages The great advantages of meditation of it which are both rich and many As several Diamonds are found in the same Rock and much Gold crowded into the same Mine Let us therefore take these manifold Emoluments in their Order Meditation is a vigorous antidote against sin It is rare physick to purge away or prevent that poyson Most sin for want of meditation There are two great snares which take most The first adtage of meditation men and intangle them in sin viz. Ignorance and Incogitancy when we either not know our danger or not consider our duty Men certainly would not be so brutishly sensual as they are if they did seriously weigh things in the ballance by solemn and holy meditation If they did meditate on the strength of Gods Arme on the strictness of Gods Justice Exod. 15. 16. on the consuming power of his Wrath if they seriously considered how infinitely evil sin is how much it Nehem. 9. 33. affronted Divine Purity and broke in pieces Divine Laws Heb. 12. 29. how exceedingly it endangered the soul and how deeply it Psal 5. 3. wounded the conscience surely men would flee all appearances 1 Joh. 3. 4. of evil and repulse a temptation in its first onset It is sin which puts a worm into Conscience a sting into Death 1 The● 5. 22. a curse into the Law and fire into Hell Men meditate not Rom. 2. 15. on these things and so they are entangled in the snare Holy meditation is a golden shield against the darts of sinfull temptations In this case meditation would be as the Angels Judg. 22. 23. sword to stop us in our sinfull cariere and to strike us into clammy sweats and heavy damps that we should not sport our selves in the wayes and traverses of sin and provocation Joseph's meditation on Gods presence and omnipotency Gen. 39. 9. Josephus circumseptus fui● pulcherrimarum virtutum choro quarum hortatu victor evasit spoyled the design of his Mistris her dalliance and kept him within the limits of holiness and chastity Meditation makes the heart like we● tinder it will not take the Devils fire In a word it is strange rashness in men that they will be taken in the ambushes of sin before they seriously meditate on what they are going about Holy meditation keeps vain and foolish thoughts out of the heart it prepossesseth the soul that frivolous imaginations The second advantage of meditation tions are wholly shut out God complains of the people of Israel that they were wholly taken up with vain thoughts Jer. 4. 14. Jer. 4. 14. And so it is with most men their minds are filled with froth and vanity and varieties of foolish thoughts croud in upon them as flyes swarm to the place where the honey lies and those incautelous persons consider not that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost sin begins at the thoughts which are the first plotters and contrivers of all evil the heart is the womb whereall sin is conceived and framed and outward acts onely midwife the sinfull birth into the world and make it visible The mind and fancy is the stage where sin is first acted The malicious O quàm vanae sunt hominum cogitationes una cogitatio foelix est cogitare de domino Hieron in Psal man acts over his sin in his thoughts he plots his revenge the impure person acts over his concupiscence in his thoughts he contrives his lust And it is much to be deplored how much wickedness is committed in the chambers of our thoughts Now meditation on things Divine the Purity of God the Promises of God would be a Soveraign means to exite and banish such vain and flatulent thoughts Hierome 2 Cor. 7. 1. cries out How vain are the thoughts of men there is but one thought considerable and that is to think on God If David had carried the Book of the Law about him and meditated 2 Sam. 11. 2. on it
pandorize the Sabbath to our lusts and vanities what is it but to make God serve with our sins Or as our Saviour phraseth it To turn the house of prayer into a den of thieves Mat. 21. 13. Is it fit for the witch of Endor to put the Devil into Samuels mantle 1 Sam. 28. 12. And for wicked Ahaz to put the Idols Altar into Gods temple 2 Kings 16. 14 15. Indeed the same wickedness they act who make the Lords day vile and cheap by sinfull abominations which should be honourable Isa 58. 13. in holy worship and service and those adorations which become the Lord of the Mark 2. 28. Sabbath To vitiate the Sabbath by visible prophaneness opens a way to all licentiousness and will be bitterness in the latter end Sabbath-breaking is usually the preface to other sins The 2 Sam. 2. 26. breaking of the two tables commonly begins at the fourth Commandment we first make bold with Gods day and then with Gods name and so break the third Commandment and then we can trinkle in his worship and so violate the second and by degrees we can slide into thefts adulteries Deut. 5. 21. and murders and so dash all the Commandments in Isa 28. 8. pieces he will easily covet his neighbours Wife for wantonness Claudius Tiberius Nero vocatus fuit Claudius Biberius Mero propter ebrietatem intemperantiam Sueton. who will sacrilegiously arrest Gods holy day for his excess and drunkenness It is the observation of an ingenuous person That he hath heard many malefactors at their execution bitterly bewail their prophanation of the Lords day and humbly acknowledge that sin was the leading cause of all ensuing mischiefs and miseries At the Gallows their Conscience hath pointed at the very sin which had been the chief actor in their wofull tragedy When Satan hath prevailed with us to violate Gods holy day he hath got his head in and he will easily draw in his whole body Prophanation Gulones nihil faciunt nisi ingerere digerere et egerere Bern. of the Sabbath is the gates of Hell the foundation upon which all other sins are erected Indeed the carefull observation of this day is a chain upon the soul and ties it up from sinfull vagaries it casts an awe upon the heart that it cannot presently startle but when the chain is filed off there is no end of licentious ranges as Cattle when they are got out of the pound they run into every ones field This sin of Sabbath-breaking it is like a Serpent whose sting is in its tail Indeed sanctified afflictions turn a Serpent into a rod but Sabbath-prophanation turns a rod into a Serpent and brings the most prosperous sinner into unexpected calamity It is observable of the people of Israel that sighs and groans Exod. 3. 7. brought them out of Egypt and Songs and Vanities on Gods day brought them into Babylon The Hebrew phrase Ezek. 23. 38. in Ezek. 20. 13. is very expressive the same word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chalal which is rendred to pollute and prophane viz. the Ezek. 20. 13. Sabbath signifies likewise to tripudiate and dance as the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Daughters of Shiloh did Judges 21. 21. where the same word is used to denote unto us one method of the Jews in prophaning the Sabbath viz. They passed it away jocularly Psal 87. 7. in sinful frolicks and immodest vanities and this was one of the chief sins they might sit down by the waters of Babylon Psal 137. 1. Cyril and weep over It is undeniable that the prostituting of the Sabbath by prophane practices both hath and will ruine Gaud●ntius c. Judaei non deo sed sibi die Sabbati ociantur Muscul Nations Families Persons and dig the grave to bury all comforts in It was generally complained of by holy and devout men in the primitive times that the Jews neglecting spiritual duties which God commanded abused the Sabbath The Jews which were killed at Hierusalem by the command of Florus were 630. By the Inhabitants of Caesarea were 20000. at Scithopolis 30000. at Ptolemais 2000. at Alexandria 50000. at Joppa 8400. at Askelon 1000. at A●haca 15000. at Gariz●m 11600. at Jotopata 30000. at Gamala 9000. at the si●ge of Hierusalem 1100000 c. 1 Cor. 10. 11. to case and luxury and wasted that holy day in gluttony and idleness and idle delicacies and this accusation in the first times of the Gospel became proverbial so that to keep the Sabbath loosly was to keep it after the manner of the fews And what judgments God brought upon them in those dayes how he did scatter them unchurch them unpeople them and leave them to be a vagabond Generation to all successive ages who knows not is a great stranger to Antiquity It would fill a Volume to relate the several slaughters of them and their exiles from Nations France Spain England and other places so that even at this day their mask is their best security and their veil is their only safety The Quotations in the margin give in some evidence of the infinite slaughters which were made of them they were a prey even to all Nations as if they were only fit to glut the Sword of an enraged enemy Let us therefore observe the Apostolicall advice and take these perishing Jews for an ensample of Gods heavy displeasure against debauched practices on Gods holy day To serve our lusts upon a Sabbath is to throw off Jehovah and to serve other Gods The person who is intemperate on a Sabbath doth he not serve Bacchus The effeminate person doth he not serve the Goddesse Venus And Phil. 3. 19. the luxurious person he makes his belly his god He that In nostris ecclesiis diebus dominicis carnis voluptatibus profusissime absque ullâ dissimulatione servitur quemadmodum Judaei qui die Sabbati ociantur et libidinantur acta verò et studia carnis Baccho et Veneri luxui et sastui omninò deputan●ur Muscul prates away a Sabbath doth his devotion to Mercurius he that plays at Cudgels and wrestles in a seeming valour acts his service to Mars he that sports away the Sabbath in Courtships and caresses offers his sacrifice to Jupiter that wanton God whose effeminacies are the best part of the Legend we have repored by Pagan Historians Strict and holy communion only becomes a holy God on a holy day Musculus very piously and gravely cryes out Let us throw off all cloaks of dissimulation and if we spend our Sabbaths in the pleasures of the flesh let us never say we keep a day to the Lord Jesus but let us say we will worship Bacchus and Venus or some Idol God who is the Patron of such wickedness And indeed a Tavern or Alehouse on the Lords day is a fit temple for Bacchus a Stews or Whore-house is a fit Sanctuary for Priapus a Table full of vain chat is a fit
with unwearied patience and unwonted alacrity they would wait upon his Ministry upon the Lords day and thought not the circuit of a Sabbath too great a compass but fill'd up the time of it in holy Devotion Indeed the Sabbath Crowns them who honour it Now Most Worthily Honoured I shall make no Applications what I could say is better seen in your practice then in my Epistle Suffer me only to be your Remembrancer those who are most spiritual lie under the motions of the Spirit if you see your selves in the Glass of this Treatise pardon me if I hold the Glass and let not my service be my offence Thus Eph. 1. 11. commending your selves your worthy Family and this Tract such as it is to the grace of him who worketh all Eph. 3. 20. things for us and in us Iremain Your faithful Servant in the Gospel of Christ John Wells TO THE READER Courteous Reader IT may be the Subject here handled may not please thy Palate because it is not some Rarity Common Dishes more quiet than please and gratifie Necessity more than Desire We are not fo fond of the Choritas ergo animas eadem feribit inculcat Amor spiritualis omne taedium absorbet omnem segnitiem Alap Herbs as of the Flowers of the Garden of those Plants which are to be put in the Pot as of those which are to lie in the bosom Reader at the first cast of thy eye upon this Book when thou seest the Sabbath to be the Theam of it thou wilt happily be apt to conclude Nihil dictum quod non dictum prius Nothing can be more said than what hath been said before And to what purpose should I survey an old Work in a new Edition An ancient person is little mended in his beauty by putting on a new Suit of Apparel The Sabbath hath been often discussed by the Pens of Learned men Nay the Rest of God hath had little Rest from Men there hath been so many Tracts and Treatises about it Now to take away this pretended Surfeit and so to bring the Reader to an Appetite It is answered first That most Tracts upon the Sabbath have been Polemicàl they have Mr. War been the jars and digladiations of Divines Mr. C. and some contending whether the last or the first day of the week be our Sabbath some striving Mr. P. whether the whole day be to be given to God Mr. L. Estr or only part and the rest may be spent in corporal Mr. Bys Refreshments or delightful Recreations Other Controversies are started and handled Dr. Tw whether the Lords day be bottomed upon Ecclesiastical Mr. Ab. or Divine Authority Whether the Sabbath was first founded in Paradise or upon Mount Sinai in the first delivery of the Decalogue VVhether we must begin the Sabbath in the Evening on the Saturday or early on the Morning on the Lords day c. These and the like Polemicks have for the most part filled those Pages which have been written upon the Sabbath Now broken strings make no musick in the Ears of the people Theological Debates are fitter for the Schools than the Vulgar Pro con more disquiet than satisfie the ordinary Reader Many have written upon the Sabbath occasionally as that Subject hath been brought in among others in their Volumes designed to some more comprehensive purpose Many Mr. G. have spent some leaves upon the Sabbath by Mr. Thom. the bye the Sabbath hath been the Branch Mr. S. not the Tree the Flower not the Garden It hath onely taken up some inconsiderable part of the work which they have exposed to the Worlds view Now occasional Diversions can put no Nausea upon full Treatises no more than the putting of a Flag into a Cockboat can stop the building of a Ship There are some who have written upon the Sabbath doctrinally without any application to Conscience the principal design of these Mr. Gr. Writings hath been to inform the Judgment Dr. B. and settle the Mind Conduct hath been more Mr. Walk aimed at than Conversation and Opinion Mr. B. more consulted than manners The end of Mr. G. these Books hath been rather to preserve us from Errour than prophaneness from mistake than miscarriage Now Reader the designe of the ensuing Introduxit me Rex in cella●● vinari●m inquit ponsa hoc est jussit introire ad Altare Dei illi● sumere calicem salutarem Domini Del. Rio. Treatise is different from all these it aimes more at the Heart than the Head at our practice than at our judgment it is more for reformation than information The designe of this Tract is to be a Munduction to lead us to a right keeping of a Sabbath how to converse with God and banquet with Jesus upon his own day how to spend the Lords day exactly according to the Lords will This Tract shoots at Conscience if possible to wound it for sabbath-Sabbath-sin and to win it to Sabbath-holiness It is an Alarm rather than an Asterisk to call us to the sanctity of a Sabbath than to point at the Criticisms of it or its bare knowledge Other Treatises have vindicated the Sabbath from false glosses this presseth the Sabbath upon Christian practices and is put out to bear testimony against the scandalous abuses of that sacred and heavenly Day But supposing there should be some coincidency with former Tracts in this present Treatise as oftentimes there is a similitude in Pictures when they are drawn for several persons yet Courteous Reader let it not be impertinent that I should be thy Remembrancer the Apostle Paul writes the same things to the Philippians Phil. 3 1. which were before suggested to them and Apostolus eadem repetit ut ex cautis fi●nt cautiores et tutiores à periculis et sic haec praxis nec inutilis est nec molesta Zanch. he saith It was not grievous to him but safe for them Philip of Macedon had an Officer on purpose to mind him every Noon at Dinner of his death and mortality the same Message did impress not nauseate him things of concernment are never too much riveted upon us Now Sabbath-holiness is not onely our obedience but our interest not onely conforms to God but concerns our precious and immortal souls And it is to be observed the Nail is Eccles 12. 11. fastned by the Master of the Assemblies a servant may bring it but the Master must fasten it the same things if spiritual may please but not nauseate a gracious soul The general prophaneness which at this day casts a black veil upon the face of Gods Facit indignatio versum blessed Sabbath calls for some to pluck it off and rend it deep wounds must have the more Balm to heal them and the more Vinegar to wash them Sometimes the Times as well as Theams find work and employment for the Pen what Pages doth devout
Psal 4. 4 The second Duty preparatory to the Sabbath is holy Meditation We must meditate on those things which may quicken grace in our hearts First As chiefly upon the greatness holiness and infinite Majesty of the Lord before whom we are to appear Sit et nobis parasceue non tantùm q●ae domos sed quae animos ad sacra festa peragenda praeparet Musc Gen. 41. 14 the approaching Sabbath and to present our selves when the light of the day cometh this will certainly move and stir up spiritual devotion and affection as we see by experience in worldly things how carefull we are to trimme and fit our selves when we are to go to an earthly King or some great Nobles And in the next place let us meditate what holiness and purity especially of heart and soul is required in using the Lev. 20. 7. 1 Pet. 1. 15 16. holy Ordinanoes of God and in approaching near to him And that Holiness which becomes the blessed Sabbath and the Ordinances of it is the putting on humility mercy Humilitas primum medium ultimum in Scholâ Christi Alap meekness and all other affections and departing from all iniquity 2 Tim. 2. 19. It is the Image of Christ in the New Creature which is created after God in Righteousness and Holiness Eph. 4. 24. This is the embroydery we are to Eph. 4. 24. wear when we meet with the King of Saints on his own day Rev. 15. 3. We are to meditate on those Scriptures which require holy preparation as Eccles 5. 1. which shews Gods anger against such who approach his presence in an unprepared frame Eccles 5. 1. Mat. 22. 12. The wise Virgins trimmed their lamps before they entered the Bride-Chamber and we must trimme our Mat. 22. 12. selves before we enter the Presence-Chamber upon the solemn day of his appearance God disgusts mans regardlesness Mat. 25. 7. and a curious plaiting of the soul pleases our Beloved The harder our labour is to fit our selves for Gods presence the sweeter will our wages be in the influences of that presence Let us meditate on that whereof the Sabbath is a signe and a pledge viz. Our resurrection to Eternal Life and to the Eternal Rest of Glory in Heaven in the fight and fruition of God whom none can see without holiness And Tertiam requiem notat Atostolus Heb. 4. 7. quae per duas praecedentes scil per requiem Sabbati et requiem in Canaan anagogicè fuerit significata quam nobis praestat Jesus Christus Heb. 12. 14. Heb. 12. 2. this will be most powerfull to stir up spiritual affection and to quicken Grace in our hearts Our life should be a continual preparation for our Eternal Sabbath and some time should be granted for a temporary preparation for our weekly Sabbath we should be very active in this work and despise the toyle and trouble looking to the joy that is set before us whereof the weekly Sabbath is to every Saint a happy Harbinger Thirdly Our third Duty which must precede the holy observation of the Sabbath is self examination and this is two fold First External We must reflect back upon the past week and review our Erratas sin before must be found out least we come to Sabbath-work with week-day guilt On the Saturday in the Evening we must cast up our spiritual accounts and when we have found the Jonah cast him over-board Jon. 1. 15. by holy faith and serious repentance It is very unseemly to keep a Sabbath with our filthy Garments with Zach. 3. 4. unwashen hearts with untuned tongues with untamenting eyes with unrepented sins When Joseph was to come into Gen. 41. 14. the presence of Pharaoh he shaved himself and changed his rayment and came in to Pharaoh And shall not we throw off our sinfull incumberances and put off our prison clothes our noysome irregularities by diligent search and holy repentance when the day draws on and we are to come into the Effunde cortuum sicut aqu●m coram facie Domini extolle ad eum manus tuas pro remedio peccatorum tuorum accipe igitur lamentum Hier. presence of the great God Our memories should be the surveyours to view and our consciences the secretaries to set down our hearts the mourners to lament the sins of the week that Christ would bring his spunge to blot them out before Gods holy day comes upon us It is observable those herbs rise high in the Summer time that in the Winter shrink lowest in the ground and those hearts that in the week-time are laid lowest they rise highest upon the Sabbath day There must be soul-humblings for the daily trespasses of the week else the day of Gods service comes but we cannot comfortably and confidently serve God on that day especially if any fouler spot hath deformed any day of Josh 24. 19. the week Secondly But there must be an inward examination as well as an outward a search into our thoughts our desires our delights our dispositions what they have been the foregoing week we must examine the passages of our souls how it hath fared with the inward man The Psalmist commands heart communion a serious discourse concerning the Psal 4. 4. behaviours of the heart As the Shop-keeper casts up his Ex corde vita et actio procedit accounts not onely concerning his debts abroad but his wares at home He turns every piece in the chest to see how it goes with his estate We must dive into our souls and see what growth of grace what decays of corruption what ornaments and additional beauty we have gained all the week before whether Christ hath given us new bracelets Ezek. 16. 11. Armillae significant nihil indecorum esse agendum sed manus i. e. opera debere esse decora Orig. and Jewels superadded grace or whether we are more wrinckled in the complexion of our souls and look more like to the old man Holy Master Greenham sends us to civil and wordly wisdome for the practise of this duty We see saith he worldly thriving men if not every day yet at least once in the week they search their books cast up their accounts confer their expences with their gain and make even their reckonings whereby they may see whether they have gained Eph. 4. 22. or lost whether they are beforehand or come short and shall Mr. Greenh not we much more once a week at least call our selves to a reckning by examination what hath gone from us what hath come towards us how we have gone forward or backward in godliness that if we have holy increases we may then give thanks to God and if we have come short to travel with our selves the more earnestly to recover our former loss In a word the impartial survey of our inward man will necessarily lead us to a more profitable observation of Gods holy day seeing those wants will be
as they came to them like the Beasts in Noahs Ark they went in unclean and they came out unclean how necessary then is it that we should pray for a firm memory to record sacred truth as well as a free heart to entertain it Fourthly Let us on the morning of a Sabbath pray for a tender conscience to fall down before the power and force of the word Conscience is the strongest Fort for the word to take it is the most unruly patient for the word to cure Oftentimes the word takes the ear nothing is more musical Ezek. 33. 32. The word takes the tongue nothing more commended then the Preacher and the Sermon Ezek. 33. 31. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sua vitèr Nay the work taketh the affections Mark 6. 20. Herod that miscreant Prince heard John the Baptist gladly Nay often the word takes the judgment nothing is accounted more rational The fickle Jews were convinced never man spake as Jesus Christ John 7. 46. But all this while conscience lies asleep and is not awakened from its dream Conscience all this while is as fast asleep in the bosom as Jonah in the ship Jon. 1. 6. and nothing minds the storm Conscience may be seared 1 Tim. 4. 2. and so feel nothing of the sharpness of the word conscience may be defiled 1 Tit. 15. and so mind nothing of the m●ssage of the word conscience may be evil Heb. 10. 22. and so fling away from the warnings of the word and therefore how should we beg of God that conscience may be impartial in waiting upon holy Ordinances A yielding conscience is the best auditor at a Sermon This was Josiahs praise he wept and Sacrae Scripturae sic exaratae sunt ut scire volentes sciant et litis studiosi ansam litigandi facillimè arripiant Camer was tender at the hearing of the Law 2 Chron. 34. 27. The soul lies in a fair way to life and Salvation when conscience blushes at the reproof of sin when conscience startles at the hearing of judgment when conscience is convinced of the necessity of Christ and of the beauty of holiness and that only a holy life leads to a holy God Indeed the principal work of the Gospel is to deal with conscience and it is the great work of God himself in the Gospel to rowse Non periclitor docere ipsas Scripturas ita dispositas esse ut moteriam subministrant etiam haereticis Tertul. conscience from its sleepiness to quiet its rage to take away its prejudices and to bring it into a calm temper that with meekness it may receive the engraffed word which is able to save the soul Jam. 1. 21. Men of polluted consciences can arm themselves against the assaults of the word now that we should lay down the weapons and submit to the force and power of truth this is to be begged by sollicitous and importunate prayer Fifthly We must intreat the Lord that the fruit of all Cingulo veritatis ornantur qui veritatem in moribus assequuntur Qui omnes res amandas et amplectendas per veritatem per virtutem virtutis verum dictamen metiuntur Quid enim humilitas Quid charitas quid patientio quid ●aeterae virtutes nisi lumina veritatis Ansel his holy Ordinances may appear in our lives The life of Ordinances lies in living Ordinances our sanctity only commends the Sanctuary to hear the word speaks some profession but to live the word only speaks Religion It is very observable that all those Israelites who heard God speaking from Mount Sinai the ten Commandments not living up to the tenor of those ten words as Moses calls them Deut. 10. 2. they all fell in the Wilderness none but Joshua and Caleb came safe to Canaan The sight of Physick doth not cure the patient but the application The word doth not advantage us as it is musicall but as it is medicinal as it is taken inwardly and heats the corrupt heart and the cure will easily be seen in a fruitfull conversation We then become the Gospel when holiness is our dress Those Sermons are most fairly printed which are most conscientiously practised A Sermon of charity is best seen in our alms a Sermon of self-denyal is best seen in our carrying the Cross A Sermon of Repentance is best seen in our tears and reformation To be only hearers of the word is to put a cheat upon our souls Jam. 1. 22. and make the Minister not the Physician but the Mountebank Practice is the shining lamp of the Sanctuary Exod. 27. 20. It was observed among the Jews that they were exact in turning Rom. 3. 2. over the leaves of the Bible and none more incurious to understand John 5. 39. the mind of the Holy Ghost in those sacred pages or to conform themselves to the commands of those divine Oracles they were like some heedless persons who gaze upon a tree but never turn up the leaves to see what fruit is underneath that they might feed upon it for support and satisfaction Such Jewish spirits too too many we have among us who like oscitant and negligent workmen who have their tools about them and set upon no piece for the exercise of their Art But it is rare and worthy when we hear things to be done and do things to be heard That knowledge is best which is practical when the understanding Psal 119. 105. impresses the will as the seal doth the wax and Mat. 7 17. so leaves characters of worth and holiness Our Saviour calls them blessed who hear the word and keep it Luke 11. 28. The hearers life is the Preachers best commendation The true use of Ordinances is not only to increase our knowledge but to regulate our practice The Law is a rule as well as a lamp A sinfull life will unravell all our profession and expose that puppet dressed up to scorn and derision Seneca observed of the Philosophers That when Boni esse desierum simulac docti ●vaserint Senec. they grew more learned they grew less morall This is more venial in a Heathen Philosopher then in a professing Christian We must desire the sincere milk of the word that we may grow thereby 1 Pet. 2. 2. Indeed the word must not onely be the light of our minds but the treasure of our Psal 119. 111. hearts which treasure must be spent upon works of piety and holiness The Lord Jesus makes it an infallible Character of our love to him if we keep his Commandments John 14. 15. First Christ doth not say if ye hear but if ye do my Jam. 2. 22. Rom. 2. 13. Commandments hearing is onely a step towards Religion a good wish for heaven the Scribes and Pharisees heard Qui servat legem dei verè testificatur se non simulate sed verè et sincerè amare deum Zanch. Christ who afterwards brought him to the Cross It is a sharp speech of the holy
et deploremus communem honc humanae naturae corruptionem quòd in mundanis quidem sive quis nobis benefaciat sive nos offendat satis acrem habemus memoriam Ac in Divinis Benefaciat deus nobis sive nos puniat facillimè obliviscimur Lys address our selves to Ordinances to see our faces in a glass as the Apostle speaks Jam. 1. 23. and presently forget both our featute and complexion Whatever truth thou forgetest so much is lost to thy soul We put not our Treasure in broken baggs The forgetful hearer is guilty of the same unthriftiness Let us before-hand beg of God a firm and tenacius memory He who gives wisdome Jam. 1. 5. to understand his word can give us a memory to retain it All the faculties of the soul are created enriched by him Remembred Truths are probably riveted in the heart and revealed in the life It is a most gracious providence of God that he commits his Word to writing And shall that Word which hath been preserved by God for many Ages even to a Miracle the fury of Man the rage of Persecutors the malice of Satan the subtilty of Hereticks being considered shall that blessed Word I say be lost by thee in a moment where God hath brought a Pen to set down wilt thou bring a spunge to blot out Let us be serious and consider God remembers those truths we forget and if they are not the guide of the life they will prove the guilt of the soul Let us summon conscience to appear at every Ordinance Satan will give us many dispensations in holy duties and divine worship He will permit us an ear to hear a tongue to pray nay he will not disquiet us in our transient heats of zeal and sweet passions of joy as Herod heard the Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mark 6. 20. sweetly Our affections for a little time shall be dallianced and delighted with some sweet Truths especially if they be set off by the musical voyce of the Preacher but this evil one will never suffer if he can obstruct it that conscience shall come into the Assemblies of the Saints within the hearing of Gods sacred and saving Word Indeed the purpose and design of the Word is to deal with conscience Cant. 5. 16. Rom. 7. 24. to work upon conscience to convince conscience of the sinfulness Eccles 1. 1. Mat. 16. 26. Ephes 2. 10. Mat. 11. 29 30 Luke 7. 45. Acts 2. 37. Mat. 10. 30. 31. John 8. 8. Rom. 2. 15. In Basilica cordis humani Deus tribunal constituit legesque in ejus tabulis incidit digito suo rationem creavit judicem conscientiam actorem Testes cogitationes quae vel accusant vel defendunt hominem 1 Sam. 16. 6 7 8. of sin of the loveliness of Christ of the vanity of the creature of the preciousness of the Soul of the beauty of Holiness of the easiness of Christs Yoke c. Christ he Preaches and convinceth Mary Magdalen in her conscience and she melts in tears at his feet Peter convinceth the conscience of the stubborn Jews and they are pricked at the heart Paul and Silas convince the conscience of the Jaylour and he is in a fit and an agony of trembling and despair and presently falls upon enquiry after life and salvation When thou approachest to Ordinances if a sin be reproved let conscience speak is not this my default If a duty be pressed let conscience speak is not this my tye and obligation If a corruption be unmasked and detected let conscience speak is not this my Dalilah my right eye which with Antigonus in his Picture I put my finger upon If self-denial be urged let conscience answer is it not the Cross I have so wriggled under and have been so impatient of Conscience is the chief Guest which is invited to the feast of an Ordinance To leave conscience at home is to let all the sons of Jesse to pass by and to keep back David too and so Samuel may go back again with his anointing Oyl Let us come to holy Ordinances with secret and severe resolutions to live them over to practice every Prayer we put up to act every truth we hear and to adorn every Ordinance we enjoy Our mingling with the people of God in holy worship is onely the bare canvass It is Conversion brings the Pencil and the colours to draw a fair and beautifull piece Moses when he came down from conversing with God his face shone Our light must shine before men Exod. 34. 30. after our communion with God in Ordinances The light Mat. 5. 16. Conciones sunt verba vivenda non tantùm audienda of the Gospel must enlighten our lives as one taper lights another It is rare when our heart is suitable to Gods nature as it is said of David 1 Sam. 13. 34. and our life is suitable to Gods Law And indeed though the spiritual life as the natural begins at the heart yet it doth not end there but proceeds to the hands and the feet c. The same water which was in the VVell is in the Bucket The holy heart is like a box of Musk which perfumes and scents the tongue the eyes the ears the hands and whatever is near it with sanctity and holiness The Ordinances should impress our hearts and influence our lives and therefore a holy conversation is called a conversation becomming the Gospel Phil. 1. 27. If we are resolved upon sin let us lay aside holy Sabbaths holy Duties holy Ordinances When the Preacher hath shut up all in the Pulpit the hearer is to begin in his practice the strokes in Musique must answer the notes and A morte Christi omnis piorum ministrorum sufficientia aptitudo dimanat qui aures verbo percipiendo et pollices actionibus sacris praeparat Riv. rules set down in the Lesson Our actions are these musical strokes which must answer the rules set down in the Sermon It is observable that the blood was to be sprinkled on Aarons right ear on his right thumb and on his right toe Exod. 29. 20. The first did note the right hearing of the Word the second and third his working according to the tenor of it His working by it and his walking in it Our Saviour couples hearing and keeping the Word together Luke 11. 28. The Porter is not so rich who carries the baggs of Silver as the Merchant who ownes them He is not so happy who hears the Sermon as he who lives it As one well observes The Virgin Mary was more honoured that she was the member of Christ than Rom. 6. 13. that she was the mother of Christ Life and holiness set off the lustre and beauty of Ordinances A savoury Christian is an Ornament to holy institutions Prayer is musique when holiness sets the tune The Gospel is glorious when holiness 2 Cor 4. 4. gives the shine and reverberates bright beams upon it Let
of Rom. 16. 5. Gods people being scattered as fruitful clouds which Col. 4. 15. are melted into their several drops let us repair to the lesser Church our family and follow Christ home and entertain Privata familia quae ob religiosam sanctitatem illustris est ecclesiae nomen promeruit Daven him there with holy communion Christ hath his lesser as well as his greater banquetting house Cant. 2. 4. And will meet us in our houses as well as in his own Mal. 21. 13. the place of more solemn assemblies He who will come to the house of a Pharisee Luke 14. 1. will come to the house of a believer Therefore after the publick ordinances are done and finished let us haste to our habitations as fast as Zacheus to his Luke 19. 6. to the same end with Familiam suam privata fecit ecclesia eam pietate religione exornans Theod. him to entertain our dear Jesus and pursue those family duties which are incumbent upon us which now shall be opened and discoursed upon There are several duties which must take up this interval that it may not be an empty and unbeautiful chasm Let our meal be adorned with temperance and made lushious and sweet with holy and savory discourse Heavenly communication is salt at the table is sauce in the dish Non prius discumbunt quàm Oratio ad deum praegustetur editur quantum esurientes capiunt bibitur quantum pudicis est utile ita saturantur ut qui meminerint etiam per noctem sibi adorandum deum esse Tertul. is a flavour in our drink Full meales are those which are spiritualized and they have most of rarity which have most of heaven Our tables are spread with variety not from our dishes but from our discourse Tertull. speaking of the carriage of private Christians at their meals tells us That they do not sit down before they have prayed they eat as much as may satisfie hunger they drink so much as is sufficient for temperate men and are so filled as they that remember that God must be worshipped even in the night season O the golden temper of these golden times Temperance must be the Caterer and holy discourse must be the musick of our tables Our tongues are instruments but the good spirit must tune them Holy discourses are perfumes which are not only pleasant to our selves but delightful to others they are the trumpets of our piety the sparks which fly from our zeal the disburdening of a gracious soul they are a celestial harmony which makes a meal on a Sabbath pleasant and seraphical Vivunt impii ut bibant et edant sed bibu●● èt edunt bène ut vivant Socr●t And therefore let us discourse at our Sabbath meals on some things delivered by the Minister or some spiritual matter which may administer grace to the hearers and let us avoid the common rock of vain and worldly talk Xenocrates the Philosopher being in company with some who used evil language he was very mute and being asked the reason he replyed It hath often repented me that I have spoken but never that I have held my peace Oh that our hearts and lips were heavenly on the Lords day that there might be more sprinkling of grace in our discourses Sermo noster sit ad aedificationem necessitatis Theoph. This would turn our food into Manna and drop dissolved Pearls into our Cup and turn our board into a Communion table Holy discourse it Et ad aedificationem utilitatis Erasm First Warms the heart Secondly It gives vent for grace Thirdly It is the bellows of zeal Et ad aedificatione● opportunitatis Sermo aedificet quoties opus vel opportunitas est alios docere Theoph. Fourthly It often awakens conscience Fifthly It is the Gangrene of sin as silence and flattery are the promoters of it Sixthly Nay it countermines Satan and turns him out of the room where our table stands Seventhly Holy discourses are the freedom of imprisoned piety and the Midwife of that holiness which lies in the womb of the heart the turning up of that truly golden Ore they are the Saints Shibboleth which distinguishes him from the foolish world which travels with froth and vanity In a word holy discourse is the ease of Conscience the sacrifice of Religion the Saints refreshment the sinners chain and astonishment heavens eccho the delight of Christian Society It is a twofold Charity First To our selves it enfranchises our affections to Christ our heart is full of love to him and holy discourse gives vent to our full hearts it is the discharge of our duty Cant. 5. 10 11 and so frees us from the guilt of disobedience and Col. 4. 6. moreover it gives fire to our dedolent hearts Our hearts Luke 24. 31. must be awakened and raised sometimes by ordinances Mal. 3. 16. sometimes by prayer sometimes by holy discourses Sequi debet in una●uaque familiâ mutua communicatio et mutua familiae institutio Rivet in Decal Secondly Which likewise are charity to others They may be their satisfaction an answer to their scruples a corrosive to their lusts a check to their sin thou knowest not but thy good discourse may be as an Angel in the way to stop some sinfull progress or a flame to anothers zeal and a salve to anothers sore Such discourse becomes our table on the Lords day and becomes the Sabbath as rich attire the Luke 14. 1 7. beautiful person the garment sets off the person and the person adorns the garment It is reported of the hearers of holy Mr. Heldersham that they would go home from Church discoursing of he powerful and precious truths which were delivered and so they did strew the way home with Roses and made their miles short by heart-sweetning discourse Christ when he was with his little family his twelve Apostles he would always be speaking of the things Deut. 6. 6 7. of heaven Mark 4. 10. Gracious words would flow from Job 32. 18 19 20. him as drops from the fountain or the morning dew from above It was a charge laid upon the Israelites to discourse Deut. 11. 19. of the statutes of God when they were in their Mat. 12. 34. houses sitting with their Children and Servants about them Deut. 6 6 7. The two Disciples going from Emaus Christus suo exemplo declaravit quomedo tempus inter matutinos et vespertinos caetus Sabbati insumendum est Ipse enim suos discipulos dissipatâ turbâ de rebus regni examinavit Chemn were talking of the sufferings and the affairs of Christ and then their dear Mediatour joyns in with them Luke 24. 15. Dr. Bound observeth That when we have heard the word upon a Sabbath we must discourse of it unless we will lose a great part of the fruit of it A talking of worldly affairs will chase away that truth we have been made