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A16523 The doctrine of the sabbath plainely layde forth, and soundly proued by testimonies both of holy scripture, and also of olde and new ecclesiasticall writers. Declaring first from what things God would haue vs straightly to rest vpon the Lords day, and then by what meanes we ought publikely and priuatly to sanctifie the same: together with the sundry abuses of our time in both these kindes, and how they ought to bee reformed. Diuided into two bookes, by Nicolas Bownde, Doctor of Diuinitie. Bownd, Nicholas, d. 1613. 1595 (1595) STC 3436; ESTC S113231 229,943 300

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reuised mine owne labours in which hauing at the first contented my selfe with the bare proofes out of the scriptures which I then thought sufficient especially for that auditorie to whome they were first ment did now compare the seuerall positions therein contained with the doctrine of former times and other Churches as I found the same set downe in the writings of the fathers Greeke and Latine new and olde so many as I had or could conueniently get and as I had time to reade them whom I finding to agree with me in the same points or rather my selfe with them was thereby the rather confirmed therin and thought that by their testimony and consent as it were by the pillar of truth I might sustaine and defend the same against al those that should oppugne or gainsay it Thus hauing so many learned men on my side managing the same cause with me or rather my selfe fighting vnder their colours haue at the last brought foorth this treatise vnto the view of the world and haue adventured it vnto 〈◊〉 the censures and speeches of all men wherin as I haue sought the ●●ory of GOD in the publishing of his truth so I pray the same ●ord to maintaine defend and blesse the same so far foorth as it 〈◊〉 his trueth And here derely beloued in the Lorde as I haue ●●imply and as it were with a naked breast declared vnto you the ●auses of my beginning and proceeding in this worke and that I ●aue not rashly and on the sodaine fallen into these opinions and ●hrust foorth my selfe into the world so I most humbly craue of ●ou this fauoure that all preiudice and sinister affection being ●ayd aside al things might be weighed in an euen ballance before they be refused as not hauing their iust weight euen there where they might cary some shew of vntruth according to the Canoni●all rule of the Apostle much more that al friuolous wranglings contentions gaine saying ambitious desire to ouercome and peruerse drawing of things to a wrong sense beeing forborne where I seeme to erre as I acknowledge my selfe subiecte vnto it I might charitably and Christianly bee admonished by your godly wisdomes that so I might also either by better proofes second the truth or els vpon more mature deliberation retract mine errour ●f there be anie For I doe most willingly submit my selfe vnto the Church of God by it in all things to bee censured and reformed according to his word Which I doe so much the more earnestly entreate at your hands because besides the conscience of my great vnsufficiency to deale in so weightie a matter before so many hundreths as the Lord in our time hath raysed vp fit for euery purpose I am not ignorant that this argument of the Sabbath is full of controuersie aboue many other points of diuinitie wherein many learned godly men dissent one from another which as I was perswaded of at the first so now of late since I attempted the ●ublishing of this booke I haue founde it to bee true by a most ●nwilling experience euen among those who for their great va●ietie of all learning deserue singularly to bee admired And ●●ough it were to be wished that we should be like minded being ●●one accord and of one iudgement yet seeing wee are men and haue but our measure of knowledge and that in euerie thing and so may easily dissent in that whereunto wee are come let vs proceede by one rule and if any be otherwise minded GOD shall reueale the same vnto him Thus commending my selfe vnto your praiers and these my labours vnto your fauourable good liking I bid you most heartily farewell in the Lorde who keepe vs alwaies his and one anothers in Christ Norton in Suffolke Iune 27. 1595. next after the yeare of Gods heauie and vnknowen iudgements by sundrie tempestes continued and renewed of boysterons windes great raine and outrage of waters fearefull thunders and lightnings pintching dearth and vntimely fruits to the destruction and losse of men cattell and goods Your dutifull brother and fellow seruant in the Gospel of Christ NICHOLAS BOVVNDE The first booke shewing the Institution and necessarie Continuance of the Sabbath and from what seuerall things we are commanded to rest vpon that day Exod. 20.8 Remember the Sabbath day to keepe it holie 9. Sixe daies shalt thou labour and doe all thy worke 10. But the seuenth day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God in it thou shalt not doe any worke thou nor thy sonne nor thy daughter thy manseruant nor thy mayd nor thy beast nor the stranger that is within thy gates 11. For in sixe daies the Lord made the heauen and the earth and the sea and all that in them is and rested the seuenth day wherefore the Lord blessed the seuenth day and hallowed it AS in the first Commandement the substance of Gods worship is set downe and in the second the manner of it in the third the end so here the time when and how long this should be openly and publikly thus practised In giuing of which Commandement the Lord vseth such manner of words and matter as might most stirre vs vp to the carefull keeping of it for in the practise of it consisteth the practise of all the other and in the neglect of it is the neglect of all religion Our naturall corruption rebellion therefore against this Commandement especially appeareth in that the Lord stirreth vs vp to it so many wayes yea in the first pronouncing of it How this Cōmandement differeth from all the rest For first whereas in the other Commandements he contenteth himselfe with bare commanding this or forbidding that yet to this he putteth an especial marke saying Remember that is thinke of it afore hand for indeed the want of remembring it in due time is many times one cause that it is no better obserued when it commeth And in Deuter. Deut. 5.12 Moses repeating the Law forgetteth not this word but vseth another of like importance saying Obserue or looke vnto the Sabbath to sanctifie it and further addeth As the Lord thy God commandeth thee referring them to the first giuing of it yea euen in this marking Secondarily in all the other Commandements when he simply forbiddeth a sinne it is to be vnderstood that he commandeth the contrary vertue though not expressed and when he willeth the good to be done he forbiddeth the contrary euill though it bee not named as wee haue seene in expounding the other Commandements yet in this not onely the good is plainly commaunded Keepe holy the Sabbath day but the euill is expresly forbidden In it thou shalt doe no manner of worke Thirdly it differeth from all other Commandements in that the Lord hath adioyned more reasons to it then to any other because our nature is most against the obseruation of it for whereas some Commandements haue no reason at all ioyned vnto them and especially in the second table in which our nature is not so corrupt
it selfe but the Lord as he is the searcher of the harts and reines so his law reacheth thither and findeth out sinne in the very beginning of it when it first lifteth vp the head and tarrieth not to giue sentence against it till it bring forth the vnsauoury and vnfruitful fruits of it but proceedeth in iudgement against it when it is but in the blossome and bud nay in the very first rooting of it which if it bee true in all other commandements why shuld we imagine that the bounds of this are so straight that it will not reach so farre Obiection If the commādement be thus straite who is able to abide it And whereas men are afraid to say what they thinke and to confesse this trueth which they are conuicted of because they doe not see how then they shall be able to keepe this law we know that this is the thing in controuersie betweene vs and the Papists whether the lawe of God may be perfectly kept or no and therefore though they abhor all poperie yet if they stand vpon this point they shall fall into a popish opinion agree with them who when they haue set it downe Concil Trident. sext sess Canon 18. as a lawe of the Medes and Persians that may not be changed that the law of God may be fulfilled of vs then they must needes giue such an interpretation of this lawe as might carry with it some shew of possibilitie that it may bee fully kept indeede Answer For if we conceiue of the law of God to bee so loose as that it should onely restraine the parts of the bodie then wee may perceiue that the heathen Philosophers by the light of nature haue seene further into the truth of it then we haue done by the bright beames of the worde who sayd that a good man must haue not onely his hands and eies continent and free from sinne but also his minde And wee must endeuour our selues so much the more carefully to dispossesse our minds of all earthly matters because it is so hard a thing to attaine vnto For wee cannot so easily cast all worldly imaginations out of our heads as we can cast the things themselues out of our hands neither can we so farre remoue our affections from them as wee can separate our bodies from them which notwithstanding vnlesse we doe all the other is but popish and ceremoniall and whereby we cannot attaine vnto the sanctification of the Sabbath in any tolerable measure But let vs consider sayth Master Caluin whether they which call themselues Christians Caluin vpon Deut. 5. sermon 34. acquite themselues in this point as were requisite a great part of men thinke they haue the sunday that the better to attēd on their worldly affaires they reserue to themselues this day as if they had no other to deliberate for the whole weeke to come nowe though the bell should to a sermon they thinke they haue no other thing to doe but to thinke on their busines and to make the account of this and of that Therefore whatsoeuer hath beene spoken before of resting from the vsuall workes of our calling the same is true of the ordinary speaking common thinking of them all which because they be of the same nature must needes come vnder one and the same law and therfore looke what libertie the Lord hath giuen vs We may speak and thinke of thinges that be necessary for the workes of our calling in the time of necessitie as it hath declared vnto vs before the same haue we for our recreations our speeches our thoughts and desires that so farre we may be occupied about them all manner of waie in soule and in body as they shall not hinder vs but rather bee meanes to further vs in the true manner of sanctifying the day And we haue here so much the more libertie because we cannot do our necessarie busines but we must speake and thinke of them not onely in the doing of them but also before and after them But because I haue alreadie made a seuerall treatise before of the workes which necessitie maketh lawfull I will not here enter into it again left I should be confused and tedious but referre you vnto that place for guiding of your speeches and studies as well as your labours and works only desiring you to remember that which is there set down also that we iudge those things onely necessary for the time present which could not haue been thought vpon spoken of and done before neither might be put off to bee studied for conferred about or put in practise till afterward A conclusion of al that went before with an application of it to our selues And so we conclude the former part of this commandement in which we haue beene something the longer because it was needfull seeing it is so large and as it were the ground of all the rest wherein wee haue seene what kind of rest the Lord requireth euen such a one not as we might grossely dreame of because of our blindes but as is plainly and truely published in his word in the which he hath declared what is the height the bredth the depth and the length and the full measure of it And this the Lord requireth of all and euery one of vs continually from the beginning to the end of our liues without any interruption vnder the paine of euerlasting condemnation as it is alledged by the Apostle to the Galathians out of the law Galat. 3.10 Cursed is euery man that continueth not in all things which are written in the booke of the lawe to doe them in which curse is contained all the punishments of soule and bodie which can bee deuised in the greatest measure as it is most largely opened in many places of the scripture Deut. 29.20 namely in Deut. 29. where he threatneth to bring vpō thē euery curse written in that book and euery plague that is not written in the booke of the law 28.61 According to which rule if wee will examine our whole life past wee shall see howe great is our deserued miserie because of the infinite breaches of this commandement For first of all we are by nature altogether ignorant of the truth of it and when it is taught vs wee haue no conceiuing of it and lesse liking vnto it but all our reason and affections are cleane contrarie vnto it so that we haue many waies broken it in thought word and deede not onely in the dayes of our ignorance but since our knowledge and therefore there must needes bee a great handwriting of accusation against vs and wee may here truelie say Psalm 19.12 O Lord who doth vnderstand the errors of this life for setting all other sinnes apart the Lord hath many waies to pleade against vs in this one thing so that we must needes confesse that if he winke at all other our sinnes and yet marke narrowlie what wee
our selues from the Church without any iust cause or by not seeking to the Prophets to teach vs when wee had not them at home and which doe so continuallie see our brethren in many places for want of teaching willingly to breake this law and which must needes foresee ours and their posteritie to fall into the same sinne nay to continue and dye in it vnles by establishing a preaching ministrie euery where which all are commanded publikely to pray the disease be now cured and so to be preuented in time to come In our English Letanie And if this be the estate of the poore people The ministers that cannot or wil not preach are special causes of vnhallowing this day that haue not the preaching of the word among thē that by breaking the Sabbath continually they must needes prouoke the most patient Lordes wrath at the last and endanger their owne soules health what can bee saide or thought sufficiently and answerably vnto the sinne of them who being called the ministers of God as they that should be the chiefe in his seruice and goe before others in it by preaching vnto them are able and willing to do nothing lesse in the world then that For partlie they are ignorant and cannot doe it partlie they are giuen to ease and will not doe it and partly they haue so many charges to looke vnto that they know not where to begin to doe it And so doe not onely vnhallow euery Sabbath daye that the liue and doe bestow no daye in the weeke so ill as that which they should bestow best of all because they neglect that which God requireth most of all at their hands but also are the onely chiefe causes euerie where of vnhallowing the Sabbath and doe compell the people to breake it whether they will or no which sinne is yet so much the greater in them because it is not accounted of and so there is no care to amend it But let them bee assured that all the charges giuen concerning the sanctifying of the Sabbath in the scripture must bee double charged vpon them for themselues their people and looke how earnestlie this is by the Lord commanded so seuerely will it one day bee required at their hands when they shall haue no bodie to speake for them nay they shall pleade against themselues and better were it for them a thousand times to begge in the meane season then to eate vp and to liue vpon as it were their owne sinnes and the sinnes of their people and to carry about with them their owne bayne not by slipping into of humaine frailty but stubbornely falling into and more wilfullie lying in so manifest a breach of so great a commandement and that in the highest poynte of it Psalm 95.7.8 2. Thes 2.10.11 Therefore to daye if we will heare Gods voyce let vs not harden our hearts against it but let vs receiue the trueth in loue least he giue vs vp to strong illusions effectuallie to be deceiued and to beleeue a lye and let vs confesse as the trueth is that the Lord would haue euerie Sabbath to bee sanctified by the Minister and the people and that in the Church he ought to preach the word and they to heare it euery Sabbath daye And though we bee not so grosselie blinded to imagine that it is not necessarie one whit vpon that day we must not also be deceiued to thinke that now and then is sufficient once a moneth or twise a quarter and so sometime both Minister and people should be exempted from it as though they could sanctifie the daye after some other manner And though I haue iustly stood vpon the preaching of the worde especially because it is the greatest parte of Gods seruice and yet that which is most neglected my meaning is not to exclude the other as though they appertained not vnto vs for it wholly and euery parte of it doth concerne vs and is to bee practised vpon this daye Therefore wee must also come to the reading of the worde We must be present also at the reading of the worde common prayer and administration of the Sacraments from the beginning to the ende and common prayer and receiue the Sacrament so oft as it is administred yea though we receiued it the Lords day immediatlie before and be present at the Baptisme of others For wee haue in the forenamed places seene all these practised together seeing they be parts of Gods publike worship we must leaue no holy worke of his vndone whereby the day might be sanctified vnto him So we must bee present at the whole action and continue at the diuine seruice from the beginning to the ending as it is prouided by the lawe of the realme which is grounded vpon Gods worde neither foreslowing to come at the beginning nor hastening to depart at the ending which is so much the more diligently to bee taken heede of on euery side because herein many doe offend carelesselie and yet the danger of it is very great Some vnder the pretence of comming to the Sermon tarrie at home a great part of the seruice and so neither are they at the confession of sinnes with Gods people nor are made partakers of the prayers of the Church for the forgiuenes of their sinnes neither doe euer heare much of the scripture read other vnder the colour of being at all these departe away before the blessing is pronounced vpon them and so many times lose the fruite of all as Iudas did or else tarie not the ministring of the Sacrament as though it were a thing impertinent vnto them Therefore it is in expresse wordes set downe by the Prophet Ezekiel cap. 46. Where hee speaketh of Gods worship vpon the Sabbath daye that the prince shall be in the temple in the middest of the people he shall goe in Ezek. 46.10 when they goe in and when they goe forth they shall goe forth together where we see he requireth that all should be present from the beginning to the ending euen the very chiefest in euery congregation as well as the meanest and no priuiledge is to be giuen to any one more then to another for comming vnto abiding at and departing from the seruice of GOD which concerneth them all like in the whole and in euery parte of it then the which nothing can be spoken more truely nor more plainely which the Prophet Dauid as he knew very well so laboured to perswade the people of it Psalm 84.10 when in the Psal 84. He accounteth the dore keepers of Gods house blessed who were first and last in the temple so partakers of the whole worship Wherefore whensoeuer wee doe voluntarilie bereaue our selues of any part of the publike Ministerie we cannot sanctifie the daye so in euery portion of Gods worke as he would haue vs to doe Hereunto it seemeth they had respect in that councell Concil Malisgon 2. cap. 1. wherein they say Si quis whosoeuer
whereof there are so many kinds as appeareth by the diuers words hee vseth in this place Whereunto agreeth that which hee write●h vnto the Ephesians Bee not drunke with wine Ephe. 5.18 wherein is excesse but bee filled with the spirite 19. Speaking vnto your selues in Psalmes and hymnes and spirituall songs singing and making melody to the Lorde in your hearts 20. Giuing thanks alwaies for all things vnto God euen the Father in the name of our Lorde Iesus Christ Where in like manner hee sheweth them howe they should behaue themselues in the aboundance of al Gods blessings that whereas the wicked are ready to abuse them and by ouercharging themselues with them doe fall into an immoderate profusion and laughter they should in the middes of these thinges being guided by Gods spirite burst forth into the prayses of God through Iesus Christ and testifie their holy mirth not of the flesh but of the spirite by singing Psalmes whereof there are so many sundry kinds that for euery time wee shall bee fitted with some one or other Let vs not therefore deny so manifest a trueth but acknowledge as the word doth teach vs that the Lorde requireth of vs in our priuate meetings vpon the Lordes day and when we are alone by our selues to sing Psalmes as well as in the Church And though I doe not binde men vnto this for bee it farre from me that I should lay any heauier burden vpon any then the worde of God it self doth bind them I say vnto this that in all their mirth they should sing Psalmes as it might seeme the places alledged doe import Yet this the Lorde requireth of vs that in all our lawfull pleasures we should looke vp vnto him and so reioyce in them that wee especially reioyce in him and so from them to be led to him and by them to be made fitter to serue him And whereas it falleth out thus with the wicked that all pleasures draw them away from God take away from them the remembrance of him and driue them into sinne we contrariwise should by all of them come neerer vnto God set him before our eyes and make our selues fitter to serue him praise him For as that is a godly sorrow that driueth vs to prayer a blessed heauinesse that maketh vs seeke vnto the Lord so that is a godly mirth that endeth with singing with Psalmes and an heauenly ioy that at least wise maketh vs more fit to serue God And otherwise as we may suspect our sorow to be but worldly so our ioy to bee but fleshly and carnall And this is that whereunto the Apostle Saint Iames hath respect saying Is any amōg you afflicted let him pray Is any merry Iam. 5.13 let him sing Where he telleth the dispersed Iewes how they should behaue themselues priuately in all estates namely that though the vngodly in their affliction doe murmure impatiently and breake out into blasphemous othes they should not onely abstaine from those things but in all humilitie should go to prayer that they might obtaine mercy at Gods hande and then being deliuered of him that they should auoyd the prophane carelessenes of the wicked and stirre vp themselues to sing prayses vnto God and so both commendeth this duetie vnto vs and sheweth whereunto all our mirth should leade vs. In which place though he doth not tye the singing of the Psalmes to the time of prosperity for there are songs of mourning no more then he doth prayer vnto the time of affliction 2. Chro. 35.25 yet he sheweth which are the fittest times for both and besides that as no man can truely pray without the feeling of his wants so no man can sing from his heart vnlesse hee haue some perswasion of Gods fauour and so as affliction driueth him to pray so mirth mooueth him to sing Therefore when the Lorde dealeth so fatherly with his children that hee tempereth their afflictions with the ioy of the spirit then he giueth vnto thē iust occasion both to pray sing vnto him Thus we reade that Paul and Sylas being in prison ioyned them together Acts 15.25 At midnight Paul and Sylas prayed and sang a Psalme vnto God Being first of all beaten very sore and then cast into a dungeon with their feete in the stocks it was then time to pray but considering the goodnes of their cause for which they suffered all these things and finding the Lord present with them by his fauour assuring them of his defence there was iust cause of ioy and in ioy to sing as they did So then seeing to sing Psalmes is a part of Gods seruice as we haue seene it in so many places of the word commended vnto vs it must needes be put in practise vpon that day which is dedicated to his seruice and especially when we consider that the fittest time for it is the time of ioy and there is no ioy comparable to that which we haue in Christ Iesus and we neuer inioy that so fully as by the meanes whereby he conueyeth it vnto vs and we neuer haue all the meanes so plentifully and so continually as vpon the Sabbath Therefore as the Lord then offereth himself wholly vnto vs and his sonne Christ Iesus to be made ours with all his merits in the worde the Sacraments and prayer and so thereby doth fill our hearts with the ioye of the holy Ghost euen that ioy that is vnspeakable and most glorious so then especially we ought to sing for ioye of the Lord if euer wee will doe it And not onely in the Church which we ought to doe especially where the greatest ioy is bestowed vpon vs but also because by the forenamed priuate exercises this ioye is renued and sometimes increased wee must priuately renue our thanksgiuing Singing of Psalmes testifieth and increaseth spirituall songs and sing vnto God againe especially when wee haue seene that these places of scripture doe commend vnto vs the priuat exercise of singing Psalmes And that we might doe it the more cheerefully let vs knowe for a suretie that though wee cannot sing at all where there is no whit of ioy so let this ioy bee neuer so little by singing we shal increase it For euen as al knowledge is increased especially by hearing reading and conferring about the scripture so all affections are most of all stirred vp by meditation prayer and singing of Psalmes And because vpon the Lords day we must labour to build vp our selues in both wee must neglect no meanes whereby we might attaine vnto our full growth in either Therefore euen then are wee iustly punished with deadnes and dulnes vpon the Sabbath because we neglect al those meanes or els doe not ioyne them together So then we haue great cause to be sorrie that wee haue so many times neglected this seruice of God vpon the Sabbath day and though wee had not spent away the time in a prophane mirth as many times wee haue done yet there is
to rest but that euen to rest frō labour though it be a meere worldly thing in it owne nature yet is a singular part of our obedience to God vpon that day when it is so many times required so often vrged and as it is neere pressed vpon vs with words doubled and tripled yea and that by God himselfe who is not flowing with words in a barren cause but sheweth vnto vs the waightines of his Commandement by the force of his words and the seueritie of his lawes by his most significant and patheticall speeches The reason why the Lord would haue men to rest vpon this day is manifold The chiefest cause of resting is that we might wholly attend vpon Gods worship the first and principall is that which was from the beginning that men might be the more fit to sanctifie it in the holy seruice of God which because they could not doe with all the powers of their soule and bodie as the worship of God requireth so long as they are about their worldly businesse because they must needes take vp their wits and their willes the vnderstanding and the heart either in whole or in part so long as they bee conuersant in them therefore that wee might so doe as hee requireth hee would haue vs rest from that which might hinder vs from it and because the affayres of this world and his worship are two distinct things he would haue vs rest from the one that we might bee occupied in the other Thus speaketh S. Augustine August de tēp serm 251. Sciendum est fratres charissimi We must vnderstand dearly beloued brethren that it was therefore commanded not onely of our holie fathers as he saith there but of God that we should rest especially on the Lords day that ceasing from all worldly busines we might be more prompt and readie for the worship of God when we should haue no let to hinder vs from it For as wee haue seene alreadie our nature is not onely ●o now but was so in Adam that he could not doe both these at once and therefore as he was willed by God to sanctifie the seuenth day so he willed him therefore to rest from dressing the garden in that he called it a Sabbath day that is a day of rest and this reason as it did straightly binde Adam to rest vpon it so doth it all his posteritie much more Afterwards there were other causes adioyned vnto this which made this necessitie of resting a great deale stronger A lesse princip●ll cause is the retayning of our bodily strength and by name for because that through sinne the bodie of man is weakened all the naturall humours of it being corrupted and hauing lost the first vigor and strength of it and therefore is now subiect to paine to wearisomnes to sicknes and to death and so standeth in neede of ease and craueth rest as that without the which it cannot long continue therfore in respect of this men had need to rest so much the more that by the rest of the seuenth day they being refeshed might bee more enabled euen in the strength of their bodies to do the works of their calling cheerefully Adam and his posteritie if they had continued in their first estate should haue labored vpon the sixe daies but their labour should haue bin no labour vnto them I meane they should not haue laboured with wearisomnes and with payne for these are the punishments of sinne and the forerunners of death threatning a dissollution of the bodie in time but then there should haue been no death yet they were bound to this rest for the forenamed cause but now when as besides that labour is through Gods iust punishment become so laboursome vnto vs and work is so full of paine and trauaile maketh wearie according as it is sayd In the sweate of thy face thou shalt eate bread Gen. 3.19 then wee see there is greater cause we should rest on this day and we are as it were with a double chaine bound vnto it Therefore in th● 5 of Deut. where Moses repeateth the law shewing h●● great cause there is why they should rest vpon the Sabbath he alleadgeth this in the end of the 14. verse that thy manseruant and thy mayd may rest as well as thou speaking of them who as they are most subiect to labor so therefore doe most of all stand in need of this benefite of rest Afterwards when this law was giuen to the Iewes by the hand of Moses as in the obseruation of it they had many Ceremonies proper to themselues so in the ende and cause of this rest there was something ioyned vnto it which bound them vnto it most straightly and yet appertaining to no other people but them and though all the people in the world were equally bound to rest vpon the Sabbath day and there was great reason to binde euery one of them vnto it yet the Iewes had moe reasons then any other and in their rest was some speciall consideration which could not enforce or compell any other but themselues And of this nature is that whereof Moses speaketh in the next verse of this very chapter Deut. 5.15 Remember that thou wast a seruant in the Land of Aegypt and that the Lorde thy God brought thee out thence by a mightie hand and stretched out arme therefore the Lord thy God commanded thee to observe the sabbath day The Iewes were bound to it more specially for a memorial of their deliuerance out of Egypt and a seale of their deliuerāce by Christ In which place he maketh the day of rest to bee a memoriall to the Iewes of their resting from their heauie burthens and intolerable labours in the land of Egypt when the Lorde ridde them out of the cruell hands of Pharaoh and so because that benefite was a pledge vnto them of their eternall deliuerie and redemption by Christ from sinne and the miserable thraldome of it euen the Lord did assure them of it by this miraculous deliuerance according to the manner of teaching in those times wherein the truth of this doctrine was not so plainely reuealed therefore this rest also vpon the sabbath was vnto them a type and figure of that eternall rest from sinne which they should haue by the Messiah and the one was most liuely shadowed out vnto them in the other for these causes also were they bound to rest vpon the sabbath which bound none but them because they onely were partakers of the redemption from Egypt wherein they onely were in bondage and so to rest vpon it that in resting they might both thankefully remember the happie and often desired rest from the endles worke in Egypt that oppressed them which none other could doe but they and also with faith to meditate vpon the hoped and eternall rest from the deadly workes of sinne in themselues by Christ and to behold the performance of the one in the other euen the bodie in
sabbath is ordayned of God not for rest in it selfe for he no where alloweth idlenes therefore the rest of the sabbath is commanded for another end namely for the diligent studie of religion for it is therefore commanded to rest from handy labours vt hoc totum tempus impendamus that wee might bestowe this whole time in the exercise of Religion And this wee doe see that as to rest vpon that day is the first thing required so for what cause it was appoynted which as it did bind men from the beginning so we can neuer looke to be exempted from it And that we might yet bee the more throughly persuaded of this one point From what things particularly wee are commanded to rest and more cleerely see into the trueth of it let vs vnto all this that hath beene spoken adde that for a further proofe which we find in the scripture that the Lorde doth not onely thus often require that men should rest that they should doe no worke doubling the word Rest in many places and going ouer it againe and againe that if it were possible we might conceiue it and yeeld vnto it though not at the first yet at the last but also more largely and fully descendeth into particulars forbidding them by name to worke in such and such things and at such times as might carrie with them the greatest probabilitie of being exempted and might make the greatest shew of giuing priuiledge to worke that all excuse might bee taken from them who in the pride of their wittes cannot conceiue nor in the stubbornnes of their harts will yeelde vnto this commandement of so precise a rest neither will haue their handes and their feete so shortly tyed vp but will needes breake out vpon that day most vngodlily to the doing of that which seemeth good in their owne eyes 1 From gathering and preparing Manna Exod. 16.23 This is that which is spoken Exod. 16. concerning the gathering and preparing of Manna which was their dayly food that vpon the seuenth day they should rest from both To morrowe is the rest of the holy Sabbath of the Lord bake that to day which you will bake and seeth that which you will seeth and all that remaineth lay it vp to bee kept till the morning for you And afterward verse 26. Sixe daies shall ye gather it but in the seuenth day is the Sabbath in it shall be none Here you see that hee would not haue them worke about the prouision of their foode when it might bee done the day before and that now when they were fed from hand to mouth as it were because they were not made to feede themselues but to liue to Gods glorie he would haue them so to eate and so to prouide for their eating that the rest vpon the Sabbath might not be interrupted and therefore not to gather or prouide vpon that day which would haue taken vp a great part of it and so they could not haue sanctified it as they ought Whereunto wee may adioyne that which is spoken concerning the making of the Tabernacle 2 From doing any thing about building the Tabe●nacle Exod. 31.13 first by the Lord himselfe vnto Moses in many words Speake then also vnto the children of Israell and say notwithstanding keepe you my Sabbath vers 14 Whosoeuer worketh therein the same person shall be euen cut off from among his people vers 15. Sixe daies shall men worke but in the seuenth day is the Sabbath of the holy rest vnto the Lord whosoeuer doth any worke in the Sabbath day shall dye the death vers 16. Wherefore the children of Israell shall keepe the Sabbath that they may rest throughout their generations for an euerlasting couenant Where the Lord doth teach thē that the rest of the Sabbath was of such importance that hee would haue the making of the Tabernacle to giue place vnto it and though it was the place wherein the Lord should be worshipped and therefore much might haue been sayd for the defence of those that should haue wrought vpon the Sabbath about it yet because it was not alreadie sanctified to that end and so was not holy and therefore the working about it in it owne nature meerely ciuill and worldly therefore he would not haue it hinder them from that which was aboue all worldly things euen his owne seruice which that they might performe in such wise as they should he willeth them to rest from all other worke yea from working about the Tabernacle And afterward when Moses commeth to speake vnto the people of the same matter hee forgetteth not this charge but placeth it in the beginning of his speech vnto them as a thing most waightie as appeareth in the same booke Exod. 35.1 These are the wordes which the Lorde hath commanded that you should doe them 2. Sixe daies thou shalt worke but the seuenth day shall bee vnto you the holy Sabbath of Rest vnto the Lorde whosoeuer doth any worke therein shall die 3. You shall kindle no fire throughout all your habitations vpon the Sabbath day and so goeth on to the declaration of that which appertained to the Tabernacle as followeth in that chapter As though he should haue sayd notwithstanding all this which you are to do about the rearing of the Tabernacle you must obserue the rest vpon the Sabbath as you had wont to do the sixe daies are appointed for it but vpon the seuenth doe nothing no not so much as make a fire to heate any tooles or to prepare and dresse any thing that belongeth vnto it And though I am not ignorant that some doe otherwise expound this last verse whom I doe esteeme in the Lord as I ought yet considering the place that it occupieth and that it goeth immediately before his speech concerning the Tabernacle I am persuaded that this is the true and natiue sense of it Must we not needes then think that to rest vpō the sabbath is a thing that the Lord highly regardeth when hee would haue it kept yea to the delaying as it were of the building of the Tabernacle And what excuses shall men haue before God for their needlesse working and superfluous trauailes when so excellent a worke as this might not be excused And here we may not let that passe which is so worthy remembrance concerning this matter spokē by the Lord himselfe as it is by Moses set downe Sixe daies shalt thou worke Exod. 34.21 and in the seuenth day thou shalt rest both in earing time and haruest thou shalt rest Where besides that in so few words 3 In the time of sowing and haruest he doth twise vse this word rest it is to be marked that to rest vpon the seuenth day is so necessarie that hee of purpose chuseth out the fittest times for men to worke in and those that might seeme most to be excepted as seed time and haruest and forbiddeth them by name to worke vpon the Sabbath yea in these times
as it were take our markes amisse of it Master Caluin vpon these words sayth Hinc colligimus Wee gather from hence that God speakes not of a small matter Caluin in Exod. 20.8 when he commends the sanctification of the Sabbath not in a word but doth exhort them vnto the diligent marking of it and so doth pronounce that their want of care to marke is a breach of the commandement And Master Musculus vpon the same words saith Notādum quod It is to be noted that he doth not simply say Sanctifie the Sabbath day but remember to do it This kind of commanding is not light but waightie hereby is signified Muscul in eundem locum that a matter of great importance is commaunded and that which by no meanes is to bee neglected but with great care to be kept For so do parents and masters vse to commend the doing of those things vnto their seruants children which aboue all other things they would haue least of all neglected So then if it be necessary to rest vpon this day as it hath been strongly prooued vnto vs then is it much more necessary to sanctifie the day as we haue seene in part and it shall more fully appeare vnto vs hereafter Which wee had need so much the more carefully to take heede vnto because the common practise of men is so cleane contrarie vnto it and the sinne as it is more common so it is greater and more dangerous And now we may more plainely vnderstand the great necessitie of that precise rest which hath beene so often spoken of and is so hardly receiued euen for because that otherwise we cannot so keepe it holy vnto the Lord as we ought to doe For this is the law of things consecrated vnto the Lord that they may not otherwise be imployed thē to his vse they must not be partly his partly ours but altogether his if they be holy to him therfore seeing the day must bee hallowed it must not be vsed in other affaires sauing in the lords busines it must not be partly ours by dooing our owne worke and partly the Lords by dooing his but his alone as it is called a Sabbath vnto the Lorde and therefore we are willed to doe no manner of worke in it And that the truth of this doctrine might appeare vnto vs so clearely as the noone daye The sanctification of this day is very precisely vrged in the Scriptures euen that the Sabbath ought most vndoubtedlie to be sanctified of all sortes let vs vnto all this which hath been alreadie spoken adde the consideration of so many scriptures wherein the spirit of God speaking of the Sabbath doth in most significant words commende according to our capacitie this truth againe and againe to vs. And first of all in the sixteene chapter of Exodus Exod. 16.23 vers 25. To morrow is the rest of the holy Sabbath vnto the Lord and afterwards To day is the sabbath vnto the Lord in both which places he calleth it a Sabbath vnto the Lord and in the former place an holy rest not onely shewing that they should rest vpon it but especially to what ende namely that they might keepe the day holy vnto the Lord by seruing of him and therefore he standeth vpon it calling it an holie rest and further adding a Sabbath vnto the Lord as purposing to let them see into the most especiall end of their resting euen the sanctification of the daye in the holy seruice of God Moreouer in the thirtie one chapter of the same booke Exod. 31.14.15 Ye shall keepe the Sabbath for it is holie vnto you Sixe dayes shall men worke but in the seuenth day is the Sabbath of the holy rest vnto the Lord where he calleth it both holie and holy vnto the Lord shewing what manner of rest it must bee not an idlenes or sleepie taking of our rest and ease but a carefull spending of that time in Gods seruice in which we must rest from all other things especially for that purpose Likewise in the 35. chapter of the same booke Sixe dayes shalt thou worke Exod. 35.2 but the seuenth day shall be vnto you the holy day of rest vnto the Lord where Moses declaring that message vnto the people which he had receiued before from the Lord for them telleth it to them fully and in the same number of wordes almost straightly requiring at their hands the keeping holy of the Sabbath day as a thing of great importance as appeareth by his speech so earnest and doubled calling it an holy Sabbath and then a day of rest vnto the Lord. But what should I here stand vpon all the places of Gods word in the olde and new testament which are infinite giuing most certaine testimonie and authenticall credite to this doctrine the time would not serue and the treatise would grow into a greater volume then I am willing it should these may suffice to shew vnto vs that the keeping holy of the Sabbath day must be the principall matter in this commaundement and as it were stand in the first ranke when it is in so many places and in such ample wordes commended and recommended vnto vs. For if it be the wisdome of a seruant there to be very attentiue where his master vseth many words and to be assured that that is a matter of great waight then much more ought wee to iudge the hallowing of the Sabbath daye to bee a thing then the which nothing ought more to be regarded of vs when vnto the words of Remembring and Marking that are set in the beginning of the commandement this thing also is in so many words spoken vnto vs and as it were beaten into our eares That I might not speake any thing of such other places wherein the seruing of God in the place appoynted by himselfe is adioyned vnto such exhortations as are made for the keeping of the Sabbath thereby declaring by what meanes especially the Sabbath is kept holie Leuit. 19.30 as ye shall keep my Sabbath and reuerence my sanctuarie where the Prophet Moses exhorting the Israelites to the diligent keeping of the Sabbath daye speaketh vnto them of that worship of God which was practised in the sanctuarie as the onely way to keepe it Vnto which agreeth that which is set downe in the 23. chapter of the same booke Sixe dayes shall worke be done Leuit. 23.3 but in the seuenth day shall be the sabbath of rest an holy conuocation Ye shall do no worke therein it is the Sabbath of the Lord in all your dwellings For in this place hee doth not onely call it a sabbath vnto the Lorde so many times before but also saith Holy assemblies were cōmanded to be kept vpō these dayes that vpon it must be an holie assemblie which assemblie then should be holie because they must meete for an holy purpose not to deale about any worldly affayres which notwithstanding they did at
from hence forth m●ght be no more children wauering and carried about with euery winde of doctrine by the deceite of men and with craftines whereby they lay in waite to deceiue but might follow the truth in loue in al things grow vp vnto him which is the head that is Christ by whom all the body being coupled and knit together by euery ioynt for the furniture thereof according to the effectuall power which is in the measure of euery part receiueth increase of the body vnto the building vp of it selfe in loue Seeing then there are so many excellent and glorious things spoken of the preaching of the word by the spirit of wisedome and truth it selfe the like whereof cannot be verified of any thing else vnder heauen namely that it should be the principall and most ordinary meanes to begin to continue to increase and make perfecte in vs faith and all other graces of God which accompany saluation and this can no where be had but at the handes of the ministers Whose lips must preserue knowledge Malac 2.7 and the people must seeke the lawe at his mouth for hee is the messenger of the Lord of hosts Therefore it is as needfull for vs nowe still to come to the place of common preaching as it hath beene for any people heretofore and to serue the Lorde with this part of his worship which hee hath appointed for our most especiall good besides that in so doing we shall drawe on our brethren by our example and as it were giue light vnto them to see where the mountaine of the house of the Lorde doth stand and shall rise vp in iudgement against them who willingly stops their eyes against so cleere a light that they might not be saued But that we might yet the rather be encouraged vnto this There also are the sacraments administred there haue we the benefite of cōmon pr●yer and see the necessitie of that to bee so great as it is we must further consider that there also are the sacramēts administred which are most sure pledges and seales as it were of all that good which is offered vnto vs in the word and whereby the deliuery of them is confirmed vnto vs. 1. Cor. 11.20 And these were so vsually celebrated in the primitiue Church vpon the Lords day as also appeareth in the scripture that it had his name of them For Chrysostome writeth Chrysost de res●● serm 5. that it had three names The Lords day because of Christs resurrection and dies panis dies lucis The day of bread because of the Sacrament of the Lords Supper and of light because of Baptisme There wee are holpen not onely with the prayers of so many of our brethren and sisters by whose meanes that which was wanting in vs is supplyed by them and that which with many striuings we haue not obtained alone by their helpe we shall more easily attaine vnto but also and especially our prayers are offered vp by the minister of God who is appointed to that end and in respect of which his ministerie is a thousand times more acceptable vnto GOD then Aaron with his rich attyre was beautifull in the eyes of men Therefore I may say as that graue and learned man sayth Ph. Melancth in praecept 3. Master Melancthon His atque alijs rationibus By these and such like reasons euery man should stirre vp himselfe to loue the societie of the Church in which there is so much good that if there bee any commoditie in other societies it is but a shadow of that and they are beholding to that for it Which if they doe not then let them heare what the Apostles say Constit. Apost cap. 63. Quam excusationem afferre potest What excuse can he pretend before God who commeth not diligently vpon the Lords day to praise God and heare his word I doubt not but they please themselues in many their excuses and thinke that thereby they bee able to satisfie men but I say as before how can they excuse it before God All which shall moue vs to bee willing to come to the Church vpon those daies For as a godly man sayth It must needes bee a very great contempt of God Bucer in Psal 92. not to bestowe one day in the whole weeke in the knowing and seruing of our creator of whom wee haue receiued our selues and all things els that we enioy Master Musculus writing of these words of the Gospell that our Sauiour Christ Luk. 4.16 when he came to Nazaret as his custome was went into the Synagogue on the Sabbath day sayth Considerandum hic Wee must here consider what vse was of the Sabbath amongst the Iewes which Christ himselfe did diligently keepe as we see here when it is written that according to his custome he went into the Synagogue vpon the Sabbath day If Christ did thus keepe the Sabbath day and went into the Synagogue that it is written that this was his custome when he had no neede of the lecture of Moses what excuse shall they haue in these dayes who either by too much disdaine or contempt vpon the Lords dayes doe neglect the Church in which the doctrine of life is deliuered Who doth not see here sayth he that Christ by his presence doth confirme a good custome And Melancthon speaking of the sundrie breaches of this Commaundement reckons vp this Seldome M●lancth in praecept 3. or neuer to come to the publike ministerie of the Church where it is rightly taught and by their example to draw away others from that ministerie which is not defiled with impietie All which wee stand in great neede of as the Donatists and Brownists of our time haue done Now least we might grossely imagine that wee stand in no neede of all these things wee must soberly and in godly trembling and holy feare remember that he in his wisedome hath appoynted them and therefore to refuse them were to make our selues wiser then he and he that hath established the ends of al things hath also ordained all the meanes to bring euery thing thereunto and therfore as hee hath chosen vs to saluation in Christ so hee hath in great wisedome and mercie prouided these rare and wonderfull meanes which he hath made to be effectuall and mightie by his blessing to bring that most happily to passe and therefore we in voluntarily neglecting the meanes doe bereaue our selues of our saluation and shall iustly perish whatsoeuer we may fondly dreame or others vainly perswade vs to the contrarie For if the nature of man was such in the beginning as wee haue alreadie seene that in Adam that in his most perfect and blessed estate he stoode in neede of all those holy exercises wherein he was commanded to sanctifie the Sabbath for the better preseruation of himselfe in his first perfection and happines how must not wee needes be perswaded that we being fallen so cleane away from it as we be
doe stand in neede to sanctifie the Sabbath againe and againe in all the meanes of Gods worship and especially then in the most principall that thereby happily we might be recouered into our former estate Nay what a blockish presumption were it for a man to thinke that Adam was bound to sanctifie the Sabbath according to the Commandement that being holie and righteous still he might haue been preserued in the fauour of God for euer and that we our selues being through sinne fallen away from his loue might make lesse account of these meanes whereby he doth first of all offer himselfe to be recōciled vnto vs and then neuer to fall away from that estate as though it were not so needfull for vs to sanctifie the day by them Therefore let vs confesse that these are though not all yet the most especiall parts of Gods seruice wherein wee are to bee occupied vpon the Sabbath and without which we are nothing neere that manner of keeping holie the day which the Lord requireth at our hands And so I conclude this poynt with the saying of Master Gualter Dei bonitatem exosculemur Gualt in Mark 1. Homil 11. Let vs thankefully acknowledge the goodnes of God who hath consecrated vnto his seruice that rest which wee stand in neede of for the refreshing of our bodies least that it should degenerate into filthie and hurtfull idlenes And here because wee speake of the Lords seruice which onely sanctifieth the day wee must consider All these parts of Gods seruice must be performed with our whole hearts and not onely outwardly of a custome Ioh. 4 24. that he is a spirit and therefore will be worshipped of vs in spirit and in trueth and therefore in all the aboue named parts of his worship we must performe a spirituall obedience if we will serue him so that whensoeuer the word is read preached or heard the Sacraments ministred and receiued and prayers made vpon the Sabbath of custome and not for conscience sake because we would doe as others doe and would not be noted to be singular and so in doing of these things we as it were doe them not For hearing we vnderstand not reading we conceiue not praying we desire not and all is done in the letter and not in the spirit wee serue our selues rather then God and so though the day bee holie wee make it not holie to him and for his sake Thus many when they haue seemed most of all to haue kept holy the day haue done nothing lesse thē that Therefore as wee must repent vs of all our hypocrisie in Gods seruice so wee must at all times endeuour that the holie exercises bee not vnhallowed of vs least the Lords seruice being neglected which is spirituall in al things we be found breakers of the Commaundement in that very thing wherein we did most of all presume that wee had kept it and if the best things that wee doe bee thus iustly refused what shall become of those which in our owne eyes carrie not that credite with them much more in the eyes of the Lord who examineth all things more narrowly Furthermore And so as by them we may be furthered in our saluation because the Lord in commanding vs to serue him hath not so much respect to himselfe who hath no neede of vs as to our owne good which may by this meanes be procured we must so behaue our selues in all the parts of Gods worship as may bring greatest profite to our soules health 1. Cor. 14.26 For in the Church of God all things must be done to edifying that al may learne and haue comfort as it is in the 31. verse of the same chapter And therfore in the 11. chapter finding fault iustly with the abuses that were in their meetings generally he chargeth thē with this 1. Cor. 11.17 that they came not together with profite Therefore both minister people must so behaue themselues in Gods house that they may depart with profit to themselues others Which that they might attain vnto they must vse all such good meanes priuatly both before and after the publike exercises as might make thē most profitable which what they be we shall hereafter see more particularly and in the very worship it selfe behaue our selues so reuerently and attentiuely as whereby greatest commoditie might redound to vs. And indeed as Master Caluin sayth Caluin in Exod. 20.8 in this Commandement is included a promise For God promiseth that as he hath sanctified the seuenth day for his seruice so he will thereby sanctifie them that rightly keepe it and therefore the promise of this blessing should be a principall motiue to our obedience And if in all other things we are carefull not so much to vse them as to vse them to the best aduantage why should we not put that out to the greatest gayne which in it owne nature is most gainfull indeede For seeing that there is nothing in the world that hath so great a promise made vnto it as the publike seruice of GOD should we not so behaue our selues in it that wee might be made partakers of it And whereas it is blessed for our sakes with the full treasure of all Gods graces in this life and eternall happines in the ende can it bee but a most grieuous sinne by our negligence to spoyle it of that honour and to make it vnprofitable to our selues Wherefore though I am not ignorant that the proper place to speake of the manner of Gods worship is in another Commaundement where also it hath been handled at large yet because all things comprehended in the other Commandements must bee practised vpon the Sabbath we must vnderstand that it is not impertinent to this treatise and that the Sabbath is then onely truely sanctified when of Gods worship there commeth some fruite and commoditie vnto vs. For this cause the Prophet Esay telleth the Iewes that then they shall haue truely sanctified the Sabbath and made it holie to the Lord when thereby they are made more able to rest from vanitie and sinne both in word deede and be made more fit to serue the Lord in all dueties afterwards Esay 58.13 If thou turne away thy foote from the Sabbath from doing thy will vpon my holie day and call the Sabbath a delight to consecrate it as glorious to the Lord and shall honour him not doing thine owne wayes nor seeking thine owne will nor speaking a vaine word Where his meaning is not that the whole sanctifying of the Sabbath consisteth onely in these as though he would exclude all the Sacrifices the reading and the preaching of the lawe prayer and the whole ministerie of that time established by the Lord whereof he speaketh not a word but he rather aimeth at this to correct their hypocrisie in these things and to shewe them that all was to no purpose vnlesse this fruite followed of it for which cause the whole worship of God and
so I conclude with P. Martyr Of euery seuen daies one must be reserued to God P. Martyr in Gen. 2. he meaneth one whole day not a peece of it Therefore there must needes be certaine other holie dueties and parts of Gods worship which wee must walke in the rest of the day when the congregation is dissolued and when wee are alone by our selues which are the priuate religious exercises of a Christian man in which he sanctifieth the rest of the Sabbath and they are all such parts of Gods seruice which a man can doe by himselfe alone or with others of his houshold or neighbours whereby he might prepare himselfe or them for the publike ministerie which is the chiefest or afterwards make it most profitable to himselfe or them Vnto which it seemeth Master Bucer had respect whē as he speaking of such things as are to be done vpon the Sabbath and hauing named those that are publike Bucer in Matth. 12.11 as to heare the word to receiue the Sacraments to prouide for the poore vnto them addeth In the first part of the day wee ought to prepare our selues for the publike assemblies Instituere ad pietatem familiam to instruct a mans houshold vnto goldines In the former part of the day therefore euery one must prepare himselfe for the Church that hee might come thither with profite for if in all worldly things that bee of any moment we doe prepare our selues then much more ought we to doe it in heauenly whereunto wee are most vnfit as they in themselues are the greatest especially when the benefit of them is so great if we be prepared and the daunger is so perilous if we be vnprepared for the preaching of the word is the sauour of life vnto life 2. Cor. 2.15 or the sauour of death vnto death And in the Sacramēt is offered vnto vs the bodie and bloud of Christ 1. Cor. 11.24 to nourish vs vp vnto euerlasting life but if we eate and drinke vnworthily we procure Gods iudgement against our selues 29 The Lord in speaking to his people from heauen in an extraordinarie manner Exod. 19. did command them to be prepared extraordinarily by which practise of his he declared that in the ordinarie ministerie of the word there ought to bee some ordinarie preparation if wee will bee partakers of it with profite The ground is prepared for the seede the stomacke for meate the whole bodie for phisicke this is the immortall seed 1. Pet. 1.23 whereby we are begotten into an assured hope of a farre better life This is the food and phisick of our soules whereby our life is preserued and we kept from eternall death therefore we must bee prepared for it The want of which preparation is the cause that the word is so vnprofitablie heard of a great many And this is so much the more diligently to be marked because it is so little known lesse practised in the world For if the daye were as long againe as the longest in the middest of Sommer a great many would spend away the time I know not how and neither at home nor in the way nor at the Church thinke to prepare themselues one whitte And if they haue made a few prayers at their first comming in then if seruice bee not begunne they are as ready to talke of any worldly matter with any that will giue them the hearing as euer they were if it were halfe an hower together yea though the minister be there vntil he begin the first word for want of which preparation either they can receiue nothing or it dooth them no good which is the very chiefe cause of so much fruitlesse hearing of so many good sermons as is euery where that they which otherwise haue good wits and great affections here are both senselesse and without feeling so that they sit more be like stockes then men conceiuing no more then the very stooles they sit vpon carrying away no more then they brought with them And if it be not so what is the cause that many reasonable men hearing one man at one time speaking one and the same worde of God so plainly that if it were possible young children might vnderstand it some shal so greatly profit by it Matth. 11.19 that wisedome should be iustified of her children others shall so meerely not conceiue one word as though they had been deaffe a sleepe or in a trance or starke dead all the while And that it is so indeed let the intolerable ignorance of men euery where after this long preaching of the word Vnder the most happie raigne of her gracious Maiestie whome God still long preserue to that ende and ad as many happie yeares vnto he raigne as may be speake for it and see whether wee complaine before wee haue cause Nay let mens owne wofull experience tell themselues that when they haue most prepared themselues they haue most profited by the publicke ministerie and contrariwise then haue they been most vnprofitable at it when they haue come most vnreuerently and vprepared to it In so much that a man of meaner giftes shall some times bee more profitable to them when they are thus prepared then another that hath more excellent graces at whom they may well wonder but receiue no profit by him when they be not propared for it I know the Lord is mercifull and he doth not alwayes deale with men according to their deserts therefore many times when they come vnprepared he blesseth his owne ordinance vnto thē Matth. 28.20 that he might performe the trueth of that promise which hee hath annexed vnto it and his mercie is aboue al our sinnes but how can men looke for any such thing ordinarilie And doth he not it vnto them to teach them that he would bestow vpon thē greater mercie by these meanes if they would prepare themselues for it How wee out to prepare our selues before wee come to the Church But how shall men prepare themselues Surely first of all let them bee perswaded that they ought to prepare themselues and this is the beginning of their preparation then let them examine themselues not onely how they haue spent the weeke past and euery daye in it calling themselues to an account before God what sinnes they haue committed day or night to bee humbled for them what benefites receiued that they might bee thankefull and what dueties they haue done that they might bee comforted therein all which though they bee shortlie spoken they are not so soone done here is not so much neede of a good capacitie to conceiue as a good conscience to practise but also generally what is their estate what graces they want what bee their sinnes past what their infirmities present and because the Lorde hath appoynted his worship to comfort vs ouer these let vs pray vnto God before hand that the prayers of the Church might be directed the Minister of the word so
man either can say do thing at all or that which hee doth shall bee very colde and vnprofitable and it may easily bee perceiued that it commeth but from the teeth outward as we say neither hath it that power of the spirite which ought to bee and no doubt is in the communication of many of Gods children And here is that common prouerbe verified that our Sauiour Christ alledgeth in the Gospell Math. 12 34. Out of the aboundance of the heart the mouth speaketh men are not most vsually speaking of that which they know best but vpon which their heart is most set and they take greatest pleasure in or are most afraid of c. Then if wee will by this most certaine rule of truth measure what is in the hearts of men and how they are there mooued at the hearing and reading of the worde either one way or other we shall find that the most part of men if they bee not voyde of the knowledge of it altogether yet they haue no sence or feeling of it in their hearts neither doth it affect them one whit but are benummed as it were that waye seeing that they are no more often in speaking of it And let vs cease maruailing why they are so prodigall of their tongue in all other matters and in these are more niggardly and sparing of it then they should seeing that they are so stuffed with the one but they like vnto vessels filled with new wine which will breake if they haue no vent and of the other they haue so little or rather nothing in them at all that you can scarsely wring out any thing from them Which as it is a great sinne in men an especial neglecting of a notable part of Gods worship vpon this holy day What fruit we might get by such conferences and what we lose by neglecting thē so it is most assuredly a cause why all that which they haue receiued in the publike ministerie is either so soone lost or remayneth so vprofitably with them For what if men heare and read neuer so diligently if he neuer speak of it afterwardes is it possible that he should remember it so fruitefully in time to come as otherwise he might Doth not experience teach all men that those schollers are like to proue best learned which will conferre one with another about that which the master hath read vnto them before And they that doe studie hard thēselues if they doe not conferre with others besides that they shal stick fast many times can goe no further whereas they might be holpen out by others euē that also which they haue gotten cannot bee so deepelie setled in them as otherwise it might So it must needes bee that if wee talke not of the Scriptures wee shall forget much of that which we haue learned neither shall we be so profitable vnto others as the Lord would haue vs. There bee many that complaine they haue ill memories and when they bee iustly founde faulte with for not profiting as they should say they cannot remember it and it is true but in the meane season they marke not how the fault is in themselues that they might amend it for they are not carefull to speak of that which they haue heard and so to remember it to themselues and others but as soone as they are out of the Church doores they fall into other matters and so put the other cleane out especiallie when they continue in the former the rest of the daye and will not giue that time vnto these that they should For presuppose they haue the best memories in the world yet hearing a strange thing if they will neuer tell it vnto others or make reporte of it any more how can they long remember it Nay must they not needes soone forget it On the contrarie we shall finde it to be most true by sufficient trial that they which haue but weake naturall giftes yet through age all are now more weakened and decayed shall notwithstanding be able to tell you along tale with all the circumstances of time place persons c. which they neuer heard but once in their liues and that it may be twentie or fortie yeares since but of the stories of the Bible which they haue that very day read and besides haue heard them twentie times before they shall bee able to say very little or nothing to the purpose And what can we iudge to be the cause of this but that they haue told the one so many times to their neighbours and haue gone it ouer and ouer againe which maketh them so cunning in it and of the other they haue scarce once opened their mouthes to speake and therfore all is so cleane forgotten Thus men may complaine as long as they wil make excuses to blinde the eyes of others and to deceiue their owne hearts but God is not deceiued who seeth the fruitelesse talking vnnecessarie iangling about al other matters euen vpon his own holy day when they haue said little or nothing of those which did most of all concerne them Therefore let vs vnfainedly sorrowfull that wee haue not heretofore so carefullie sanctified the Lords day in this part of his worship as he required of vs and let vs confesse that we haue been iustly punished therein that we haue lost a great part of that fruite which otherwise we might haue reaped our selues from Gods worship and bestowed vpon others let vs hereafter be more carefull to spend some part of the daye in such holy conferences as maybe profitable both to our selues and we discharged of our dueties to God thereby And whereas wee haue a thousand things within vs and without vs to hinder vs from it let vs cast them away and seeing the duetie is so necessarie the commoditie thereof so great also let vs endeauour our selues and call vpon others most earnestly to performe it Some are ashamed to talke of the Scriptures For why should wee bee ashamed of it And seeing that the shame of the worlde hath not kept vs heretofore from vngodly communications vnto which shame iustly belongth why should it hold vs back from all christian conferences of which we shal neuer haue cause to be ashamed Nay why should wee not haue our mouthes filled full of all good words out eares open to heare them from others that it might appeare wee are now ashamed that wee haue spent so much heretofore in speaking and hearing those things whereof there came nothing but hurt to our selues and others And that wee may not bee so ignorant as to imagine Others thinke that it belongs onely to the Minister and not to the common people that to conferre of the Scriptures is proper to the ministers and not belonging to the common people which once to dreame of is a thing more meete for the darke night of poperie wherein it was defended them of the midday of the Gospel which doth so manifestlie gainesay
admit no conference with their people at all whereupon many of Gods people are driuen to omit this part of Gods seruice whether they will or no to their owne great hinderance But to make an end of this matter we haue seene that it is the duetie of all men to conferre one with another and therefore no man can say I would faine doe it but I haue none that will conferre with me for hee may finde our some one or other that will ioyne with him in it and if not in that manner that hee desireth yet let him begin and it may bee that he may prouoke some that were vnwilling before and if not that if yet he shall finde that the very vttering of that which was taught before with his mouth vnto others shall be a singular helpe to confirme himselfe in it neither let any be so vntowarde Which they may doe though they can say but I or no or aske a question as altogether to drawe backe because they cannot speake so fruitfully of the word as they desire and it may bee they see some others before them doe For if they doe but listen diligently vnto that which is spoken in a desire to learne and will but giue their consent vnto it and seeme to like of it saying I or no they shall draw on the speaker and so continue that conference which may be profitable to them both which I knowe by experience the Lord hath so blessed in some that he hath nowe rewarded their obedience in the kingdome of heauen And we must remember that the Communion of Saints consisteth as well in receiuing as giuing euen in receiuing good from others as wel as in doing it vnto thē And therefore as wee must alwaies carrie about with vs these mindes that our desire is to further our selues or others in godlines so we may be assured wee haue spent the time well when wee haue attayned vnto either of both For as a Prophet must goe in the name of a Prophet to doe the dutie of a Prophet Math. 10.41 so the people that receiue him in the name of a Prophet that is to heare his doctrine to be made partakers of his prayer and to profit by both shall not lose their reward For this cause the Apostle writing to the Romaines sayth Rom. 1.11 He was desirous to come among them for the common good of both saying For I long to see you that I might bestowe among you some spirituall gift to strengthen you 11. that is that I might he comforted together with you through our mutuall faith both yours and mine Thus wee haue seene how we ought to meditate and conferre about the scriptures But wee must further know that though our meditations and conferences must alwaies be kept within the compasse of the worde least they bee wandring and so not onely friuolous and vaine but wicked and vngodly yet they are not so tyed vnto that but wee both may and ought fruitfully to meditate vpon and soberly to conferre about the workes of God that so wee might bee taught not onely by the worde but also by experience seeing that the inuisible things of God are seene by the creation and gouernement of the worlde Rom. 1.20 being considered in his workes We ought to meditate vpon and conferre about the works of God by which he manifesteth himselfe vnto vs. Which without the word I confesse is so litle because of our blindnes that it doth but leaue vs without excuse as the Apostle sayth in the same verse yet being holpen by the benefit of the worde as the dim sight of an olde man is holpen by the benefit of a paire of spectacles we are guided aright and see more cleerely into euery thing thereby especially when we are gouerned by Gods spirite herein For then we shall perceiue the infinite wisedome of God his great mercy and power his iustice and trueth c. which are so plentifully spoken of in the scripture not onely by his iudgements vpon the wicked and his benefites bestowed vpon his children in our owne times and in the dayes of our forefathers but also in all other the dumme and insensible creatures euen in the day and in the night winter and summer heate and cold c. whereby hee doth exercise his iudgements vpon the one or hee brings his blessings vpon the other Euen as the same Apostle testifieth vnto the mē of Lystra saying That God which made heauen and earth the sea Acts. 14.15 and all things that in them are in times past suffered all the Gentiles to walke in their owne waies neuerthelesse hee left not himselfe without witnesse in that he did good and gaue them raine from heauen and fruitfull seasons filling their hearts with food and gladnes For by those thinges they might haue seene how he in great wisedome and mercy gouerneth the world for their good so that thereby they shuld haue beene made more carefull to serue him which because they did not they were left without excuse and had nothing to say for themselues before Gods iudgement seate for the things should witnes against them and by the testimonie of their owne conscience they should confesse that the Lorde had by all his creatures sensibly allured and prouoked them to good And if the heathen were iustly condemned because they did not so profite by the view of the worlde as they should how much more shall we be without all shewe of excuse that we doe not labour to behold the inuisible things of God in his works euen his wisedome goodnes and truth and so forth which are so apparant in them and as it were written in great capitall letters to bee reade of the whole world seeing vnto them we haue the light of his word adioyned to helpe the blindnes of our eyes in this behalfe Psalm 92. That Psalme which was specially made to he sung vpon the Sabbath daye as appeareth by the title of it doth sufficiently declare how we ought then to be occupied in meditating vpon Gods goodnes and praysing him for it yea how wee ought to conferre and talke of the same And indeed this is the right vse of the creatures for which they were first made namely to set foorth the glorie of God and to serue man that hee thereby might bee made more fit to serue God therefore then doe wee vse them aright when they leade vs vnto God then are they abused when wee stay in them and so are thereby either turned away from God or at least wise kept from comming vnto him So then let vs account this one part of our duetie and seruice to Iesus Christ vpon his holie day to consider aduisedly of his workes who is now the heire of the whole world and gouerneth euery thing in it for the good of his people that he hath redeemed seeing all power is giuen vnto him in heauen and in earth that wee thereby might be more cōfirmed in
his fauor more assured of his promises and made more fit to serue him Euen as in the scriptures The seruants of God haue greatly profited in faith obedience by the consideratiō of his creatures we may see many times how the spirit of God sendeth vs to the creatures to bee confirmed by them in the things that are spoken of God in the word and the seruants of God haue by them strengthened their faith in the promises which they had learned out of Gods word before The Prophet Esay chap. 40. propoūding vnto the people most excellent promises whereof they should bee made partakers in the time of the Gospell which hee doth in the former part of the chapter frō the 12. verse he beginneth to confirme them in the certaine trueth of the same by the consideration of Gods omnipotent power whereby hee made all things at the first in such a wonderfull order that thereby they might bee assured that nothing should bee able to hinder him from bringing that to passe which he haid promised to his Church but that they should looke most certainly for it saying Who hath measured the waters in his fist and counted heauen with a span and comprehended the dust of the earth in a measure and waighed the mountaines in a waight and the hils in a ballance So likewise the Prophet Ieremie in his 33. chapter promising mising vnto the church deliuerance out of their trouble doth perswade them of the infallible truth of Gods word herein by setting before their eyes the immutable course of nature in the continuall interchange of the day and night Thus sayth the Lord Iere. 33.20 if you can breake tny couenant of the day and my couenant of the night that there should not be day and night in their season 21. then may my couenant bee broken with Dauid my seruant that he should not haue a sonne to raigne vpon his throne and with the Leuits and Priests my ministers 22. As the armie of heauen cannot be numbred neither the sand of the sea measured so will I multiplie the seede of Dauid my seruant and the Leuits that minister vnto me The Psalmes most of all are full of this matter and as it is a booke of practise especially so it is plentifull in these meditations and the treatise would be long if I should but in order reckon vp the principall places there tending to this purpose yet the waightines of the matter will not suffer me to passe ouer them all It is most apparant how Dauid in the 8. Psalme stirreth vp himselfe and all mankinde to praise the Lord for his great liberalitie towards them appearing in this that as he made him at the first Lord and ruler ouer all his creatures in heauen and earth so he hath restored him into the same dignitie by Christ when he had iustly lost it before because of his sinne when he thus beginneth and endeth the Psalme O Lord our gouernour Psal 8.19 how excellent is thy name in all the world And in another Psalme the Prophet complaineth of the greatnes of his affliction and being almost discouraged because the Lord deferred his helpe so long that he might not vtterly sink down vnder the heauie waight of his grieuous tentation Psal 77.10 strengtheneth his faith by remembring Gods former works that he might haue hope of his mercie towards himselfe I remembred the yeares of the rtght hande of the most high 11. I remembred the workes of the Lord certainly I remembred thy wonders of old 12. I did also meditate of all thy workes and did deuise of thine acts So likewise in the 22. Psalme the man of God being in such extremitie that he was almost past all hope beginneth with this heauie complaint Et. 21.1 My God my God why hast thou forsaken me and art so farre from my health and from the voyce of my roring But afterwards commeth to this verse 4. Our father 's trusted in thee they trusted and thou didst deliuer them 5. They called vpon thee and were deliuered they trusted in thee and were not confounded And then he sayth vers 10. I was cast vpon thee euen from the wombe thou art my God from my mothers bellie Where we see he getteth hope at the last of being heard and deliuered by the consideration of Gods workes both generally done to his seruants in times past and particularly shewed to himselfe heretofore And there is great reason of this for the Lord is alwaies like himselfe and Iesus Christ is yesterday and to day and the same for euer and therefore will doe as he hath done for there is no respect either of persons Psal 25.10 or times with him but all the wayes of God are mercie and trueth not only mercie in the beginning but trueth in the midst and ending For this cause the seruant of God thus praieth in the Psalme 119. Et. 119.132 Looke vpon me and be mercifull vnto me as thou vsest to doe vnto those that loue thy name And vers 149. Heare my voyce according to thy louing kindnes O Lord quicken me according to thy custome In both which places we see how he prayeth to God that he would shewe him that mercie which he was wont to shew to him himselfe others in the like case heretofore so by the former works of God strengtheneth himselfe in prayer Thus wee may easilie vnderstand what profit we might get by the earnest meditation and wise conference about the works of God which are done in great wisedome thereby to confirme vs in the trueth of those things that are written in the word and to draw vs to those dueties that are required of vs in the same and so generally to further vs in all godlinesse and therefore a thing not to bee neglected at any time but most of all to bee practised vpon the Lords day that we might leaue nothing vndone which might make all Gods worship most profitable vnto vs and make vs fitter vnto all other dueties which is the end why the Sabbath was ordained In the 104. Psalme the Prophet speaking of the wonderfull workes of God and the marueilous gouerning preseruing of them beginneth thus Et 104.1 My soule praise thou the Lord and towards the midst breaketh forth into this speech O Lord how manifold are thy workes vers 24. in wisedome hast thou made them all And in the end concludeth with Glorie be to the Lord for euer And 33. I will sing vnto the Lord all my life I will praise my God while I liue Hereby declaring what ought to bee wrought in all men by the reuerent cōsidering of Gods works and that we should not muse or speake of them vnprofitably but with that glorie vnto God and comfort to our selues which he requireth of vs and no doubt many of his children doe But that I might drawe to an ende one word of that which as it is most plaine so it is most comfortable