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A14653 The doctrine of the Sabbath Wherein the first institution of the vveekly Sabbath, with the time thereof, the nature of the law binding man to keep it, the true ground, and necessity of the first institution, and of the observation of it, on the severall day in the Old Testament, and also of the moving of it to the first day under the Gospel, are laid open and proved out of the Holy Scriptures. Also besides the speciall dueties necessarily required for the due sanctification thereof, those two profitable points are proved by demonstrations out of Gods Word. First, that the Lord Christ God and man, is the Lord of the Sabbath, on whom the Sabbath was first founded...2. That the faithfull under the Gospell are as necessarily bound to keep the weekly Sabbath of the Lords day... Deliverd in divers sermons by George Walker B. of Divinity and pastor of St. Iohn Evangelists Church in London. Walker, George, 1581?-1651. 1638 (1638) STC 24957; ESTC S103296 151,861 168

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2 Cor 2 6 7 and as divers of the auncients haue held and shewed in their practise Seventhly ordaining and calling of Bishops Pastors and Elders being of old performed in the face of the whole Church with publick prayers and laying on of hands Act. 1.15 14.23 2 Cor. 8.19 As it was of old soe at this day is a verie fitt dutye of the Lord holy weekly Sabbath Besides these publick duties there are diuers priuate duties which are necessary both to make the publick duties effectuall and frutefull and to testifie to the Praise and glory of God the power of his holy ordinances and the worke of the spirit by them upon our hearts and soules The first of these is private prayer either by our selves alone or in our families with our Children servants and others of the houshold for if we must pray continually when just occasion and oppertunity is offered as the Apostle teacheth 1 Thes. 5. then most especially before we go vnto and after we returne from the publicke assemblies for a blessing upon Gods Publick ordinances both to our selves and others Our Saviour bids us pray in secret and David exhorts vs to commune with God on our beds and to pray after his example morning evening and at noone day The second is meditation of such as are alone on things heard in the Church and repetition in the family for the printing of the the word in their mindes and memories and mutuall instruction and exhortation one of another without which the word will take small effect afterwards and quicklie beforgotten Saint Paul doth intimate the necessary vse of this duty where he commands women to aske and learne of their husbands at home and not to speak in the Church 1 Cor 14 35 1 tim 2 11. This is the holy duty which God commended in Abraham Gen 18 That he did command and teach his houshold Children which few men can do conveniently on the week daies when every one is about their worke some in one place and some in another onely the Lords day is the fittest The third is rejoycing singing of Psalmes and Praising God in our families this David commends for a duty of the Sabbath Psal. 92.1 And this Paul and Silas taught us by their example Act. 16.35 Where they two being in prison and in the stocks are said on the Lords day at midnight to pray and sing Psalmes with soe loud a voyce that the Prisoners heard them And yet I hope none dare call them Puritants and Hipocrites as the profane miscreaunts of our time call all the familes in which they heare singing of Psalmes on the Lords day The Fourth is visiting of the sick of prisoners releiving the poore and needy perswading of disagreeing Neighbours to peace and reconciliation These are works of mercie and of Christian loue and charity haue no proper end but to bring honour to God and to make him to be praised of his people and his people to be edified in loue And being an holie private service of God they may be done on the Lords daie our Church Doctrine doth teach them and Ecclesiasticall constitutions allow them The last duty is meditating on Gods workes magnifying them and speaking of them with admiration one to another if upon any just occasion or for necessarie refreshing we walke diuers together into the feilds This David mentions in the Psalme for the Sabbath day Psal. 92 45. Where he saith thou Lord hast made me glad through thy workes and I will tryumph in the workes of thy hands O Lord how great are thy workes Thus much for the speciall duties both publick priuate which Christians are bound to performe on the Lords day which is the Christian Sabbath Now the consideration of these severall duties being some publick some priuate some more proper for the Sabbath and some for all daies offer to us somethings more to be obserued First the publicke duties of the whole Church together must first be regarded and preferred before priuate duties at home and mumbling of private praies with our selves in the Church because they make more for Gods glory and mutuall edification and do shew and declare our Christian vnity Secondly publick duties must take up the best and greatest part of the day because they are proper to the day and to publick assemblies which are to be kept weekly on the Sabbath day Priuate duties are common to all daies of the weeke Thirdly the duties of mercy charity to men must giue place to the mediate worship of God when there is no vrgent necessity and they may bee deferred to another day without any inconvenience Men hauing oppertunity before must not put them off vntill the Lords daie and then by them shoulder out holy duties of piety and Gods solemne worshippe Lastly by the many and severall duties required on the Lords Sabbath wee see that to him who hath a care and respect of them all there will be no time left for for idle words and toyish talking praunsing in pride and vanity nor for any carnall sports pastimes and pleasures But Gods day wil be found little enough for holy duties which are to be performed And therefore I dare not allow any liberty for any sports how honest lawful so ever at other times except they bee holy and Gods worship be furthered and no better duties by them be hindered Which no man can in reason conceive or imagine If God be to be loved aboue all and honoured and served with all the heart and mind soule strength as the law commands J do not see but all Gods people ought so to do especially on the Lords day to be discontent grieued that they can̄ot do it so fully as they ought not to allow to themselves in these things anie liberty which may hinder Gods holy worship The greatest opposites of the weekly Christians Sabbath when they haue most vehemently disputed spent al their argumēts against the observation of the Lords day for an holy Sab day of holy rest are by the cleare evidence of the truth so convinced that will they nill they their conscience forceth them to confesse That the spēding of the whole day even the space of four twenty hours of the Lords day an holie rest cessation from all worldly thoughts cares from all seculiar affaires in holy duties of Gods worship service both publick and private is a thing Commendable praise worthy in them and pleasing and acceptable in the sight of God To that one only wise omnipotent immortall and eternall God who in all things and ouer all enimies maketh his truth to triumph be all honour glory and praise now and for euer FINIS Justin. Dialog cū Triphone Tertull. adversus Judoeos Irenaeus lib. 4. c. 20 * Tostatus Pererius Gomarus Heb. 11.10.16 Origen Hierom. trad in 2 Gen. Austin in Psal. 80. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gen. 8 21 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gen. 31.2 Heb. 10.26 1 Ioh. 5.16 Heb. 6·6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Doctrine 1 Reason 2 Reason 3 Reason 4 Reason 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. Position negative 1· Pit 1.3 Objection Answer 1. Position affirmative 2. position affi●mative Gen. 4. 3 position affirmative Objection Answer Object 2. Answer The severall opinions concerning the law of the Sabbath The distinction of Gods laws serm 251. de tempore serm de tempore 136. Zanch. lib de De Calog thes 1. 1 Argument 2 Argument 3 Argument Argum. 6 Argument 7 Argument 8. Argu. 9. Argu. Of mans sanctification of the Sabbath 1 Argument 2 Argument 3 Argument 4. Argu. 5 Argument Objection Answer Object Answer Prolog in Psalm Objection Answer Lexic● cold 1. Argument 2 Argument 3. Argument 4. Argum. 5. Argu Chrisostom in Cor. 16. Augst ser. 25 1. de temp Gregor Magn Epist lib 11.3
mear and drinke offerings of fine flower mingled with oyle and such like and incense and gummes and spices they where but tipes and shaddowes of Christ his substanciall sacrifice and in that respect holy by Consecration And though divers of them were indifferent and tollerable while the bodily Temple was yet standing Yet when God hath cast them out by the destruction of the materiall temple the chaunge of the weekly Sabbath they are growne unlawfull to be practised and the reviuing of the practise of them is called abomination Dan. 12. And apostacy from Christ Gala. 4 5. turning againe to weak and beggarly elements and rudiments and becoming slaues to them Gal. 4.9 Wherfor we are now onely to observe in our sanctification of our holie weekly Sabbath such holie duties and exercises as are holie at al● times and in all ages both before and under the law and now also under the Gospell which in their owne nature are either trulie holie or t●nde to beg it increase and cherish holie graces in men And because God hath by the Gospell shined into our hearts to giue us the light of the knowledge of his glorie the face of Iesus Christ 2 Cor. 4.6 And hath shed his spirit on us aboundantly through him Tit. 3.6 And soe made us more spirituall because also our Saviour himselfe hath taught vs in the Gospell that God is a spirit they are true worshippers who worship him in spirit Iohn 4.23.24 Therefore the chiefest duties by which the Sabbath is sanctifi●d are the most speciall duties of Gods worshippe and the more spirituall the more pleasing to God more beseeming Christ●ans Soe that the first rule which is here to be giuen and to be observed is this That all Gods people doe chiefely labour to stirre up and quicken the grace of God in their hearts and holy heavenly and supernaturall aff●ctions in their soules that with pure mind● and spirits they may performe all duties and actions of Gods worship and seruice both publick and priuate It is true that all times and on all daies we ought to keepe our whole spirit and soule as well as our body pure and blameles to serue God as well with inward affection of heart and purity of spirit as ou●ward visible sencible actions and gestures of body But because the Lords day is the most blessed daie of the w●eke sanct●fied set apart for the holy worshippe and immediate service of God and for publick and priuate service devotion and Religious duties onelie therefore we all ought to haue as great care to furnish our soules with spiritual beauties of holinesse more abundan●ly in greater measure as we haue to make cleane and neate our houses and to decke and adorne our bodies with our best and cleanest holy daie apparell on the Lords day For though outward bodily actions gestures are required as r●quisit and necessary in the publick worship of God and without them it is as impossible to do that publick duty and service to God which belongs to mutuall edification of Christians in this life to the solemne lauding and praising of him in publick assemblies as it is to performe visible senceable actions of this life by the soule only without the body Yet bodily service worship of God as coming duly diligently to the house of God to publick assemblies hearing the word withall attentions and speaking it with great vehemency Praying worshipping and giving thankes in the best forme of wordes which can be devised and with most humble and reverent gestures of devotion as bowing down the body to the ground knocking of the breasts sighing groaning lifting up the hands and eyes to heaven and the like they all without spirituall affection and devotion of the heart are no better then a dead karcast without a soule yea they are filthy hyp●crisie and mockerie of God and lothsome abomination in his sight as the Lord by the Prophet testifieth Isa. 1 c 10 to the 16 verse 29 13 And therefore let our first and chiefest care bee about the fitting and preparing of our hearts and filling and replenishing our soules with spiriruall affections and quickening and stirring up inward and spirituall grace within us for these are the life and soule of all religious duties of all holy worship of God without them we can̄ot in the least measure sanctifie Gods holy day nor performe any least duty of sanctificatiō acceptable to God Now the speciall means which serve for the quickning of spirituall grace kindling of spirituall devotion in our hearts are diuers The First is that which J haue spoken of befor in the duties which concerne Rest to weet a totall sequestring of our selues from all worldly businesse puting away all earthly thoughts cares delights that our whole heart and soule all our affections being purged from all such drosse may haue roome for holinesse only and for spirituall devotion and motions of the spirit For no man can serve two Masters at once God and the world Cast out earthlie carnall thoughts and spiritual and heavenlie affections will easilie enter and beare sway And because this sequestring of our selves from cares of the world must go befor true sanctification in order time therfor undoubtedlie the beginning of the Lords Sab daie is there where the old Iewish Sab ended that is in the evening of the Saturdaie And certainlie when men taking their Rest from labour the whole night befor the Lords daie for sequestring themselves from worldlie businesse fitting of their soules with spirituall devotion and stirring vp of grace in their hearts then do they most profittablie begin their Sabbath for by the meanes the time of preparation and quitting of the minde from worldlie troublesome thoughts shall go before the time of practise and publick assemblies Wherein they are to appeare before God and to performe the maine duties of Sanctification and of his holy worship And her● J cannot passe by without some reproofe that evill carnall custome most worthy to be condemned which is to common among our Cittizens who defer their reckoni●g with their worke-men untill the evening and night which beginns the Lords day Let me here admonish you all to forsake this practise if you loue the Lord and will honour his holy Sab. The second meanes is to meditate on those things which may stirre up our dull spirits and quicken grace in our hearts as first upon the greatnesse holinesse and gl●rie ●f the Lord and more specially to present our selves when the light of the day commeth both to speak to him in praier and praises to heare him speake to us in his word read and preached This must needs moue and stirre up spirituall 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 before an earthly King or some great Nobles Secondly to consider what holinesse and purity especially of
heart and soule is required in vsing the publick holie ordinances of God and in approaching neare to him to worship him in his holy place his owns house As wee reade Leviticus 20.7 1 Peter 1.15.16 The holinesse that becomes Gods house is not vanishing showes and shaddowes which passe awaie in the doing and vsing of them as bowing cringing and such gestures but a spirituall and eternall holinesse which lasts for ever and can never bee defaced nor perish as David shewes Psal. 93.5 It is better then thousands of Rammes Mich. 6.6.7.8 It is putting on of Humility Mercy meeknesse and all other affections and departing from all iniquity 2 Tim. 2.19 It is the Jmage of Christ in the new creature which is created after God in righteousnesse and holinesse that is which cannot lye nor deceiue by faiding but lasts for ever Ephes. 4.24 Thirdly to call to mind those Scripturs which require holy preparation as Eccle. 5.1 which shewes Gods anger against such as come to his house without due furniture and a wedding garment as Mat. 22.12 Fourthly to meditate on that whereof the Sabbath is a signe and pledge vnto us even our Resurrection to eternall life and to the eternall Rest of glory in heaven in the sight and fruition of God whom none can see without holinesse Thi● is most powerfull to stirre up spirituall affection and to quicken grace in our hearts The third meanes is earnest prayer to God for his spirit and increase of his spirituall grace in our hearts that is of great force if it be importunate Luk. 11.13 18.1 and fervent Iam. 5.16 And therefor when the Lords day begineth in the evening or day going of the Satturday we must make speciall prayers for this purpose as also in the morning when we awake and see the light of the Lords holy day Jn the next place after we are thus prepared wee must set our selves wholy to the performance of the duties of holinesse which are required for the sanctification of an holy Sabbath to the Lord which are either publick or private The first publick duty is diligent assembling of our selues with the congregation of Gods people in the house of God the place of publick assemblies This is so necessary that without it there can be no solemne service nor publick worship of God performed by us This the Lord requires in the law where he joynes these two together as in seperable companions even holy convocations and keeping of a Sabbath Ex. 12.16 These our Saviour Christ did frequent though Lord of the Sabbath as well as the fathers did under the law as appears Mark. 1.27 And so did his Apostles on the new Sabbath the Lords day 1 Cor 16.1.2 The second publick duty in the publick worship of God is Praier lauding and Praising him and offering vp sacrifices of thankfulnesse and the first fruites a●d calues of our lippes in a solemne orderly and decent manner and order This the holy men of God carefully performed in the House of God on their Sabbath in the old Testament as David shewes Psal. 5.7 42.4 And this our Saviour commandes to us for an holy duty in Gods house where hee cals the house of God the house of prayer Mat. 21.13 that not only to the Jews but also to al beleeving nations as the Prophets words by him cited do shew Isa. 56 7. This the godly at Philippi where they had no Synagogue nor Church performed in a publick assembly by a Riuers side Act. 16.13 This was practised by the first Christians at Iudaea Act. 2.46.47 and this the Apostle injoynes Heb 13.15 This David foretold Psal. 118.24 In a word all Scriptures which teach us to call upon God to pray to confesse our sinnes to humble our selves before God to worshippe him and to giue thankes and do commend these for holy duties they doe much more teach vs to performe them on the Lords day in our holy assemblies The third sort of publicke duties are the holy ordinances of God which tend properly to beget and increase holinesse and to teach Christians Gods holy worship and feare to weet the publick reading and and expounded of the word of God and preaching and Catechising on the Mininisters part and on the peoples part reverent attention hearing of the word of God This was a constant practise from the daies of old which the Fathers obserued soe long as the Church of the Jewes and first temple was standing As appeares Ast. 13.15 cap. 15.21.27 Also by our Saviours practise preaching in the Sinagogues every sabbath day Luk. 4.16 Mar. 1.31 And this the Apostles practised in holie assemblies which they appointed to be kept on the Lords day and this they commanded to be performed by all the Christian Churches as appeares Act. 11.25 20 7. 1 Cor. 16.1 14.23.26 Colos. 4.14 1 Thes. 5.27 Fourthly besides preaching reading and expounding of the holy Scripturs ther is also the administration of the Sacraments as of Baptisme and the Lords Supper the later of which especially is an holy sab daies ordinance of Christ first instituted in the assembly of his Apostles not to be administred and receiued ordinarily but in Sab assēblies and publick meeting of the Church comming together on the Lords day as we gather from Act. 20.7 1 Cor. 11.20.33 And that publick Baptisme is most fit to bee administered on the Lords day in the publicke assembly these reasons sh●w 1. Because it is joyned with preaching Mathew 28.16 Secondly because it is the receiuing of the Baptized into the true Visible Church Thirdly in publick it may bee better perfomed by the joynt prayers of the whole Congregation· Fourthly it may much profit the whole publick congregation of Gods people by putting them in minde of the covenant made in Baptisme The fifth sort of publick Sabbath duties are workes of mercy charity which are fruites of faith working by loue Unto which duties the publick Ministers soe often occasion is offered are to excite up the people and they ought to offer freelie and to make collections for the poore Saints This St. Paul taught 1 Cor. 16. 1 2 and this was in times and ages next after the Apostles practised and performed as Iustin Martyr testifies Apolog. 2 pag. 77. Sixthly publick censures of the Church and actions of correction are most fitly performed in publick assemblies of the whole Church on the Lords day such as open rebuke of scandalous sinners before all the people that others may feare Excommunication and casting out excluding from outward communion obstinate and refractary offenders as hereticks adulterers incestuous persons such like Receiving into the Church of God such as were cast out upon their humble confession and publick repentance openly before the whole Church These are not to be done in corners but in the face of the Church as St. Paul ordained by commandement from the Lord by direction from the spirit of God 1 Tim. 5 20 1 Cor. 5.4
in Christ we are called to be Saints and sanctified 1 Cor. 1.2 Secondly there is no thought or hope of eternall rest in heaven but in and by Christ hee brings us into that and by going before us makes way for us Heb. 6.20 9 24. Jt is that which never entered into the heart of man his reason conceives it not till God doth reveale it by his spirit given though Christ 1 Cor. 2.9.10 Thirdly no man can haue accesse vnto God but in Christ there is no approach to the throne of grace but in him Heb. 4.16 It is Christ alone who for his peoples sake sanctified himselfe that they also might be sanct●fied Ioh. 17.19 And there is no growing up in grace holinesse but in him and by vnion and communion in one body with him as our head Eph. 13·16 vpon these infalible premises it followes necessarily that the proper end and use of the Sabbath presupposing Christ the first institution thereof must needes be grounded on Christ also Fourthly if Christ as he is the Sonne of man vnited in one person vnto God and so our mediatour be the Lord of the Sabbath so that the alteration and chaunge of it from one of the seven dayes to another is onely in his power and depends wholy on some chaunge in him then the institution of it is grounded one the promise of him and upon his mediation Now the Antecedent is manifest by our Sauiours owne words Mat. 12.9 where hee calls himselfe Lord of the Sabbath day And by his resurrection and becomming the head stone of the corner the Sabbath is chaunged from the day of him promised vnto the day of the full exhibition of him aperfect actuall redeemer in his resurrection as David foretold Psal. 118. And the practise of the Apostles in all Churches of Christian Gentiles doth aboundantly declare Act. 20.7 and 1 Cor. 16.2 wherefore undoubtedly Christ promised was the first ground of the institution of the Sabbath as our Saviour in that place of the Gospel Mat. 12.9 affirmes it was made for man that is not only for mens use but also for him the son of man upon the promise undertaking of him to become man the seed of the women for mans redemption for destroying the workes of the Divill VSE This Doctrine thus fully proved confirmed is a Doctrine of speciall use to worke in the hearts of all true Christians who have all their hope confidence in Christ an high holy reverence esteeme of the Lords holy weekly Sabbath to provoke stirre them up to a carefull conscionable diligent observation thereof in all their generations for the promoting propagating of pietye for the increase of devotion and advauncement of Religion in all succeding ages If the observation of the weekly Sabbath were but a dictate of nature written in mans heart in the creation then were the chiefe end and ayme of it no more but an earthly felicitye and the fruition of a naturall life in an earthly paradise It should be no better then one of the duties which belong to the old couvenant of life justification by mans owne works which is abolished and made void by mans fall And It is wholy frustrated of the proper end use of it which was justification life by workes of a mans own doing And so being not a part of the wisedome which is from above it should be of lesse esteme and of common and ordinary account with holy Christian Saintes Or if the Sabbath were a legall rite and ceremoniall ordinance onely such as were sacrifices burnt offerings circumcision and legall purifications which were shadowes of things to come then should it be abolished by the full exhibition of Christ and the observation thereof among Chistians of the beleeveing Gentiles were no better then setting up of abominations which make desolate by cutting men of from Christ. But here we are taught better things concerning the Lords holy weekely Sabbath to weet that it is an holy Heavenly Euangelicall ordinance wholy grounded upon Christ and depending onely upon him first instituted upō the promised Christ limitted to the seventh day of the weeke in which he was promised to be mans redeemer did undertake in some measure begin actually to mediate and to intercede for man with God and commaunded to be kept onely on that seventh day during the tyme of the old Testament while Christ was onely promised the fathers sought salvation in him to come And now ever since the full exhibition of Christ a perfect redeemer in his resurrection necessarily imposed on all Christians and limitted by virtue of the first institution and foundation of it upon Christ to that day even the first day of the weeke which is the greatest day of Christ appearing in the nature of man on earth that is the day of his resurrection to glory and immortalitie and the day of his complete victory and triumph in his owne person over sin death the Devill all the powers of darknesse So that though the particular dayes of the weekely Sabbath that is the seventh of the weeke in the old Testament and the first in the new and under the Gospell may truly be called temporarye and caeremoniall because they have their set tymes and seasons the one the tyme and season onely under Christ promised the other the tyme and season under Christ fully exhibited that is the whole tyme of grace under the Gospell vntill we come both in soules and bodyes to the etternall Sabbath and rest in heaven when Christ Mediatour haveing destroyed all enimyes and delivered up the Kingdome to God his father God shal be all in all Yet they are such ceremonies as are holy in their seasons not by signification and consecration to holy and supernaturall use only as legall shadowes were but also materially and in respect of the very duties which are performed in observation of them yea and effectively because the due observations of them properly tends to begitt and increase true holynesse in Gods people Besides if we consider the observation of a weekely Sabbath simply in it self without limitation to a particular day so it is a perpetuall ordinaunce of God which bindes all mankind to the end of the world And there is none of all Adams posteritye but by Gods first institution he is bound to keep the holy weekely Sabbath upon that very day of the weeke which by the word of God and the ground of the institution appeares to be most seasonable in the age and the state of the Church under which thy live and have their being on earth Now these things being soe how it is possible that any true syncere Christian who as by one spirit and by a true lively faith soe also in his whole heart and in all holy affections is vnited vnto Christ and hath all his h●pe confidence in him as in his only Redeemer Lord Saviou● should not
As for example Gods commandement and law given to Israell was that they should loue him the Lord their God and serue him with such worship as is agreable to his word This law bindes them and all Gods people in all generations unchaungable Jt bound all such as lived in the old Testament to serve God with sacrifices and burnt offerings and to worship him with their first fruits and sweet odoures and perfumes of incense and that in the place which he did chuse out of all the tribes of Israell And it bindes vs still who liue under the new Testament to loue God and to serue him But with a spirituall woshippe and seruice such as is most agreable to the word of the Gospell as Saint Paul shewes Rom. 12. ● and our sacrifices are not of bruite beasts but our owne bodies deuoted to the obedience of Christ and sacrifices of thankes and praise which are the calfes of our lipps Heb. 13.15 for now men are not by the lavv bound to worship God In Ierusalem nor in the mountaine of Samaria but in every place to lift up pu●e hands and hearts to God and to worshippe him in spirit and in truth Iohn 4.21 And to this worshipp the same law doth as strictlie binde us as it did the fathers to their bod●ly sacrafices in Ierusalem though the seruice in divers particulars is chaunged yet the law is perpetual and st●nds firme and immutable and bindes all Gods people in al their generations Soe likewise from the first promise of Christ a redeemer to mankinde Adam and all his posterity are bound to beleeve in Christ and to seeke expect and hope for salvation and life only in him the promised seede of the woman that is in him made man and mans mediatour And the law of beleeuing in Christ is perpetuall firme and vnch●ungable And yet the dutie which he requires is changeable and is chaunged now under the Gospel from that which is under the law in circumstance for the faithfull in the old Testament were bound to except and wait for Christ and to beleeve in him to come but we under the Gospel confesse Christ and beleeue in that Christ Iesus which is come in the flesh ●nd whosoever confesseth not Christ which is come but beleevs Christ to come he is lead by the spirit of Antichrist 1 Joh. 4.3 And euen thus the case stands with the law of the Sabbath which God gaue in the beginning when he sanctified the seuenth day for by that law he bound Adam and all his posterity to obserue and keepe an holy weekly Sabbath and that one the particular day of the week which is the day most blessed with the greatest blessing aboue all other daies of the weeke and wherein the created worke of the world comes to greatest perfection and that is brought into actuall being where God especiallie resteth and wherewith he is chiefly satisfied delighted This is the summe and substance of the law which equallie bindes all Gods people perpetually to the worlds end This law bound the fathers to keepe holy the seventh day and last day of the weeke in the old Testament because that was the day most blessed with the greatest blessing as yet reuealed in the world that is the promise of Christ his actuall undertaking beginning to be mans mediatour by which promise of the redeemer bringing in of supernaturall grace which is spirituall immutable the mutable worke of the creation was perfected in which mediatō of Christ God rested took such delight that he would not go about to uphold the world by way of creation but cōmitted the reparation of the world to Christ the mediatour But now under the go●pel since the ful exhibition of Christ a perfect actual redeemer the perfecting of the work of redemption on the first day of the week in Christ his resurrectiō that first day of the seuenth which is the seventh in the weekly revolution if we count the daies begin̄ing with the daie next following is now the day most blessed wherin the created world is after a better manner in an higher degree perfected God findes that actually performed wherin he resteth wherwith he is fully satisfied And therfore the same perpetuall law of the Sabbath bindes us to keepe this day for our weekly Sabbath that not with such service as was holy under the law that double bodily sacrifices nor with assemblies appointed for preaching reading hearing of the law the promises of a redeemer to come for seeking salvation blessings in Messiah promised yet not come But with spirituall worship faithfull praier invocation in the name of Christ exhibited already exalted with reading preaching hearing of the gospel which declareth Christ Iesus already come in the flesh And thus I hope I haue fully answered the objection made it manifest the christian churches in chaunging the day of their weekly Sabbath their forme manner of worship haue not made void but established the law of the Sabbath which God gaue in the beginning and these chaunges doe in no case proue the law to be ceremoniall onely and mutable neither doth the moralitie and perpetuity of the law require that every circumstance of the Sabbath and every particular Sabbath duty should at all times remain the same perpetual unchangable CHAP. 10. BVT that this truth may yet shine forth more clearlie and may soe m●nifestlie shew it selfe that no scruples may remaine nor any doubts concerning it or any part of it I will proced to the second special thing which is before propounded That is to inquire search out discover the nature and kinde of this law and commandement of God concerning the weeklie Sabbath And how farre and in what manner it bindes Adam and all his posterity And her● I haue alarge field to passe through wherein divers points offer themselues to our view which J cannot passe by nor lead you along withou● due consideration of them First here J meete with divers and severall opinions of the learned concerning the law of the sabbath which come first to be rehearsed and examined Secondly I finde severall kindes of lawes which God hath given to men mentioned in the Scripture and divers sorts of commandements which we must severally discribe and distinctlie consider before we can determine that which principallie is here intended that is what kinde of law and commandement this of the Sabbath is and how farre and in what manner all man kinde are obliged by it bound to obey it The first opinion is that the law of the Sabbath is naturall morall perpetuall writen in the heatt of the first man in his creation And that as he was bound to keepe the seventh day holy to the Lord in the state of innocency Soe also are all his posteritie bound in all all ages even to the last man to keepe the weeklie Sabbath But they who conceiue
tipicall seruice of the Lord which he in his temple required by a ceremoniall law for the sanctification of the Sab. Then much more doth Gods law allow cōmand his publike ministers to labour sweat spend their bodily strength spirits in preaching his word in the holy Christian assemblies where Christ who is greater then the temple is present by his spirit in many of his members who are so many temples of the Holy Ghost and of God The second argument is drawne from the practise and example of Christ and his Apostles For as the Priests and learned scribes did of old read and expound the law and the Prophets in all their sinagogues every sabbath day And our Saviour approued this by joyning with them in some practise preaching teaching in their sinagogues in great throngs assemblies of people which thronged after him undoubtedly made him sweate as appeares Mat. 4.13 Iohn 5.10 So also the holy Apostles did on the first day of the week the Lords day labour in the word as we see by the example of St. Paul who at Troas continued his Preaching till midnight because he was to depart the next daye Act. 20.7 Now what they did performe as a duty taught by the law and moued by the spirit of God Jn that all their faithfull successoures are bound to immitate them Therefore the laboures and paines of Ministers and preachers are allowed on the Lords day being holy and religious workes and fittest of all for the holy day and holy place A second sort of workes alowed to be done on the Lords day are bodily workes and laboures which are soe necessary for the fitting and enabling of Christians to sanctifie that day and for bringing them vnto holy and publick assemblies and places of prayer and of Gods worship and holy service that wit●out such working and labouring even on that day they neither can be so fit and able to serue God joyfully and to worshippe him with cheerefull hearts neither can they as the present case stands come unto holy Sabbath assemblies to heare the word to pray and to worship in publick As for example in places of restreant and of trouble and persecution where publicke Sabbath assemblies of true Christians are not tollerated but in Churches which are remote diuers miles and in barren countries where the Churches are foure or fiue miles distant from some houses and vilages in the parrish men may lawfully ●rauell on foote and ride one horses or make their horses labour in drawing them to the Church in Coaches And because men cannot be soe Cheerfull in the seruice of God nor soe hartily rejoyce before him not with strength and delight spend the whole day in Sabbath duties wit●out warme and wholesome food and plentifull refreshing of their weake bodies therefore the dressing boyling baking and rosting of meate is lawfull on the Lords day soe farre as it more helps then hinders holy duties and the service of God This is manifest by the words of the law Exod. 12.16 where the Lord forbidding all manner of worke on his holy Sabbaths excepts labour and worke about that which people were to eate and which was necessary for the upholding of an holy moderate feasting on those daies This was practised by the Ph●rises and by our Saviour and his Apostles who on the Sabbath day came to a feast to the house of a chiefe Pharise Luk. 14.1.2 Also the speech of the Shanamite to his wife 2 King 4.23 doth import that for the solemn observation of the Sabbath they were wont to ride and travell to the Prophets and to places where they might worship God and be instructed in the knowledge of his will and worship For when shee desi●d an asse to ride on and a young man to attend her unto Carmell where Elisha ●he man of God was Wherefore wilt thou saith he got to him to day seeing it is neither New Moon nor sabbath But here let me giue a caution That Christian people bee not too heedlesse setting their inhabitations in places Remote from the Church for some worldly commodities when they may with a litle lesse conveniency dwell neere And that they do not by vnnecessary feasting and superstitious dressing of meate hinder or wholy disable some of their fam●ly from keeping holy the Lords day a fault to common in our daies Thirdly all works actions of bodily labour which are works of mercy and of Charity which cannot without convenience or danger be deferred or which may be done without hindering of our soules in Gods publick worship and to the great comfort of our brethren are lawfull and may be done on the Lords day As for example visiting of the si●k and of them that are in prison or in any great distresse and applying and ministering comfort and healing medicines to them offering and gathering of collections for the Reliefe of poore Saints labouring to set men at ●nity and to Reconcile jarring neighbours These are holy pious workes as our Saviour shewes and hee accounts such deeds when they come from a sincere heart as if they were don to himselfe Mat 25.40 Yea he himselfe did commonly on the Sabbath day practise such deeds soe often as he found occasion as we read Mat. 12. Luk. 6 Paul by inspiration of the spirit and by Commandement from the Lord Christ doth ordaine and appoint such vvorks to be done on the Lords day 2 Cor. 16.1 2. And from the daies of the Apostles all true Churches of Christ did practise such vvorkes of mercy pietie and Charity as Justine Martyr vvitnesseth and divers others in alter ages And such works the Ecclesiasticall constitutions of our English Church commanded and commend on the Sundayes holy daies of the Lord. Fourthly all bodily workes of great and extreame necessity which concerne the life and safety of men and of their cattell the preseruation of necessary creatures other good things of good use value and moment serving for mans being and welbeing may lawfully be done on the Lords day As for example 1. Fighting for our liues and for the safety of our country or city against enimies which invade us and set upon us and taking advantage if God doth offer it to us on the Lords day as Ioshua did at Jerico in compassing the City by Gods appointm●nt and by circumstances it is probable taking it on the seventh day and offering a bloudy sacrifice in fire to God as a Cherem or Anathema devoted and seperated to God for the first fruites of the land of Canaan after they came to Jordan from which no man might without sacrilege detract any thing as Achan did and was cut off for it Josh. 6. If Ioshua did compasse the Citty seven daies together as the text saith then one of the seventh must needs be the Sabbath most likely the last of the seventh wherein the Citty was taken and offered up in fire as a devote thing to God God offering the occasion
with the spirituall and heavenly obseruation of the Lords holie day in which God requires serious sanctification and graue and sober conversations as our own Ecclesiasticall Constitutions do affirme the reason is the same in both Thirdly in all other things consecrated by God himselfe and by his word and commandement to holy and heavenly use it hath alwayes beene counted a greevious offence to ad our owne naturall inventions and diuises to them or to turne them to common civill and mere naturall use either in whole or part except in case of necessity So undoutedly it is by the same reason a greevious offence willingly and purposly to imploy the Lords holy daie or any part thereof to common naturall and civill sports and delights Now the first is manifest by the word and law of God Nahab Abihu the sonnes of Aron were consumed by fire from the Lord when they offered sacrifices with common fire Lev. 10. Because they added to the holy offering that which was common Alsoe the sonnes of Ely did sinne greeviously in turning any part of the consecrated flesh to feede their owne bellies 1 Sam. 2. Saul in turning Gods sacrifice to a prophane use and forcing himselfe to doe it in ordinately that he might make the people to stand to him and keep them from scattering sinned and lost his Kingdome 1 Sam. 13. And when the Jewes prophaned Gods house of praier which was the holie place by buying selling and money chaunging it was so vile in our Saviours eyes and so wicked that he who in other things was a meeke Lambe being moved with zeale did like a Lyon Roare against them fell violentlie upon them and whipt them out with disgrace Iohn 2. Now the Lords Sabbath is an holie day sanctified by God immediatlie after the Creation and commanded in the fourth Commandement to be kept holy And our Sauiour by his Resurrection hath consecrated blessed the Lords day aboue all other dayes of the weeke and made it the Lords Sabbath more holie then the first as haue beene before abundantly proved And as all true Christian Churches so our Church more especiallie both by Doctrine and practise hath openlie approved this for the Lords Sabbath Therefore no part of this day ought to be turned to nautrall ciuill or carnall sports and delights Lastly though our Churches the places of our holy assemblies and our communion tables haue no particular expresse commandement for them from God but onely are consonant and agreable to the houses of God in Israel and we haue no other warrant for them but the example of Gods people in the Old Testament our own experience reason teaching that they are very necessary for publick assemblies and holie service the plot of ground is chosen by men and the materials and framing of them and the forme of them are all the workes of men God hath neither appointed the place as in the temple of Ierusalem nor the materials the forme as in the Tabernacle the Arke Altars which were built by Moses Yet we would count a great offence to turn any part of the Church to be a place for common sports plaies or a dancing Schoole and to play at dice or Cards or other profane games vpon the Communion Table Now then seeing we count it unlawfull to profane the places consecrated to holy vse by men inimitation of God and not by expresse commandement given for the separation of the ground or the place We ought more to count it unlawfull to spend any part of Gods holy day in carnall sports being a time sanctified by his expresse word and blessed with the greatest blessing Fourthly and in the last place whatsoever recreations and exercises of body and mind are necessary required for the bettering of our sanctification of the Lords day the enabling of us to perform with more cheerfulnesse strength and courage the holy worship of God and the work and service of his holy Sabbath and which are also intended by vs onely to that end and use them we may vse And so farre as they serve to further and in no wise to hinder Gods holy worship and the immediate works and duties thereof This is manifest by Gods allowing to his people in the law dressing of meat Cheerfull feasting on his Sab and holy daies Which are needfull to cheere up men and to provoke them to worship him with all thankfulnesse of heart also to put on our best apparell that we may come decently to Gods house As these are lawfull being directed to holy use so undoubtedly honest refreshing with recreations which cheer up the heart refresh the spirits are lawfull when they are helpfull to holy exercises and are directed to that end as stirring of the body walking in to gardens or fields to take fresh aire being found very helpefull to Preachers to reviue their spirits s●rengthen their loynes cleare their voyces sharpen and quicken their wits and memories and being done only to that end are lawfull So also walking into the corne feilds in ●ommer o● harvest or into meddowes or Pastures in the spring both to refresh our Bodies spirits and to give vs occasion to admire Gods bountie in clothing the bodies and his Fatherlye providence in making the ear●h so fruitfull and to laud and praise him is lawfull for vs. And if after publick private exercise we doe soe walke about diuers together conferring of heavenly things taking occasion by sight of earthly blessings to provoke one another to thankfulnesse acknowledgment of Gods loue this no doubt is a recreation fitt for the Lords day and helps much our devotion and this seemes to haue beene practised by our Saviour who went through the corne feilds on the Sabbath day Mat. 12.1 and his Disciples with them CHAP. 22. IN the last place J come to the speciall Duties of holinesse by which The Lords Sabbath is especially said to be sanctified which I will run through as breifly as I can so far as brevity may stand with plainesse perspecuity And first of all you shall see that the most strict sanctification of the Lords day which is taught and urged by the godly learned both auncient and moderne Christian Divines Is no Judaisme I would haue you to take speciall notice that whatsoeuer things the Iewes and naturall Isralites were bound by the law ●o perfo●me in the sanctification of the old Sabbath which were meerely tipicall and ceremoniall and were ordained and practised onely to signifie some things which are fullie accomplished in Christ that we hold to be so abolished and made void that Christians ought in no case to obser●e or practise them on their new Sabbath the Lords day For they are all removed with the chaunge of the day we ought to a voyd them as much as we avoyd the old Sab which was the seventh day from the begining of daies in the creation As for example offering the sacrifices of slaine beasts and