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

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Jer. 5. 14. us then fully in the strength of Christ Phil. 4. 13. resolve Psal 119. 105. when we come to Ordinances the Word shall be a Fire to our dross a Curb to our passions Musique to our ear A Purge to our corruptions a Light to our feet a Card and Acts 17. 18. Compass to our conversations Some hear and deride the Acts 7. 54. Word Some hear and storm at the Word Some hear and Mark 6. 20. onely admire at the Word But let us hear and both admire and reform so hear as to set our dyall according to the Sun of the word And as many as walk according to this Rule Gal. 6. 16. the peace of God shall be upon them and the whole Israel of God Let us take heed of wandring thoughts in holy Ordinances It is storied of Bernard that when he came to the Church Luke 10. 37. door he would say Stay there all my earthly thoughts Let us go and do so likewise When we approach to holy Ornances let us say stay behind me all my secular imaginations all my worldly cares all my vain and impertinent thoughts we are now going to meet with God on the Gen. 22 5. Mount Vain thoughts in holy Worship they are as weeds in the Garden or those painted plants in the Corn which hinder the springing up of the blessed seed of the Word Indeed they are like Thieves who dog us to do us a mischief either to steal away the comforts of the Word or to wound and burden Conscience or to keep the heart in an hurry till Christs message be delivered and the blessed opportunity be over These vain thoughts in Ordinances are the flyes in the ointment the motes in the eye of the soul and the spots in the feast of an Ordinance But here we will first find out the disease and then apply the Remedy All our wandring thoughts in holy Ordinances They are open and offensive to Gods eye They cannot creep so sliely Deus totus oculus est et minima videt Aug. Heb. 4. 12. Jer. 4. 14. Oculus Dei simul universa cernentis non abdita locorum non parietum septa secludunt Non so●ùm ei acta et cogitata sed agenda et cogitanda sunt cognita Aug. and closely through the mind but God fully observes them certainly takes notice of them and as surely is angry at them 1 Chron. 28. 9. Gods eye is more peculiarly upon us in holy Worship Beggars crowd not into the Presence-Chamber Vain thoughts what are they but the raggs of the mind the emblems of our nakedness and poverty and shall these thrust in when we are in the Presence-chamber of the infinite Majesty God sees all these Vagrants and shall we converse with him with Concubines in our bosomes How often is it repeated Christ knowing their thoughts Mat. 12. 25. Luke 5. 22. Luke 11. 17. Luke 6. 8. which doth alarm us to keep our thoughts pure especially in the Divine Presence when God meets us in holy Worship And let us seriously consider Christ who is now the Spectatour shall be the Judge of our thoughts and imaginations Impertinent and vain thoughts they very much discompose and distract Duty they are like a broken string in an Instrument which makes the Musique harsh and unpleasant They are the inward noise of the mind which so much disturbs Isa 29. 13. us that we cannot heed with that attention nor pray with that devotion as doth become us As if Musique should be brought into the Room and play while we are hearing a Will read we cannot apprehend one clause in it distinctly and to any purpose such swarmes of inconvenient thoughts hinder the ear from listning to and the heart from fastning upon God in holy Worship they are like Tobiah and Sanballat who hindered the building of Jerusalem What confusion must there be if the Minister speak Nehem. 4. 2. and the Spirit speak and our worldly hearts speak all at the same time whom shall we hear God usually comes in the still Voyce when the ear bends and the heart waits 1 King 19. 12. silently at the door of Salvation Vain thoughts in holy Ordinances they are sinful irregularities the spawn of the Serpent they do not onely disturb but stain our duties They are breaches of Divine Command Prov. 4. 23. When we are in Ordinances we Nocturnas et diurnas excubias collocemus invigilando cordi Cartw. are not onely to thrust out enemies but to keep out wanderers If we watch our hearts we must not onely resist Satan from his attempts but reject foolish thoughts from their intrusion their company being our crime Indeed a careless hearer flings all open and lets in light vain worldly wanton all ranks and degrees of sinful thoughts and imaginations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Captivum ducentes omnem intellectum Syr. Surely it must be a great sin that when in holy duties our hearts should be Gods inclosure we should make them a Common for all beasts of prey to graze upon And how can we bring every thought in obedience to Christ according to Command 2 Cor. 10. 5. When our hearts in a duty are like open Cages for every thoughts to flye out and perch upon any vanity it meets with Our thoughts in duty must not sport and like the Bees run from one flowre of pleasure to another of worldly affairs and so skip over to another of ordinary occurrences and think to suck sweetness from them In Gospel opportunities our 1 Cor. 6. 20. Quòd non caput non pedem non manum petit Deus illud e●us sapientiae est consentaneum quippe cordis possessione omnia corporis mem bra sibi addicta et devota habebit Cartw. thoughts are not our own but they are under Authority and must be staked to the spiritual business they are now about they must be confined to Truth to Christ to sacred Counsels and holy instructions which are now in handling and the suggestions of Gods Word which are now laid before them And how can we be said to give God our hearts according to that Command Prov. 23. 26. if our thoughts are tossed too and fro in a loose vagary when we are in Communion with God To give God our hearts is a gift never so rational so necessary so seasonable as when we are in holy duties then this donative is like ripe fruits blown Roses like those Commodites which bear the greatest price So much of the thoughts as wanders from God so much of the heart is estranged and it must be so for Isa 29. 13. thoughts are onely the hearts emissaries And it is very remarkable Mal. 3. 8. that those thoughts which are good in themselves yet if impertinent to the duty in hand viz. prayer hearing receiving c. they are sinfull and irregular As a Limner who eyes the hangings in the Room the fret-work in the
must meet with Christ at a Sacrament A contrite heart is the fittest company for a Crucified Saviour Eph. 5. 19. In singing of Psalms there must be holy joy we must make August in lib. confes Deplorat dolet q●●d concentibus musi●is plus attentionis adhibuit quàm quae sub ill●s prof●reb●ntur Zanch. melody in our hearts Holy affection must make the reading of the Word savoury and saving to us The Sabbath then without we act our Graces on God on Christ on the Word and in the Ordinances is onely a day of theatrical shews and spiritual pegeantries which when it is over leaves the soul empty of any purchase or satisfaction And if so many graces must be drawn out into act we had need take the wings of the morning and speed to our Sabbath employments which are so numerous and important There are many faculties and parts to employ on the Sabbath All that is within us and all that is without us must serve and praise the Lord every part of our bodies and Psal 109. 30. every faculty of our souls the whole man is but a reasonable Rom. 12. 1. sacrifice to be offered this holy festival First Our outward man the tongue must be employed in prayer the ear in attention the heart in devotion the eye in speculation the knee in submission And Secondly Our inward man the understanding must be improved to drink in truth the will to entertain truth the Recta ratio dictat deum mag●● interna fide spe pietate amore et puritate mentis quàm externis corporis ceremoniis colendum esse Alap memory to retain and record truth and our affections have a three-fold office First To espouse the Word by receiving it in the love thereof 2 Thes 2. 10. A careful attention opens the door to 2 Thes 2. 10. the word but a lively affection opens the heart to the word The preaching of the Gospel layes a treble injunction upon us 1. To receive it 2. To love it 3. To live in it But the Second office of our affections is to heat our prayers it is love makes that sacrifice to smoak and flame And James 5. 16. Thirdly To scale Heaven in longing for a better Sabbath more durable more sweet more full and superlative Psal 63. 1. There are many persons to converse withall on the Lords day First We must converse with God The Sabbath is called the Lords day not onely as it is the commemoration of Rev. 1. 10. his glorious resurrection and his appointment and institution but likewise because our business is with him on that day then more especially our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ Our praying on a Sabbath 1 Joh. 1. 3. is the pouring out of our souls into Gods bosome our In Patrea et in Christo sunt omnia verae ecclesiae bona Zanch. hearing is onely receiving and being acquainted with Gods mind in Ordinances we wait upon God in the Sacrament we feed upon Christ in our Services we do homage to God in our Praises we pay tribute to God The Sabbath is the souls meeting day with God its spiritual Mart in which it traficks and drives its trade with Heaven Take away God from a Sabbath and the Ordinances are dry and parcht duties are heartless and unprofitable the Sanctuary is filled with emptiness the people and professors hunt after a Isa 55. 2. shadow and at last shall catch that which is not bread All our addresses on this holy day are to God our delights are in God our expectations are from God our fellowship and sweet communion is with God and therefore holy David Psal 63. 2. speaks of Gods Power and Glory in the Sanctu●ry and makes its only request to behold the beauty of the Lord in the Temple Psal 27. 4. and magnifies a dayes opportunity in Gods house The Psal 84. 10. Spouse enquires where Christ feedeth and where he makes his Can. 1. 7. flock to rest at noon Our great and principal business is with God on the Sabbath Secondly We must converse with the Ministers of God they are on this day the stars to guide us Rev. 1. 10. they Rev. 1. 10. are the Stewards to provide for us and give us our meat in due season Luk. 12. 42. 1 Cor. 4. 1. 1 Pet. 4. 10. they Luke 12. 42. are the salt to season us Mat. 5. 13. they are the wise Duo docet Apostolus unum communionem cum Apostolis ideòq eorum Doctrinam eô spectare ut omnes unum fiamus cum Christo ejus Patre Zanch. 1 Cor. 3. 10. Mal. 2. 7. builders to edifie us in the increases of God their lips preserve knowledge their feet appear beautifull in bringing the glad-tidings of Peace their voice is sweet to the hungry soul On the Sabbath we must wait on the Ministry of Gods faithfull Ambassadors Thirdly We must converse with the Saints of God on his holy day then Gods people must gather together and pursue Rom. 10. 15. a joynt interest Publick Assemblies adorn the Sabbath Cant. 2. 14. Grapes are best in clusters There are many strings to the 2 Cor. 5. 20. Lute which is the sweetest Instrument Flocks are most pleasant when gathered together in one company and Armies most puissant when kept in a body their dissipation is both their rout and ruine Christs sheep must flock together Suggerit Apost constantiae adm●nicula Primò Vtament et diligenter frequentent caetus Ecclesiasticos Secundò Vt se mutuò ad veritatem tuendam cohortationibus excitent maxime qui firmiores sunt infirmiores juvent confirment et hortentur ad constantiam in fide Deus enim publicis presentiam suam et eruditionem promisit In Ecclesiae congressi●us doctrina fidei reperitur et declaratur ad singulorum aedificationem et preces pro constantid publicè funduntur ad deum quas juxta promissionem exaudit Par. on Christs holy day Paraeus gives us four solid Reasons for it which I shall mention for their substantial worth First The Congregating of Gods people especially on the Lords day is the soder of unity like many stones so artificially laid that they appear all but one stone Every Congregation is a little body whereof Christ is the head Vnity is the strength and beauty of the Saints nothing so preserves it as frequent and holy Assemblings Secondly It is the preservative of love Many sticks put together kindle a flame and make a ●laze Frequent visits multiply friendships In Heaven where all the glorified Saints meet together how ardent is their love Absence and seldome associations beget strangeness as between God and us so between one another To meet to worship the same God is the best way to attain to the same heart like the Primitive Saints who were all of one company and all of one mind Acts 2. 46. Acts 2.
duty is properly the task of the understanding The Tongue works in prayer the Ear bends in hearing the Hand is stretcht out in Sacramentall receiving the Eye toyls in reading the Heart is or ought Jam. 5. 16. Mat. 11. 15. to be employed in every sacred service but the Mind is taken up in meditating on sublime and supernatural objects The Eagles of the thoughts fly upon this Carcass to allude Mat. 24. 28. to our Saviour Meditation fructifies duty without which the truths of God will not stay with us The heart is naturally hard the memory slippery and all lost without meditation every drop Mark 8. 17. runs out again and the whole web of divine service is unravell'd The Apostle compares the word to rain Heb. 6. 7. Heb. 6. 7. Now it is meditation onely which saves this rain water that it sheds not and run in waste This necessary duty of meditation it fastens truth upon the heart and is like the selvedge which keeps the cloath from ravelling It is the engraving of letters in Gold or Marble which will endure without this piece of holy duty all the preaching of the Cor est sons sapientiae Word is but writing in sand or pouring water into a sieve Reading and hearing without meditation is like weak physick which will not work The Word cannot be in the heart Deut. 6. 6. unless it be wrought in by holy meditation this is the hammer which drives the nail to the head Ordinances without this duty are but spiritual pageantries a pleasant landskip which when we have viewed we presently forget Jam. 1. 23. Knowledge without meditation is like the glaring of a Sun-beam upon a wave it rushoth into the thoughts and is gone There is very much in this duty to fix truth upon us Carnal mens thoughts they are usually flight and trivial they know things but they are loath to let their thoughts dwell upon them Musing makes the fire burn Men musing and meditating Psal 39. ● on the Word are much affected and then they are ready to say now we taste the sweets of our beloved we lie Psal 119. 93. under the force and power of the Word Meditation it sweetens our life here below The contemplative Christian lives in the Suburbs of Heaven How did meditation cast a flavour upon Davids soul and fill it with Psal 63. 5. aromatick and perfuming impressions Geographers are at a loss to find the place where Paradise was now to stop their curiosities it may be replyed it may be found in the fragrant tract of heavenly meditation When we meditate upon the sweetness of scriptural promises upon workings of Christs heart towards believers upon the watchfulness of Gods eye over his people upon the all sufficiency of our Saviours merit for 1 Cor. 2. 9. life and salvation upon the recompence of reward so great that 2 Cor. 12. 1. mans thoughts cannot grasp it how do these and such Rev. 1. 10. like things raise us to St. Pauls rapture or St John's extasie which were the initials of Glory to those heavenly Apostles Quid est quòd futura laetitia in cor non ascendit qui● sons est et ascensum nes●it Bern. It may be averred for certain that the neglect of this duty brings a searcity of comfort upon our lives which otherwise might meet with a plenteous harvest and a constant revenue of joy and satisfaction CHAP. XV. What we must meditate upon on the morning of the Lords day HAving thus drawn the portraicture and given a description of this duty of meditation with the blessed appendices which do attend it as its seasons advantages c. I now come to present suitable objects for this duty to prey upon and so to raise a little stock for meditation to trade with And as to the Queries viz. What we must meditate on in the spring and morning of the Sabbath It is answered Dies vitae nostrae est dies parasceves in quo laboramus et cum Christo patimur succedit dies quietis in sepulchro quem sequitur dies resurrectionis ad vitam Ger. whatsoever is spiritual any thing of a spiritual nature we may meditate on the promises of God the loves of Christ the strictness of the Law the sweetness of the Gospel on the filthiness of Sin on the vanity of the Creature on the excellency of Grace we may muse and fix our thoughts upon the estate of our souls and of the fewness of them who shall be saved so likewise upon Death or Judgement As holy David sometimes he meditated on the works of God sometimes on the Word of God and sometimes on God himself But I shall onely open a double fountaine to feed our meditations Psal 143. 5. Psal 119. 148. Psal 63. 6. on the morning of the Sabbath Viz. 1. Let us meditate on the God of the Sabbath 2. On the Sabbath of God These two superlative objects are like mount Hor and mount Nebo where Moses and Aaron took their prospects Numb 33. 38. Deut. 32. 49. before they were conveighed to the mountane of Spices we Cant. 8. 14. will handle them distinctly And 1. Let us meditate on the God of the Sabbath Indeed this Divine and admirable object takes up the views and contemplations of holy Angels and the inhabitants of glory Mat. 18. 10. who spend eternity in beholding God face to face But yet some glances we may have of this soveraign being by holy Cor. 13. 12. and spiritual meditation CHAP. XVI God is most glorious in his essence and nature LEt us meditate on the essence of God He is an infinite being the fulness of Heaven the mirrour of Angels Exod. 15. 11. Creasti nos domine propter te et irrequietum est cor nostrum donec perveniat ad te August the delight of Saints so glorious in himself that he is onely perfectly known by himself God is an Ocean of goodness a fountaine of life a spring of grace a father of mercies mans center to which he must come before he find quietation or rest for his soul He is so infinitely glorious that he must be described by removing from him what he is not rather then by asserting what he is The eyes of Angels are too weak to behold him and must make use of a vail alittle to remit De deo dicisacilius potest quid non sit quam quid sit Rivet the beams of his glory Our knowledge of him is onely borrowed from his own discoveries Let us then meditate on The everlastingness of his nature He is the antient of dayes He was before time was fledged and had either wing Dan. 7. 9 22. Psal 102. 28 Psal 29. 9. Rev. 4. 8. Rom. 16. 26. Isa 57. 15. Psal 90. 2 or feather His duration admits neither of beginning or ending God is the first and eternal being He did shine in perfections before the
Father before we go to the Psal 119. 27. publick Ordinances on the blessed Sabbath Rev. 3. 18. Secondly As we must pray that God would take away the scales from our eyes so likewise that he would remove the caul from our hearts that he would open our hearts to receive the word Judgment discerns truth but affection embraceth it Indeed the understanding takes a view of Gods word and finds it to be holy just and good Rom. 7. 12. But the heart entertains it and lays it up as its choicest Luke 2. 19. treasure A poor man goes by a Goldsmiths shop and seeth Mandata dei sancta sunt quia praescribunt quomodo deus sanctè col● debet justa quia praescribunt ut proximum non laedas sed ei quo● suum est tribuns bona quia praescribunt e● quibus quisque in se bonus est Alap Nisi Sp. s cordi sit audientis otiosus est Sermo Doctoris Greg. Money Jewels and Plate but he is not enriched by this wealth and a traveller in his journey takes a view of pleasant Lands delicate Mountains and amiable Prospects but his own Tenure is not amplified by all that he seeth So our judgment views truth and is convinced of its beauty and excellency but the heart only espouses the blessed truths of God and makes them his own to all intents and purposes Gospel discoveries are no riches till they are locked up in the heart and therefore God must be intreated for this thing for he that opens the eye must open the heart or else when the Sermon is done all the Prospect is over and we are not at all the better Lydia's attending was unavailable untill God opened her heart Arts 16. 14. The Apostle speaks of receiving truth in the love thereof 2 Thes 2. 10. Truth is pleasant to the Understanding but profitable to the Will Then the Gospel advantageth us when the Doctrine of it is not only the guide of our eye but the good of our heart It is love and affection which squeezeth the Grapes of truth and maketh it generous wine to the soul Where Acts 2. 37. the word Preached by Peter wrought upon the Jews it Christimors morita sacramenta praecepta promissa licet incredulis pudorism● et risui tamen nobis virtus dei et potentia pricked them to the heart Acts. 2. 37. If we buy the truth as Solomon adviseth us Prov. 23. 23. the heart must be the Chapman If we taste the word 1 Pet. 2. 1 2. the heart must be the Palate we then rellish truth when we affect it If we delight in truth Psal 119. 47. It is the joy and the rejoycing of the heart as Jeremy speaks Jer. 15. 16. A learned man observes It is the love of truth which is one of those graces which accompany Salvation Therefore on the morning of a Sabbath let us importune the Lord to engage our hearts in the service of truth and for the entertainment of it he who searches must draw the heart Rom. 1. 16. Thirdly Let us wrestle with God for the strengthning of our memories that he would make them pillars of Marble to write divine truth on It is very sad when heavenly Doctrines are written in sand or dust and after our hearing of them they run out again as the sands in the hour glass sad it is that truth which cost so dear should be lost so soon If God is so gracious to keep a book of remembrance for our discourses Mal. 3. 16. how serious should we be to keep a book of remembrance for Gospel discoveries It is most reasonable that those truths which were bought with Christs bloud should be wrought on our hearts Indeed in this case Jonah 2. 8. to forget our mercies is to forsake them How earnest was the Apostle Peter that the Saints might not forget those Doctrines which he ●ad preached how doth he reduplicate his care and their duty 2 Pet. 1. 12 13. Wherefore I will not be negligent to put you always in remembrance of 2 Pet. 1. 12 13 15. these things yea I think it meet as long as I am in this Tabernacle to stir you up by putting you in remembrance And so in the fifth verse Moreover I will endeavour that you may be able after my decease to have these things always in remembrance Thus this blessed Apostle again and again stirs up and urges their mindfulness and remembrance of those Gospel truths he had discovered to them and presses that the Gospel might not die with them when he was dead and gone Our memories are naturally sieves of vanity and therefore need divine assistance to close up the chinks and stop the holes that the waters of life run not out in waste Indeed mans memory is never so usefull as in the time of Ordinances it is then a sacred Register and a holy repository like 1 Cor. 4. 17. the Ark where the two Tables in which the Decalogue was written were put and lodged After a good heart and 2 Tim. 2. 14. a good life nothing more conduceth to mans happiness then a good memory Forgetfulness is the grave of Gods truth 1 Tim. 4. 6. and mans treasure what I forget I can neither dwell upon by meditation nor feed upon by love and affection nor live upon in a holy and fruitful conversation Forgotten promises cannot support my faith forgotten commands cannot regulate my life forgotten truths cannot enrich my mind Forgetfulness is never happy but when injury is the object when we bury our injuries in that silent sepulchre One glorious office of the spirit is to bring things divine to our remembrance John 16. 26. and to fasten truth upon the Spiritus sanctus non solùm ut sciamus Author est sed ut verè sapiamus Doctor est ut beati simus intimae suavitatis largitor est Aug. soul we should therefore be earnest with God on the morning of a Sabbath to cause his spirit to execute this blessed office For though in preaching of the word the Mysteries of the Gospel are propounded to us yet it is the spirit must open our minds to understand the word else it will be a book sealed as the Prophet speaks Isa 29. 11. It is the spirit must give us wisdom to apply the word Eph. 1. 17 18. It is the spirit must support our memory to retain the word A learned man observes The Holy Ghost performs his office Isa 29. 11. not only by revealing truth to us but by imprinting it upon us Else the sounding of the Gospel will be like the sounding of Eph. 1. 18. a Clock after it hath struck a little noise there is for the present but it ceases by degrees and at last no sound at all is heard In a word forgetful hearers go from Ordinances Spiritus Sanctus apud nos officium suum peragit non solùm docendo sed et suggerendo just
as they came to them like the Beasts in Noahs Ark they went in unclean and they came out unclean how necessary then is it that we should pray for a firm memory to record sacred truth as well as a free heart to entertain it Fourthly Let us on the morning of a Sabbath pray for a tender conscience to fall down before the power and force of the word Conscience is the strongest Fort for the word to take it is the most unruly patient for the word to cure Oftentimes the word takes the ear nothing is more musical Ezek. 33. 32. The word takes the tongue nothing more commended then the Preacher and the Sermon Ezek. 33. 31. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sua vitèr Nay the work taketh the affections Mark 6. 20. Herod that miscreant Prince heard John the Baptist gladly Nay often the word takes the judgment nothing is accounted more rational The fickle Jews were convinced never man spake as Jesus Christ John 7. 46. But all this while conscience lies asleep and is not awakened from its dream Conscience all this while is as fast asleep in the bosom as Jonah in the ship Jon. 1. 6. and nothing minds the storm Conscience may be seared 1 Tim. 4. 2. and so feel nothing of the sharpness of the word conscience may be defiled 1 Tit. 15. and so mind nothing of the m●ssage of the word conscience may be evil Heb. 10. 22. and so fling away from the warnings of the word and therefore how should we beg of God that conscience may be impartial in waiting upon holy Ordinances A yielding conscience is the best auditor at a Sermon This was Josiahs praise he wept and Sacrae Scripturae sic exaratae sunt ut scire volentes sciant et litis studiosi ansam litigandi facillimè arripiant Camer was tender at the hearing of the Law 2 Chron. 34. 27. The soul lies in a fair way to life and Salvation when conscience blushes at the reproof of sin when conscience startles at the hearing of judgment when conscience is convinced of the necessity of Christ and of the beauty of holiness and that only a holy life leads to a holy God Indeed the principal work of the Gospel is to deal with conscience and it is the great work of God himself in the Gospel to rowse Non periclitor docere ipsas Scripturas ita dispositas esse ut moteriam subministrant etiam haereticis Tertul. conscience from its sleepiness to quiet its rage to take away its prejudices and to bring it into a calm temper that with meekness it may receive the engraffed word which is able to save the soul Jam. 1. 21. Men of polluted consciences can arm themselves against the assaults of the word now that we should lay down the weapons and submit to the force and power of truth this is to be begged by sollicitous and importunate prayer Fifthly We must intreat the Lord that the fruit of all Cingulo veritatis ornantur qui veritatem in moribus assequuntur Qui omnes res amandas et amplectendas per veritatem per virtutem virtutis verum dictamen metiuntur Quid enim humilitas Quid charitas quid patientio quid ●aeterae virtutes nisi lumina veritatis Ansel his holy Ordinances may appear in our lives The life of Ordinances lies in living Ordinances our sanctity only commends the Sanctuary to hear the word speaks some profession but to live the word only speaks Religion It is very observable that all those Israelites who heard God speaking from Mount Sinai the ten Commandments not living up to the tenor of those ten words as Moses calls them Deut. 10. 2. they all fell in the Wilderness none but Joshua and Caleb came safe to Canaan The sight of Physick doth not cure the patient but the application The word doth not advantage us as it is musicall but as it is medicinal as it is taken inwardly and heats the corrupt heart and the cure will easily be seen in a fruitfull conversation We then become the Gospel when holiness is our dress Those Sermons are most fairly printed which are most conscientiously practised A Sermon of charity is best seen in our alms a Sermon of self-denyal is best seen in our carrying the Cross A Sermon of Repentance is best seen in our tears and reformation To be only hearers of the word is to put a cheat upon our souls Jam. 1. 22. and make the Minister not the Physician but the Mountebank Practice is the shining lamp of the Sanctuary Exod. 27. 20. It was observed among the Jews that they were exact in turning Rom. 3. 2. over the leaves of the Bible and none more incurious to understand John 5. 39. the mind of the Holy Ghost in those sacred pages or to conform themselves to the commands of those divine Oracles they were like some heedless persons who gaze upon a tree but never turn up the leaves to see what fruit is underneath that they might feed upon it for support and satisfaction Such Jewish spirits too too many we have among us who like oscitant and negligent workmen who have their tools about them and set upon no piece for the exercise of their Art But it is rare and worthy when we hear things to be done and do things to be heard That knowledge is best which is practical when the understanding Psal 119. 105. impresses the will as the seal doth the wax and Mat. 7 17. so leaves characters of worth and holiness Our Saviour calls them blessed who hear the word and keep it Luke 11. 28. The hearers life is the Preachers best commendation The true use of Ordinances is not only to increase our knowledge but to regulate our practice The Law is a rule as well as a lamp A sinfull life will unravell all our profession and expose that puppet dressed up to scorn and derision Seneca observed of the Philosophers That when Boni esse desierum simulac docti ●vaserint Senec. they grew more learned they grew less morall This is more venial in a Heathen Philosopher then in a professing Christian We must desire the sincere milk of the word that we may grow thereby 1 Pet. 2. 2. Indeed the word must not onely be the light of our minds but the treasure of our Psal 119. 111. hearts which treasure must be spent upon works of piety and holiness The Lord Jesus makes it an infallible Character of our love to him if we keep his Commandments John 14. 15. First Christ doth not say if ye hear but if ye do my Jam. 2. 22. Rom. 2. 13. Commandments hearing is onely a step towards Religion a good wish for heaven the Scribes and Pharisees heard Qui servat legem dei verè testificatur se non simulate sed verè et sincerè amare deum Zanch. Christ who afterwards brought him to the Cross It is a sharp speech of the holy
Prophet Jeremy adviseth us Lam. 3. 41. Let us lift up our heart with our hands unto God in the heavens The soul is principally interested in all holy duties First Not only because in all holy services God principally eyes the heart Prov. 23. 26. Or Secondly Because Gospel Ordinances chiefly influence and aim at the heart But Thirdly Likewise because the welfare of the soul is the only Port we sail to in all our attendance upon Gospel opportunities It is the souls conviction the souls conversion the souls edification and building up in its most holy faith which is the grand design in every Evangelical administration Now for the composure of our inward man in Eph. 3. 16. holy Ordinances Let us apply our understandings to the word and the work we are about The wise man saith Prov. 20. 27. The spirit of a man is the candle of the Lord and when we Haec lux in intellectu in tenebris micans sovenda est studio et diligenti operum dei commentatione et experimentis et otio veluti rubigine corrumpitur Cartw. come to holy Ordinances it is both our duty and our wisdom to snuff this candle that it may burn the brighter to see the mysteries of the Gospel and this is suitable to the Apostolical Counsel 1 Pet. 1. 13. Gird up the lo●ns of your mind A metaphor taken from travellers who gird their garments close that they may not be impeded and hindred in their journey When we draw nigh to God in Ordinances we must bend our minds and be intent on the word and drink in truth as the parched ground doth the rain we must screw up our minds to an acurate observation of what ever is revealed unto us from divine Writ If the Gospel John 3 19. be light it is the eye of the understanding must behold this light If the Gospel be a day it is the eye of the mind must Rom. 13. 12. discern this day Some hear the word and understand it Isa 6. 10. not and this is Gods judgment But some hear the precious truths of God and entertain them not and this is mans sin Men shut the eye of their understanding by carelesness and neglect We should hear the word as condemned men their pardons as Legatees the Wills wherein their Legacies are set down with that intenseness of minde Preaching if we spur not up the minde to pursue it is a noise Pater nobis de● illuminatos oculos cordis nostr● ut ejus lumine illust●ati Christum plenè agnoscamus Ambr. not the word an inarticulate sound not soul-saving Doctrine And that our understanding may discharge its office prayer must precede That God would open the eyes of our minde that we may see the wonderfull things of the Law Psal 119. 34. and we must beg eye-salve Rev. 3. 18. and that God would give us the spirit of Revelation Eph. 1. 18. to shed a light upon our understandings Luke 24. 45. that we may dive deep into the profound Mysteries of the Gospel We know not what ardent prayer and a diligent minde may Christus solus operit intelle●tum Scripturarum Chemn● Mel in Ore melos in Aure. Bern. accomplish towards Scripture knowledge Indeed the Gospel is proportionate to every thing in man it is honey to the taste and Gold to the interest of man Psal 19. 10. It is musick to his ear Ezek. 33. 32. light to his eye John 19. and comfort to his heart Rom. 15. 3. And pity it is the shutting of an eye a little rareless remisness and not bending the minde should rob the soul of such unsearchable treasure We must deal with our hearts to embrace the word in the dispensations of it The Gospel is not only to be let in by Prov. 23. 23. Verbem dei s●t domesticus non peregrinus non for● stare sed in domo cordis continuò versari Daven our apprehensions but to be lockt in by our affections and we are to entertain it not only in the light of it but in the love of it The Apostle complains 2. Thes 2. 10. That many did not entertain the truth in the love thereof that they might be saved The truths of God must have the heart and we buy them not by our audience but our espousals The word must dwell in us Col. 3. 16. and not as a transient guest but as an inmate Scholars may understand the word but Christians embrace it It is a rare speech of the holy Psalmist Psal 119. 20. My soul breaketh for the longing it hath to thy judgments at all times The word is the Mat. 13. 23. seed the heart the ground where this seed must be thrown John 5. 40. David calls the Law not his light but his love Psal 119. 97. and his delight Psal 119. 35. When we come to Ordinances we must resolve to treasure up truth and entertain it as Lot the Angels Gen. 19. 3. Or the Virgin Mary the wonders of her time Luke 2. 19. A refractory will renders all opportunities of grace abortive The two Disciples Luke 24. 32. which came from Emmaus question one with another Whether their hearts did not burn within them when Christ had opened the Scriptures to them intimating to us that the heart is properly the Altar upon which the fire of the word is to be laid to the sacrificing of our lusts and the inflaming of our graces And it is the glorious promise of God to write his Law upon our hearts Jer. 31. 33. Let us meet this blessed promise in bringing our hearts to every Gospel dispensation We must put our memories upon employment when we come to holy Ordinances The memory it is the Secretary of the soul and as at Council boards the Secretary cannot be absent so at Ordinances which are the Council table Acts 20. 27. where soul-concernments are agitated and transacted the memory must not be absent We must not write the word when preached to us in dust but in marble not in a heedless neglect but in a faithfull remembrance We do not throw Pearls into sieves to drop out The paradox is greater Memo●ia ignis gehennae est ●emedium ap●rimè utile contrà omnes tentationes Chrysost Rev. 14. 6. when we put the eternal Gospel into a treacherous and faithless memory Surely we shall never practice that truth we cannot remember if we do not mind the word we shall never live it We cannot read blotted lines or understand torn papers and if the word lie onely upon the surface of the memory it will never get within the bark of the life That Sun-dyall will never give us the time of the day which wants the gnomon to cast the shadow charge thy memory to retain every truth thou hearest Let it pick up the filings John 6. 12. of divine Truth that nothing may be lost The richest Fringes are so many several threads wrought together We do not Agnoscamus
et deploremus communem honc humanae naturae corruptionem quòd in mundanis quidem sive quis nobis benefaciat sive nos offendat satis acrem habemus memoriam Ac in Divinis Benefaciat deus nobis sive nos puniat facillimè obliviscimur Lys address our selves to Ordinances to see our faces in a glass as the Apostle speaks Jam. 1. 23. and presently forget both our featute and complexion Whatever truth thou forgetest so much is lost to thy soul We put not our Treasure in broken baggs The forgetful hearer is guilty of the same unthriftiness Let us before-hand beg of God a firm and tenacius memory He who gives wisdome Jam. 1. 5. to understand his word can give us a memory to retain it All the faculties of the soul are created enriched by him Remembred Truths are probably riveted in the heart and revealed in the life It is a most gracious providence of God that he commits his Word to writing And shall that Word which hath been preserved by God for many Ages even to a Miracle the fury of Man the rage of Persecutors the malice of Satan the subtilty of Hereticks being considered shall that blessed Word I say be lost by thee in a moment where God hath brought a Pen to set down wilt thou bring a spunge to blot out Let us be serious and consider God remembers those truths we forget and if they are not the guide of the life they will prove the guilt of the soul Let us summon conscience to appear at every Ordinance Satan will give us many dispensations in holy duties and divine worship He will permit us an ear to hear a tongue to pray nay he will not disquiet us in our transient heats of zeal and sweet passions of joy as Herod heard the Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mark 6. 20. sweetly Our affections for a little time shall be dallianced and delighted with some sweet Truths especially if they be set off by the musical voyce of the Preacher but this evil one will never suffer if he can obstruct it that conscience shall come into the Assemblies of the Saints within the hearing of Gods sacred and saving Word Indeed the purpose and design of the Word is to deal with conscience Cant. 5. 16. Rom. 7. 24. to work upon conscience to convince conscience of the sinfulness Eccles 1. 1. Mat. 16. 26. Ephes 2. 10. Mat. 11. 29 30 Luke 7. 45. Acts 2. 37. Mat. 10. 30. 31. John 8. 8. Rom. 2. 15. In Basilica cordis humani Deus tribunal constituit legesque in ejus tabulis incidit digito suo rationem creavit judicem conscientiam actorem Testes cogitationes quae vel accusant vel defendunt hominem 1 Sam. 16. 6 7 8. of sin of the loveliness of Christ of the vanity of the creature of the preciousness of the Soul of the beauty of Holiness of the easiness of Christs Yoke c. Christ he Preaches and convinceth Mary Magdalen in her conscience and she melts in tears at his feet Peter convinceth the conscience of the stubborn Jews and they are pricked at the heart Paul and Silas convince the conscience of the Jaylour and he is in a fit and an agony of trembling and despair and presently falls upon enquiry after life and salvation When thou approachest to Ordinances if a sin be reproved let conscience speak is not this my default If a duty be pressed let conscience speak is not this my tye and obligation If a corruption be unmasked and detected let conscience speak is not this my Dalilah my right eye which with Antigonus in his Picture I put my finger upon If self-denial be urged let conscience answer is it not the Cross I have so wriggled under and have been so impatient of Conscience is the chief Guest which is invited to the feast of an Ordinance To leave conscience at home is to let all the sons of Jesse to pass by and to keep back David too and so Samuel may go back again with his anointing Oyl Let us come to holy Ordinances with secret and severe resolutions to live them over to practice every Prayer we put up to act every truth we hear and to adorn every Ordinance we enjoy Our mingling with the people of God in holy worship is onely the bare canvass It is Conversion brings the Pencil and the colours to draw a fair and beautifull piece Moses when he came down from conversing with God his face shone Our light must shine before men Exod. 34. 30. after our communion with God in Ordinances The light Mat. 5. 16. Conciones sunt verba vivenda non tantùm audienda of the Gospel must enlighten our lives as one taper lights another It is rare when our heart is suitable to Gods nature as it is said of David 1 Sam. 13. 34. and our life is suitable to Gods Law And indeed though the spiritual life as the natural begins at the heart yet it doth not end there but proceeds to the hands and the feet c. The same water which was in the VVell is in the Bucket The holy heart is like a box of Musk which perfumes and scents the tongue the eyes the ears the hands and whatever is near it with sanctity and holiness The Ordinances should impress our hearts and influence our lives and therefore a holy conversation is called a conversation becomming the Gospel Phil. 1. 27. If we are resolved upon sin let us lay aside holy Sabbaths holy Duties holy Ordinances When the Preacher hath shut up all in the Pulpit the hearer is to begin in his practice the strokes in Musique must answer the notes and A morte Christi omnis piorum ministrorum sufficientia aptitudo dimanat qui aures verbo percipiendo et pollices actionibus sacris praeparat Riv. rules set down in the Lesson Our actions are these musical strokes which must answer the rules set down in the Sermon It is observable that the blood was to be sprinkled on Aarons right ear on his right thumb and on his right toe Exod. 29. 20. The first did note the right hearing of the Word the second and third his working according to the tenor of it His working by it and his walking in it Our Saviour couples hearing and keeping the Word together Luke 11. 28. The Porter is not so rich who carries the baggs of Silver as the Merchant who ownes them He is not so happy who hears the Sermon as he who lives it As one well observes The Virgin Mary was more honoured that she was the member of Christ than Rom. 6. 13. that she was the mother of Christ Life and holiness set off the lustre and beauty of Ordinances A savoury Christian is an Ornament to holy institutions Prayer is musique when holiness sets the tune The Gospel is glorious when holiness 2 Cor 4. 4. gives the shine and reverberates bright beams upon it Let
partakers of And indeed none but a corrupt heart would chain up holy discourse upon the Lords day that heavenly season when gracious words should be our dialect If the word of God dwell richly in us Col. 3. 16. Inhabitants will not always keep within doors we shall bring forth our treasure for the enriching and edifying of others And let us not excuse our selves with a pretence of shamefastness The shame of the world will not keep us from vain why then from godly discourse Sweet and spiritual communication Christiani in primaevâ ecclesiae aetaie non tam caenàm caenabant quàm diciplinam Tertul. Apol. c. 39. is none of those fruits whereof we may be ashamed Rom. 6. 21. Nor let ignorance be alledged for an excuse ignorance it self might induce thee to propound things profitable which will feed good discourse the Question will beget an answer and the Answer will bring forth a progeny of heavenly communion But in a word what do our tables especially on the Lords day without savory and Christian discourse differ from a manger After our meal our dinner is over then follows not onely the digestion of our food but of the word that better food John 6. 27. Verùm non publicè modo sed privatim hunc ipsum diem sanct● pietatis officii● qualia sunt sacrae Scripturae lectio et meditatio domestica colloquium de rebus sacris atque charitatis officiis transigendum censemus Leid Prof. which nourisheth unto eternal life and this will be the best wine at the end of our meal John 2. 10. We must repeat over discourse over pray over that word we hear in the Morning in the publick Congregation Indeed Truth is most pleasing when most tasted David calls the word Honey Psalm 19. 10. and honey pleases not the eye but the palate it is better food then prospect Then the word doth its work not when it is onely heard but when it is ruminated on and is not onely discovered but digested it then doth most good to us when it is riveted in us fastned nails help forward the building not those which lye loose up and down when we work Gods word upon our hearts this is like inlaid Gold which makes the richest embroydery Hearing may bring a truth to the head but meditation and a careful pondering works it into the heart It is the seething of Milk makes the Cream The Bee sucks the flowr and then works it in his Hive and makes honey of it Satan himself is called an Angel of light 2 Cor. 11. 14. He knows very much It is not truth in the head but riveted fastned and setled in the heart which speaks us to be translated from darkness to light and from the power of Satan unto God Acts 26. 18. Chrysostome in one of his excellent Homilies upon Matthew layes it as a charge upon Christians That when we depart from the Ecclesiastical Assembly we should not in any case entangle our selves in businesses of a contrary nature but as soon as we come home turn over the holy Scriptures and call our wives and children to confer about those things which were delivered in publick and after they have been deeply rooted in our minds then to proceed to provide for those things which are necessary for this life And the same worthy Father makes the Similitude 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Sciendum est quòd non sufficit ut concionibus dei sabbati attenda●us et doctrinam bonam recipiamus et ut nomen dei invocemus sed ut haec omnia digeramus et ad hanc rem ipsi quoque transformemur Calv. Acts 17. 11. Si detis operam verbo ut inde pietatem et omnem salutiseram sapientiam discatis Haec est meta studii nostri et sic instruamur expen●● scripturarum Daven Psal 119. 15 23 48 78 148 97 99. When saith he we retire from Fields in their beauty and flourish we bring some Rose or Violet home with us And when we come from a goodly Supper we bring some remaines of those dainties and give them to our friends And when we have been in publick Ordinances shall we not bring some doctrine and heavenly admonition to our wives friends ad children when this doctrine is more profitable then the flowers of the field or the dainties of the Table Heavenly Truths are Roses which will not shed fruits which will not perish and delicacies which will not corrupt c. So then the word which we hear in the publick Assemblies that heavenly food must be concocted it must be walked down by holy Meditation staked down by good and seasonable Communication fastned upon the soul by holy musing and ardent Prayer The seed in the ground brings forth grain not the seed upon the top of the clods The digested word will bring forth twins delight and obedience Women when they dress themselves they do not walk by the Looking-glass but set themselves before it and spend some time in fastning every pin onely to hear the Word is but to walk by the Glasse but repetition discourse prayer and contemplation must fasten every truth upon the soul and so it will look amiable and beautiful The clean beasts chew the cud Levit 11. 3. The careful Christian will whet the word upon his own and as much as may ●e upon anothers heart The Bereans obtained the title of Noble not from hearing but examination of the VVord not for any thing they did in the publick Assembly but from what they did at home The winnowed Corn is fit for use when it hath passed the Flail and the Fan. The Word digested is fit for practice when it hath passed the meditation of the head the discussion and discourse of the tongue the pondering and the laying up of the heart The hearing of the Word onely is but a beautiful Prospect which is delectable but not durable but the weighing of the VVord in the scales of judgment the beating of it out by the labours of the minde makes it a rich treasure and a stock of divine counsel for the life to spend upon The Psalmist no lesse then seven times in one Psalm professes that the Law was his meditation he did not run over the beauty of it with a glance of his eye or pass over the musique of it as the playing of a tune and so lay aside the Instrument but his thoughts did dwell upon it as the Scholar upon his books Let us as our Saviour saith go and do so likewise and let us remember that on Gods blessed Day and on Gods blessed VVord our Luke 10. 37. work is much at home in our Families and with our hearts Let us spend the interval between the Morning and Evening worship in publique in holy prayer Prayer is suitable to every division of a Sabbath It doth not onely prepare Homines sunt instar terrae cursemen verbi dei committitur quaeque culturá ministerii praeparata
thus declares himself You must know Brethren that therefore it was appointed and commanded Christians by our Holy Fathers That in the Solemnities of the Saints and especially on the Lords dayes they should rest and be free from earthly businesses that so they might be more free and ready for the service of God when they have nothing to hinder them and might leave earthly cares that they might the more easily intend the will of God Chrysostome calls the abstinence from worldly affairs on the Sabbath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys Hom. 5. in Matt. Greg. of Tours Dies Sabbaths indeterminatè sumptus est dies requiei Alex. Hal. an unmoveable Law such a Law as nothing but Sacriledge and Irreligion can shake or suppress we must on this day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abstain from all works saith that golden mouth'd Father And if we come to the midle times of the Church the Sabbath still is fenced with the same cautions that no work be done thereon Gregory of Tours hath an excellent saying Being the Sabbath was the day whereon God made the Light and after was the witness of our Saviours Resurrection therefore it ought diligently to be observed by every Christian no manner of publick work to be done upon it And the same Author tells us a story of a fearfull judgement of Lightning which befell the City of Limoges ob diei dominici injuriam for prophaning the Lords day And another Gregory of a far greater fame Greg. Mag. viz. Gregory the Great speaks the same language Viz. We ought to rest on the Lords day from earthly labours and altogether give our selves to prayer And if we slide down to our dayes and the dayes of reformation servile works on the Sabbath incur the same censure If we call in the Testimony of forraign Divines Doctor Ames that pious Ames Mod. Theol. p. 364. and learned Divine observes That all servile works were to be abstained from in other festivals among the Jewes Lev. 23. 7 8. Numb 28. 25. Multò magis exclusa fuerunt à Sabbatho Exod. 12. 16. Much more on the sacred Sabbath Other forraign Testimonies might be subpaena'd in to give witness in this Cause but the Reader shall not be cloyed with a multiplicity of Quotations Onely as forraigners So our own Divines give in their suffrage to the same truth Famous Hooper Bishop and Martyr thus declares himself To that end Bish Hooper did God sanctifie the Sabbath day that we being free from the travels of the World might consider his works and benefits with thanksgiving hear the word of God honour him and fear him c. And holy Babington most pathetically Even as Bish Babington on the fourth Commandment you will answer it before the face of God and his Angels at the sound of the last trumpet weight whether Carding and Dicing c. and such exercises be commanded of God for the Sabbath And thus this Godly Bishop restrains the Sabbath to its own viz. spiritual work Not onely the Church distributive but the Church collective condemns labouring on the Lords day Many famous Councils have decried and prohibited this uncomly practice The famous Council of Mascon gives a severe prohibition to secular employments on this holy day in these words Let no man meddle with litigious controversies Concil Moscon Concil Cartha Concil Chalons or works of Husbandry on the Lords day but exercise himself in Hymns and singing praises unto God being intent thereon hoth in mind and body and much more to the same purpose I could name the Council of Carthage the Council of Chalons and others but this truth shall stand no longer before humane Tribunal Nay the great taking argument of Reason the Idol and Diana of most men joynes in the Verdict for the guiltiness and condemnation of labours and working in our Callings on the Lords day Servile and secular labours are too pedantick and low for 2 Cor. 6. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost the dignity of a Sabbath as the Apostle speaks What communion between light and darkness and what between the drudgeries of the world and the affairs of Heaven The Sabbath must not be degraded by servilities and low employments it was appointed for more noble undertakings it was set apart for Divine contemplations heavenly actions spiritual ordinances supernatural converses between Christ and the Soul and not for the culinary sweats of an empty any world To work on the Sabbath what is it but to plece a Silken garment with Canvas Greenham formerly complained There are many who make the Lords day a packing day for earth and make it a custome to have their Servants follow their Callings but these men act as Heathens who never Greenham's Treatise on the Sabbath p. 215. knew any thing of the Creation of Heaven and Earth by God nor never heard any thing of the Redemption of man by Christ nor ever tasted any thing of the sanctifying power of the Holy Ghost Reas 2 Worldly labours they tend nothing at all to the worship of God they are onely sinfull and unseasonable divertisements Can we be intent on the works of our Calling and yet at the same time our heads fill'd with divine meditations our hearts breaking with holy affections our tongues employed in sacred devotions surely this would speak us more then men and it is but a mear dream to fancy such Veniendum est ad coenam a peccatis surgendum in vale dicendum Christus fide est amplectendus nova vita inchoanda Chemn nimbleness and agility Worldly affairs will take the soul off from heavenly employment they are contraries in themselves The Shop-board and the Church cannot unite Drossie avocasions will call us off from spiritual devotions The guests who were invited to the Supper if they will mind their secular affairs they cannot come to the Supper they cannot mind their Oxen and their Farmes and the Supper too and therefore they must be excused from the Luke 14. 16 18 19. one Such men who work on the Lords day a holy man saith their hearts are possessed with covetousness their minds Doctor G. are filled with the affairs of the world and what shall God have if their hearts and their minds are alienated to another Aug. de temp Serm. 251. purpose Augustine saith We are commanded to rest upon the Lords day from earthly business and he gives us this reason That we might be the more fit for Gods service And so Calvin upon Deut. Cap. 5. Serm. 34. Calvin We ought to cease from those works which hinder the works of God Let us not stay from calling upon his Name or exercising our selves in his Holy Word Now secular affairs Concil Arelat 4. Cap. 16. a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Est omnis cessatio ab opere quies scil à motu labore Leid Prof. 218. Joh. 3. 8. Exod. 34. 6. Exod. 35. 2.
securing to its self an everlasting Heb. 9. 15. inheritance and therefore no time can well be lost The Client who hath his suit to follow gets up early to wait at his Councellors door The Husbandman betimes waits on his business in harvest time The Sabbath is the souls good wind for heaven and mariners must not lose their winds they may so lose their voyage The Israelites were not to Exod. 16. 25. gather Manna on the Sabbath for then the showre ceased but Christians are then chiefly to gather their spiritual Manna for then the shower is most plenteous If one day in Gods Psal 84 10. Courts be better then a thousand as the Psalmist speaks it is so in relation to the soul and shall then any time of it be lost Shall we clip that day when the very clippings are as good silver as any that is left The souls interest widens the Sabbath and would lose no time The temptation of Satan contracts the Sabbath and would mind no time Now whether we should hearken to our better part or our Manè i. e. tempestivè sollicitè vigilanter secundò mane i. e. opportunè Alap worser enemy is most easie to discern Surely carnal sloth on Gods holy day doth onely evidence the conquest Satan hath gained over us There are two things he tempts us forcibly to to lose our Sabbaths and to lose our souls and it is no weak no faint memento to us to rise early on Gods day to seek him when he professes so often he rises early himself Jer. 7. 13. Jer. 26. 5. Jer. 25. 4. and sends his Prophets early to seek and enquire after us Let us cast an eye upon the examples of Gods Saints they are early in their visits of God The Church resolves to get Cant. 7. 12. up early and go into the Vineyards she would betimes gather clusters spiritual food for her feeding and refreshing The Church denotes her longing after Christs presence E●ce sanctorum animae ec ce sanctorum mentes quae ad excellentissimos fructus gloriosissimè perveniunt Philo. there will be nothing but fruitfulness and flourishing where Christ draws near Christ comes not empty to his Spouse but he brings abundance of grace and sweetness with him The bubbling and boyling hearts of Gods holy and hidden ones are waiting for the first opportunities to enjoy communion with God they will file off the chains of sloth and sleep to be free to converse with their beloved The holy Psalmist in this duty writes us the fairest copy sometimes he began his devotions in the night watches before any appearance Psal 63. 6. of day had made a rent in the mantle of the night when others were rockt asleep and fast in the armes of natures nurse for so sleep is David was waking and busily imployed in holy meditation and devotion But if the night had been farther spent yet he was so early in his addresses Psal 88. 13. that he professes that he prevented God himself he was with him before the Lord could well expect him If he delayed his devotions till towards morning yet then he Psal 130. 6. grew so impatient that he longed as much to be with God as the poor tyred Sentinel waited for day peep that he might be taken from his harsh and dangerous employment for thus he speaks Psal 130. 6. My soul waiteth for the Lord more then they who watch for the morning I say more then they who watch for the morning And it is observable least we should think he had spoken more his affection then his practice he repeats the word twice for our greater assurance Nor will his zeal or divine affection suffer him to let the morning steal upon him that he should see the light of the sun before he had pursued the light of Gods Countenance no He will prevent the very first dawning of the morning so he saith Psal 119. 147. I prevented the dawning Psal 119 147. of the morning and cryed I hoped in thy Word And in this passage it is most remarkable timely piety and devotion it was not a fit of love but a holy custome And lastly if his natural rest had kept him a prisoner from God longer then usual yet he resolves he will awake early Psal 108. 2. Psal 108. 2. Psal 57. 8. Psal 110. 3. 1 John 1. 3. Nay he will awake right early Psal 57. 8. The rest of nature shall not long withstand ●he force of grace and holy love but he will break out of the womb of the morning to cry and wait for God to enjoy salvifical fellowship with him Now if David was so early in his inquisitions after God on any time or time indefinite how much more should we on Gods own holy day that peculiar day which God hath especially Psal 118. 24. made for close converses between himself and the precious soul Now if you ask me what employments or affairs engaged Davids early awakings that he could not fetch his sound sleeps as well as other men I answer I find four things that took up Davids earliest thoughts First Prayer so Psal 5. 3. and so Psal 88. 13. And in the morning shall my prayer prevent thee This holy man must break the silence of the night by the approaches of his soul before God break the darkness of the night by the approaches of the sun He remembred that those who sought Prov. 8. 17. God early should find him Prov. 8. 17. A rich promise can draw out Davids heart in holy prayer Secondly Meditation Psal 63. 6. David could let out his earliest thoughts upon God as the most pleasing subject they could prey upon Indeed most sutably our thoughts should Rev. 1. 8. begin with him who is the beginning of all things who is both the fountain to bubble forth and the pillar to support Porro α. ω. proverbialitèr dicitur de eo qui primus est in re quapiam seu qui in aliquo genere est summus Pau. our beings In the spiritual nature of God is the reason of our spiritual worship his wisdome is the reason of our submission his holiness is the reason of our conformity his justice is the reason of our fear his goodness is the reason of our love his truth is the reason of our trust his grace is the reason of our prayers and his glory is the reason of our praises Now here is the flowy field for the soul to meditate in in the freshest morning Thirdly Holy thanksgivings Psal 92. 2. the words are these To shew forth thy loving kindness in the morning and Psal 59. 16. this Psalm is the song for the Sabbath as the title informs us indeed every morning but much more on the morning of Gods holy day there should be a dew of holy thanksgiving upon the heart of every believer Fourthly Acting of graces so the Psalmist Psal 119. 147. I prevented
he had not looked on Bathsheba with such a wanton Psal 1. 2. eye Holy meditation would have quenched the fire of that lust This heavenly duty hath this advantage in it it presses the thoughts for the service of Christ nor will permit them to wander in a sinfull liberty Meditation it puts life into Ordinances and makes them sweet and savoury to the soul Ordinances they are like The third advantage of meditation cloaths which have no warmth in themselves but as they are heated by the body which wears them and so Ordinances have no energy or quickning power in themselves but as the divine spirit co-operates with them and our serious meditation makes them fruitfull and effectual If we canvas an Ordinance or two we shall find this more apparent and manifest Shall we instance In Prayer Meditation before prayer is like the tuning of an Instrument and the fitting it for melody and harmony This holy duty of meditation doth mature our conceptions excite our desires and screw up our affections what is the Preces non tam verbis quam animo aestimantur Chemnit reason there is such a discurrency in our thoughts such a running of them to and fro when we are in Prayer like dust blown up and down with the wind but onely for want of meditation And what is the reason that our desires 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in prayer are like an arrow shot out of a weak bow that they do not reach the mark but onely upon this account we do not meditate before prayer He who would but consider before he comes to prayer the pure Majesty of God the holiness of his Nature the quickness of his Eye the strength of his Hand and that he will be sanctified by all Acts 1. 14. who draw near to him as likewise those things he is to pray Ipsa majestas dei est origo et fundamentum gloriae Gloria ex Majestate emanat sicut radius â sole Alap for the pardon of Sin the spirit of Grace the assurance of Gods Love an inheritance with the Saints in light Col. 1. 12. How would this cause his prayer to ascend as incense before God David expresses prayer by meditation Give ear to my words O Lord consider my meditation Psal 5. 1. In hearing the word the benefit of it much depends upon meditation Before we hear the word meditation is the plough Dum terra labori et agriculturae respondet ipse deus novas pluvias et novas solis caelique influentias immutit which opens the ground to receive the seed and after we have heard the word meditation is as the harrow which covers the new sown seed in the earth that the Fowls of the air may not pick it up Meditation makes the Word full of sap and juice life and vigour to the attentive hearer What is the reason that most men come to hear the word as the beasts came into the Ark they came in unclean and they went out unclean it is because they do not meditate on the truths they hear they put truth into shallow and neglective memories and they do not draw it out by serious meditation It is said of the Virgin Mary that she pondered Luke 2. 19. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tanquam semen in agro those things in her heart A steddy and considerate meditation on divine truth would produce warm affections zealous resolutions and holy actions If we will profit by the Word let us conscionably meditate on the Word In receiving the Sacrament Meditation puts a taste upon that divine feast Examination is commanded before we approach this Supper now this duty of Examination is best managed by meditation He who meditates aright concerning 1 Cor. 11. 28. him who is the Author the Object the end of the Haec 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in tribus p●rtibus consistit 1 In agnitione miseriae et peccatorum magnitudinis reatus gravitatis 2. In fide et fiduciá mediatoris ne desperatione absorbeamur 3 In serio resipiscentiae et novae obedientiae proposito Par. Luke 22. 15. Sacrament and considers with himself what rich testimonies of Grace there are to the worthy receiver how will this dispose the soul to that holy Ordinance And he who meditates of his infinite misery out of Christ and of his happiness in a dear Redeemer how will this encourage and sharpen his desires to come to the Lord Jesus and meet him at his own table And in receiving we should meditate on the sufferings of Christ for the Sacrament is onely the abridgement of Christs agony And we should likewise meditate on the affections and loves of Christ for the Sacrament is a Copy of his love The Sacrament is food and so we must receive it with an appetite and strong desires but this food must be carefully concocted by meditation The fourth advantage we receive by meditation is the strengthning and recruit of our Graces Indeed grace The fourth advantage by meditation and meditation are reciprocal causes of each other meditation maintanes grace and grace exercises meditation A gracious heart with Moses ascends the mount of meditation Exod. 24. 15. to meet with God and then his face shines his graces are more illustrious and resplendent Meditation feeds three royal Graces with supply and support First Faith receives recruit from this heavenly duty Fides est quasi column● et fundamentum in terrâ jactum fides inter omnes res est solidissima certissuna et firmissima Chrysost Heb. 11. 19. When our faith languisheth and our thoughts are ready to terminate in despair then meditation brings a cordial it fixes upon the power of God which is faiths great supporter in all our temptations When the soul shall meditate thus that God by his own Fiat his own Word gave being to the World and raised this glorious superstructure where man now inhabits and that his power is no less then infinite reducing into act and being whatsoever the Divine Will shall command how doth this underprop our faith and preserve it and secure it against the quick-sands of unbelief Haec suit invicta illa fidei 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 et basis in mandato et promissionibus dei radica●a Thus Abraham meditates on Gods power and this meditation so steels and backs his faith that it breaks through the most rigorous and fierce onsets of tryal and temptation and so becomes laureat and victorious Another grace which flourishes and thrives on the Mount of meditation is Hope Faith is confirmed and hope is enlarged 1 Tit. 1. 1. Tit. 2. 13. Col. 1. 5. Quaerat aliquis quando per●eniam ad speratum gaudium respo●dendum cum deus dederit nullae sunt l●ngae morae ejus quòd certò donabit Tert. Psal 103 5. by meditation the hand of faith is strengthned and the wing of hope is plumed by this excellent duty If a Christian should consider by
and rule of all Laws and Laws are so far just good and equal as they accord with the Divine A primâ veritate quae est deus dependent omnes veritates Law So every thing is true as it is consentaneous and conformable to the Counsels and Will of God to that truth which is in the mind of God As Ambrose observes No man can call Jesus Lord but in and by the Holy Ghost because whatsoever is true by whomsoever it is spoken it is from the holy spirit All truth flows from the spirit as all lies are from Satan he is the Father of them God is immutably and unchangeably true Man runs often from truth to errour deceiving and being deceived we often leave the plain way of truth and go into the by-wayes Pulcherrima est veritas per quam immutata quae sunt quae fuerunt et quae futura sunt dicuntur Cic. of errour and mistake The Church in all ages hath had its Pests as well as its Pillars and hath been plagued with an Arrius as well as blessed with an Athanasius Simon Magus hath crept in among the fold of Christ as well as Simon Peter hath had the charge of the flock of Christ And besides truth in us is sometimes more clear sometimes more clouded Our understanding is different and graduate in Amos 3. 6. Jer. 10. 10. Joh. 17. 3. the apprehensions of it But the Lord is alwayes unchangeable in his truth because he is so in his being in his will in his wisdom and other attributes God is not subject either to misapprehensions or recollections God is true in all his works Whither we consider his spiritual operations whom he justifies he not onely freely but truly justifies not onely reprieves but pardons suspends Isa 46. 10. Rom. 11. 29. his execution but makes him heir of life and salvation If God call us he doth it truly and effectually not by Rom. 8. 30. a pretended invitation but by a powerfull and successfull vocation The Apostle links predestination and vocation together in the same chain Whom God regenerates he doth truly convert to himself giveth them true faith and the blessed graces of his holy spirit And so in the works of his hands Angels are glorious and real spirits Man is a noble and a true creature resembling the God of truth and bearing his image he is no fantasm no spectrum as some Gen. 1. 26. hereticks in the primitive times asserted of the body of Christ God made all things very good Gen. 1. 31. and so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 no mixture of false semblance embased their worth The Creatures are real according to their appearances The world is no dream or fantastick landskip God is true in his words He is true in the incarnate word Christ is the true Son of God not suppositious not the Son of Joseph but the Son of God He was truly 1 Joh. 1. Joh. 7. 40. Heb. 5. 10. Joh. 12. 15. Col. 2. 9. Psal 19. 8. God and truly Man a true Prophet a true Priest a true King 1 Joh. 5. 20. And Christ calls himself the truth Joh. 14. 6. God is likewise true in every word which the Prophets or Apostles have pronounced or laid down for Joh. 18. 31. Joh 18 37. Mat. 5. 18. Rom. 3. 4. our advice and instruction truth is an indelible character of the Scriptures In his Word God is true in every particle of it in every tittle of it Mat. 5. 18. And therefore as the Apostle saith Let God be true and every man a lyar Rom. 3. 4. Christ asserts he spoke nothing but the words of truth and he left heaven to converse with the Sons of men to bear testimony to the truth Joh. 8. 40. Joh. 8. 40. God is true in his donations He gives us true happiness true grace puts in us a principle of truth God writes us true Eph. 4. 30. Mundi bona sunt fugacia et falsa sed Christus robis confert spiritualia et aeterna spiritum sanctum et vitam aeternam Ger. pardons seals us by a spirit of truth to the day of redemption give us true knowledge fills us with true joy and sweetens our souls with real and true consolations He enriches us with true riches Luke 16. 11. The profers of the world are false and evanid false shews and counterfeit satisfaction But all true complacencies and delights are to be found in Christ and are treasured up in God God is true in his promises Those breasts which yield better liquor then wine those flowers which smell sweeter then Promissiones habent ubera verè vino meliora et magis fragrantia unguentis optimis Bern. the choycest oyntments as Bernard saith sweeter then the flowers of Paradise All the promises in Christ are Yea and Amen 2 Cor. 1. 20. They are all established in him as a str●●●ure built upon a sure founda●ion Indeed the Lord is abundant in truth Exod. 34. 6. He is encompassed with truth as with a girdle Isa 11. 5 6. He is plenteous in 2 Cor. 1. 20. Exod. 34. 6. Isa 11. 5 6. Psal 86. 15. Psal 100. 5. Psal 91. 4. Psal 117. 2. Psal 146. 6. truth Psal 86. 15. Ready to write truth in our inward parts He is eternal in truth he is holy and true in this generation and so he will be in the next Psal 100. 5. He is preservative in his truth his truth is both shield and buckler Psal 91. 4. So that truth is not onely Gods glorious attribute but mans sure defence We must meditate on the Love of God This is that influential attribute which sets God on work His love sets his eye on pittying his head on contriving his hand on acting his heart on melting God out of love sent his Son Joh. 3. 16. Joh. 3. 19. out of his bosome scatters his Gospel in the world that light which is more glorious then the Sun In love God saith Ezek. 16. 6. to the sinner live Ezek. 16. 6. seeketh after enemies for reconciliation 2 Cor. 5. 19. and makes clods of earth and 2 Cor. 5. 19. poor worms heirs of salvation Heb. 1. 14. But for the further Heb. 1. 14. discovery of this sweet attribute we must search for it in its properties it may be discerned in its characters though not in its cause Now there are divers explanatory characters of divine love The love of God is eternal love Gods love to poor man had no beginning there never was any time when the heart 2 Tim. 1. 9. Jer 31. 3. Hos 11. 9. Apostolus tempora secularia vult quae simul cum seculo et mundo fluere et volui caeperunt sed ante tempora secularia quod ante mundi constitutionem ante temporis et mundi originē est Ansel of God was not set upon a Saint He loved him in his futurition when the believer was to be a child of God
Exod. 17. 10. hands they are apt to faint and fall down but a continued violence and force must keep our affections in their highest sphere The Bird cannot stay in the Air without continual flight and motion of the wings nor can we persist in affectionate prayer without constant toil with our own hearts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Justin Mart. Apol 2 affections faint and thoughts scatter weariness makes way for wandring so that we must take pains to keep our affections sailing towards heaven we must keep the wind of the spirit and row at the Oar that we be not sinfully becalmed and so miss of the end of our voyage Justin Martyr observes That the prefect of the assembly in his time used to pray with his utmost strength So then our prayers on the morning of the Sabbath must be cordiall and affectionate Our prayers must be cloathed with humility we must pray in a sense of divine purity and of our own unworthiness Luke 18. 23. Not only the bended knee but the submissive Isa 66. 3. spirit becomes prayer Christ himself kneeled down and prayed Luke 22. 41. On the morning of a Sabbath we Quatuor sunt gradus humilitatis Primus est contemptibilem se esse cognoscere Secundu● de hoc dolere Tertius hoc confiteri Quartus Aequo animo ferre se contemptibilitèr tractar● Ansel have great things to beg and we our selves usually give our charity not to the sturdy but to the stooping beggar If we look for blessings from Gods hand it is fit we should lie at Gods feet Christ himself melted Heb. 5. 7. and shall not we stoop and be humble in prayer Hezekiah turned his face to the wall and prayed Isa 38. 2. as being conscious of his own unworthiness covering his face with blushes which the world must not see and so confounded in himself he pours out his soul before God In this holy duty we lie at the allowance of Gods mercy and most rationall it is we should lie at the foot-stool of Gods Throne The Publicans stroke on his breast which was an evidence of his humility and self-abhorrency made his way to that acceptation the Luke 18. 13. proud Pharisee could not attain unto Our closet and family prayers on the morning of the Sabbath must be sharpened and spirited wirh the sense of want and with hungrings and desires after supplies The Mat. 5. 6. Neh. 1. 11. Luke 11. 13. Non frigidè à deo petere debemus beneficia sed affici nos oportet sensu et vehementi desiderio illarum rerum quas à deo petimus Daven beggar cryeth loudest his rags make him roar we are cloyed in our apprehensions and we are cool in our Petitions Necessity inflames importunity Were we but sensible on the morning of a Sabbath to come to our case in hand what need we have of sins pardon of an understanding heart of a hearing ear of a holy and suitable frame of spirit for divine Ordinances and to run profitably through the duties of the whole Sabbath surely our hearts would be like coals of Juniper Psal 120. 4. we should burn with ardency and importunity We pray most fervently when we pray most feelingly want is the bellows of desire Let In petendo panem nostrum quotidiunum egestatem mendicitatem nostram agnoscimus us therefore study a sense of our spiritual wants and that will set the wheel of prayer on going with the greatest speed and eagerness Let these introductory prayers on a Sabbath be animated with faith That grace makes every duty weight and every service without it if it be put into the ballance will be found too light In our prayers we must be perswaded of the Heb. 11. 6. 1 John 5. 14. Psal 10. 17. mercifulness of Gods nature to encline and bow his ear to them of the riches of his promises to encourage them of the infiniteness of his power to fulfill and accomplish them Olea Arbor pinguedine suâ fertur nunquam deficere sed folia sub aquis manere possunt virentia Par. or else all our requests are like the bird with clipt wings they may flutter up and down the ground but they can rise no higher We must believe that God can fill every chink of our desires and that he will send home the Dove with the Olive branch in his mouth These annexed Scriptures will further evince this truth 1 John 5. 14. Mat. 21. 22. Psal 141. 2. Jam. 1. 6. Psal 55. 17. Where David saith He shall hear my voice O rare act of vigorous faith In a word Then Jude v. 20. we pray aright when we pray in the Holy Ghost His concurrence is necessary God will own nothing in prayer but Rom. 8. 26 27 what comes from his spirit any other voice is strange and barbarous to him God delights not in the flaunting of parts and in the unsavory belches of a carnal heart nor in the tunable cadency of words which is only an empty ring in Gods ear But the method of the Lord is to prepare the 1 Kings 18. 38. heart and then to grant the request Psal 10. 17. Our heart is opened first and then God opens his ear Fire from Potentia ad precandum non est ex nobis metipsis sed ex spiritu sancto Psal 147. 9. Vt adjuetis me in Orationibus i. e. ut concertetis in agone mecum grae●è est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 heaven to consume the sacrific was the solemn token of acceptation heretofore 1 Kings 18. 38. Fire from heaven is the token still even an holy ardour wrought in us by the Holy Ghost Indeed prayer is a work too hard for us we can babble of our selves but we cannot pray without the Holy Ghost we can put words into prayer but the spirit must put affections without which prayer is but cold prattle and spiritless talk Our necessities may sharpen but they cannot enliven our prayers The carnal man may cry unto God as young Ravens and as the rude Marriners did in Jonahs ship but now gracious affection is quite another thing There may be cold and raw wishes after grace in an unbeliever but Jonah 1. 6. serious and spiritual desires after the same blessed gift these Hos 12. 4. we must have from the Holy Ghost Quest Did we consider what prayer properly is we should then easily see the necessity of the spirits assistance Prayer is a Qui precatur debet esse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 certans et luctans etiam cum ipso deo Daven work which will cost us travel of heart Acts 1. 14. a working spirit Jam. 5. 16. an earnest striving Rom. 15. 30. and contending with God himself Col. 4. 12. It is very observable that the party Jacob wrestled with Gen. 32. 25. is called a Man an Angel nay he is called God a man for his shape and the form he assumed an Angel to denote the
severall attributes in God which bespeak our greatest attention and Rev. 1. 13. devotion in holy Ordinances First His excellent and incomprehensible greatness If we Christus praesens est medio suorum càm convenerint nomine suo gratiosâ sut praesentiâ had any dread or awe of an infinite Majesty upon us we should throw away all sleep and drowsiness when we come before him in holy worship Let us contemplate on the royalty of his Throne of the brightness of his Majesty and this would awaken us to fear and astonishment Shall a besotted worm stupifie himself by sleep when he is under the full view and immediate eye of the Almighty Surely not only his sences but his reason is asleep and his whole man is Psal 11. 4. in a benummed Lethargy Cannot infiniteness startle us And the dread of the Almighty pull us out of our dream One sparkling of his eye could confound us if he should command a ray of the Sun it would fire us out of our sloath and scorch us into nothing or that which is worse then nothing Secondly His omnisciency We sleep but God doth not Psal 121. 4. slumber he fully seeth our desperate carelesness and wilfull drowsiness in holy Ordinances There is no dropping asleep in a croud or taking a nap in some obscure place can Gen. 28. 17. evade the full view of Gods eye He takes notice of the frame of our hearts much more of the posture of our bodies 1 Chron. 28. 9 When thou sleepest in the time of worship there is no curtain before thee nothing to abate the view of God or darken his eye God sees all thy snoring indulgence which is excessively Psal 139. 12. offensive to him Thirdly His holiness God is exceedingly displeased with our unbecoming behaviours in holy worship his purity is much provoked by our sinful Lethargy Sleeping in Ordinances it is a sin nay a dangerous sin nay it is a crying sin Psal ● 5. and therefore highly provoking to divine holiness Our Saviour Rev. 3. 1. speaks of some who seemed to be alive and yet were dead And such are sleepy hearers their Pew is their grave their cloaths their winding-sheet and their present sleep their temporary death Indeed sleeping in Ordinances is a sin against nature it self The Sun will not stop in its course in attending on the world but the foolish sleeper stops in his attendance on the word and yet the Sun receives no reward but the Christian looks for one and though he hath snorted away a Sermon he presumes he hath discharged a duty and so is in his road to life eternall Fourthly His justice which is easily awakened by his holiness a just God will not endure a drowsie hearer The young man who slept at Pauls Sermon fell down from the Acts 20. 9. third loft and was taken up dead In mercy God presents the Gospel to our attention and in justice he will punish our want of attention God indeed took away a rib from Gen. 2. 21. Adam when he was asleep Gen. 2. 21. But he will not take Edormiente potiús quam vigilante formavit deus mulierem quia deus se ei in somnis revelari voluit sicut se revelare solebat prophetis Par. away a lust from any of the Sons of Adam while they are asleep in the Paradise of Ordinances A Lamb will not sleep in the paw of a Lion in the reach of an enraged Panther how much less should fond and formall sinners sleep in the presence in the most peculiar presence of him who is the Lion of the tribe of Judah Rev. 5. 5. who can tear our souls like a Lion Psal 7. 2. nay tear us in pieces and there is none to deliver Psal 50. 22. and break us in pieces as a potters vessel Jer. 19. 11. to be made whole no more Jer. 48. 38. Sleeping in Ordinances is distastful to the view of Angels Those holy spirits frequent the assemblies of the Saints 1 Cor. 11. 10. And they are witnesses of our carriage and Nos Angelos habemus obedientiae inobedientiae no strae c. Chrys Theo. Theoph. Ans deportment of our obedience and disobedience as Theophylact Anselm Chysostom and others aver and how much disgust must it cast on those holy and most Seraphick beings those blessed Courtiers of heaven whose concerns are so much wrapt up in the honour of God to see a stupified formalist with his sences chained up in unseasonable Angeli templum percurrunt singulorum habitus gesta vota explorent Nil sleep when the Eye Heart Mind and all should be attentive to grasp after divine truth in the publick dispensations of it and when the inward and the outward man like winde and tide both should meet to carry away and treasure up the discoveries of Gods word and counsel to him The Angels see our foolish glances wanton looks undecent postures they have a strict eye upon us in Ordinances O then let us not damp these glorious spirits by our uncomely and unworthy drowsiness This sinfull sleepiness is disquieting to the assembly of the Saints with whom we do associate Do we know what hearts are saddened what spirits are grieved what passions are raised by our sleepy carriage and our drowsie behaviour Our Saviour charges us not to offend one single Saint much 1 Cor. 10. 32 less an assembly of Gods people when we are met together in divine worship When we see one sleeping and Mat. 18. 6. hear another talking and observe another rowling his eyes from one object to another is not this to turn the Temple Sed etiam Christi monitu quantò magis necessaria tantò magis cavenda sunt scandala ne à nobis vel concitentur vel capiantur into a Babell and the order of the Church into confusion and to attempt to build Gods house a new with axes and hammers A sleepy hearer is a spot in our Feasts like a seared bough in a green tree a disturbance and grief to the assembly like a broken string in a lute which jars the Musick This stupid drowsiness is very prejudiciall to the work we are about when we come to Ordinances we are employed in the work of heaven This is opus dei Gods work a holy and sacred work In Ordinances we deal with God we pay our tribute to God we have communion with God we drive a great trade with 1. Vt in eâre quam agimus sit tota animi intentio 2. Vt sit inexplicabilis cupiditas benè operandi 3. Vt accedat assiduitas continuatio Basil God and shall we sleep in Gods work Basil observes there are three things requisite for the carrying on Gods work First That the mind be wholly set upon it and taken up in it Secondly That there be a restless desire of doing well Thirdly That there be diligence and unweariedness in the work
His dread is of God Psal 119. 122. His love is to God Psal 18. 1. in every Ordinance he approacheth to God is the only object of his prayers Psal 5. 3. If he come to Sermons it is to Paulo quinto Vice-deo hear something of God and Christ John 10. 3. In Ordinances we must not worship men as the Samaritans worshipped Antiochus Epiphanes stiling him the mighty God or as the Venetians petitioned Paul the fifth Pope of Rome giving him the title of Vice-god nor must we worship the host of heaven as the Ammonites nor the Devill as the Indians nor Ezr. 9. 1. Zeph. 1. 5. Phil. 3. 19. Col. 3. 5. Jer. 50 2. Judg 2. 13. Acts 19. 28. 2 Kings 5. 18. Jer. 51. 44. Chemosh non potest defendere Moabitas à Babyloniis Nec aurei vituli Israelitas ab Assyriis Alap the belly as the Glutton nor interest as the Covetous nor the Cross as the Papists nor must we worship false gods not Belas as the Assyrians nor Baal as the Tyrians nor Diana as the Ephesians nor Juno as the Samians nor Rimmon as the Syrians but we must worship the great God the incomprehensible Jehovah God in Christ and him only must we serve In a word we must be cautionated against a threefold worship First We must not worship deos mortuos dead Gods images and reliques c. Nec deos mortales nor dying gods Men or Princes Nec deos mortificos deadly goods our swaying lusts and corruptions How necessary is it then for us to come with knowledge to holy worship that we may seririously apprehend that infinite Majesty that most glorious Being Psal 82. 7. Nahum 1. 5. at whose presence the mountains quake and the hills melt and this is the God the Jehovah Elohim with whom we converse in holy Ordinances We must act sincerely in holy Ordinances VVe must be hearty in our hearing we must not only bring the ear but Col. 3. 16. the heart to the truth of the word Truth must dwell in us Col. 3. 16. and must be not only our information but Luke 2. 19. our inhabitant it must be treasured up as well as attended to The truths of the Gospel are as so many Jewels and rare Pearls which must be lockt up The ear is only as the Verbum dei intromittatur in domicilium cordis nostri ac versetur assid●è in animis nostris Daven Psal 17. 1. Heb. 10. 22. Lam. 3. 41. Notandum est quod quae offeruntur in holocaustum interiora sunt quod exterius est non deo offertur ut pell● Orig. stall the heart is the Cabinet And indeed Satan can quickly pick truth out of the ear he can easily open that window but he cannot penetrate the heart that lock is only broke open by Omnipotency Truth is under lock and key safely secured when laid up in the heart and indeed it is never well housed till it is folded up in the soul And so we must be sincere and hearty in our prayers Tongue and heart must keep time and tune The Jews have this sentence written in their Synagogues where they meet for holy Ordinances A prayer without the heart is like a body without the soul God looks not so much to the Elegancy of our prayers how neat they are nor to the Geometry of our prayers how long they are but to the sincerity of our prayers how cordiall they are Thy prayers without thy heart will be a sacriledge not a sacrifice When the heart is Rector chori the chief leader of the quire then the voice is pleasant in Gods ear The heart though it be one of the least parts of man yet it is the best And as we must be sincere in our management of holy duties so in the ends we propose Acts 17 18. Some go to Ordinances as Athenians to understand some Mat. 22. 15. new thing some as Herodians to carp and to catch some to be gratified with ingenuity and wit as those who go to hear a noise of Musicians All these are as Children who Ezek. 33. 32. go to Fairs to buy toys and trifles But let us go to Ordinances to gather those flowers which grow in Eden to advantage our better part and to lay up treasure for our immortal souls We must act faith in holy Ordinances The Apostle avers it positively That without faith it is impossible to please God This grace is the incense in our sacrifices the rising Heb. 11. 6. perfume in all our offerings The hand of faith sprinkles the bloud of sprinkling upon all our oblations Faith is the Heb. 12. 24. eye of the soul to see the light of the Gospel faith is the hand of the soul to receive Christ offered in the Gospel Though faith be not the One thing necessary yet it is the chief thing necessary in all our duties and services This Si non unicum necessarium tamen primò necessarium est fides sacro sole●ni cultu efficox grace doth not only justifie our persons Rom. 5. 1. Purge our hearts Acts 15. 9. Nay espouse us to Jesus Christ Eph. 3. 17. But it doth sanctifie our duties and make them authentical and effectuall It is the believing soul alone enjoys an Ordinance profitably and performs a service acceptably he only feeds upon the tree of life in the Paradise of Ordinances We must act holy and ardent desire in holy Ordinances We must come to the Ordinances as the Hart to the brooks Luke 17. 37. Psal 42. 1. Fides quâ solâ apprehenditur Christus cujus justitiâ induimur verbi praedicatione procreatur conservatur Cartw. or as the Eagle which flyeth upon the prey or as the poor stooping Israelites who lapt at the water Judg. 7. 6. Indeed there are many desirable things in ordinances there is a desirable Christ desirable Grace desirable Life a desirable Soul to save a desirable heaven to ensure It may be added the Scriptures resemble this blessed work to whatever may inflame desire It is light for its pleasantness John 3. 19. It is honey for its sweetness Psal 19. 10. It is food for its necessity Job 23. 12. It is gold for its value Psal 19. 10. We live by it Mat. 4. 4. And we perish without it Prov. 29. 18. And let our desires answer all these allurements Indeed we should come to Christ in ordinances as the Bride to the bridegroom with joy and delight as the Husband-man to the Vine for a Vintage of satisfaction David rejoyced and triumphed in his own soul when the multitude called him to go to the house of God and indeed the Sanctuary is the Saints Bride-chamber on this side heaven And thus we see how we may every way deport our selves in publick ordinances and opportunities CHAP. XXXIII How we must improve the interval between the Morning and the Evening worship in the publick Assembly THE publick worship being over and the assembly
pluvia coelestis gratiae ad fructificandumirrigatur Par. us for publick duties but succeeds those publick ordinances to us It is like a good wind which doth not onely carry us off from the shore but goes along with us the whole Voyage it is a sweet duty which must be interwoven in every part of a Sabbath Prayer plows the heart for the seed of the VVord it commands rain to prosper that seed it secundates and ripens the Corn when it appears above-ground and it keeps the weeds from choaking the Corn It doth the whole work When we have been in publick with Psalm 109. 4. God Private prayer in Christ is the Altar which sanctifies the gift and Prayer in this interval of holy worship looks with a double aspect backward to what we have heard and forward to what we may hear indeed in this being like Heb. 4. 12. the Word a two-edged Sword it hath a double edge for our spiritual advantage Now our Prayer is like the sword at the east of the Garden of Eden which turned every way Acts 2. 27. Prayer in the Closet often saves us the labours of the Pulpit Jer. 23. 29. and directs the speech of the Minister to prick the Jer. 20. 9. 1 Cor. 3. 2. heart of the hearer Ananias came to Paul when he was praying Acts 9. 11. If the Word be an hammer it is prayer causes the stroke if the Word be fire it is prayer layes this fire on our hearths if the VVord be a sword it is prayer weilds this Sword to wound our lusts and corruptions In a word private prayer is the best meanes to prosper publick preaching and to guide the arrow of truth to hit the mark of Conscience Another Duty which must take up the space between the publick Ordinances is reading thē Scriptures VVhen we come home from the publick we must not be confined to the Scripturae sunt spiritualis aniae mensa in quá vivae representantur deliciae et maxima bona Anselm inclosure of the Ministers Sermon but we must open to the wide though pleasant Common of the whole book of God we must read some Chapters for spiritual edification Anselme used to call the Scriptures the spiritual Table of the soul furnished with all heavenly delicacies and with the choicest good things And on Gods holy day when our own table is taken away Let this spread-table be set before us for soul-feeding and repose Every Chapter which may be read is an Epitome of divine Truth which may Si quando procacior suit inimicus Psaltorium decantabat In tentationibus Deutero ●ii verba voluebat In tribulationibus Isaiae replicabat eloquia et scripturae testimonium in consolationem suam edisserebat Hierom. train up our children and influence our servants and which may build up our own souls and water every branch of the Family for spiritual growth in the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus our Lord Phil. 3. 8. Hierome reports of Paula that he used the Scriptures as a Medicine against every disease If her enemies were violent she would turn over the Psalmes If her temptations were strong she would fix upon some part of Deuteronomy If her afflictions were forcible then she consulted some part of the Prophesie of Isaiah and so she drew the Scriptures into an universal comfort to her The VVord of God is our light to guide us Psalm 119. 105. And that family where the Scriptures are much read is a Goshen of light and pleasantness where Israel resides and inhabits when other habitations are covered with Aegyptian darkness with the darkness of sin and ignorance Governours of Families are the best stewards not onely when they lay in provisions from the Market Luke 12. 42. but when they bring forth spiritual food from the Scriptures by reading conscionably and constantly those Oracles of Rom. 3. 2. God to those under their roof for holy Job confidently asserts that the word is more necessary than the appointed food Acts 20 27. Job 23. 12. Let therefore the interval between the publick worship be filled up with holy travel in the counsels of God Scripturas non obiter inspicia nus et legamus ut externum corticem tantùm accipiamus sed adhibenda est diligens perscrutatio Chemnit recorded in Scripture Our Saviour imputed all the sottish mistakes of the Jews to their ignorance of the Scripture Mat. 22. 29. and lays it as a charge upon them to search the Scriptures Joh. 5. 39. But it must not be as Chemnitius observes a transient glance but a serious search as Miners for Gold with pains and delight So then it is a great part of wisdom in Families to converse much with Gods word but especially on Gods day and most peculiarly when the most solemn and publick worship doth not call them off CHAP. XXXIV How we must spend the Evening of the Sabbath when the Publick Assemblies are dismissed THere are many who will give an easie answer to the question Nos ab omni opere externo vacantes deo uni et soli hoc die vacemus Ideireò et hunc diem benedixit et sanctificavit i. e. in usum suum separavit et elegit Aret. Eph. 4. 20. proposed and will tell us that when the publick service is ended we have our free liberty for all pleasing Recreations we may exercise our skil in a pair of Bowles we may exercise our valour in a pair of Cudgels we may exercise our fancy in a Dance or a Barly-break But all the reply I shall make this being spoken to before is I hope we have not so learned Christ Now therefore my next task is to lay down those duties with which we may close Gods holy and blessed day We must carefully survey what we have been acquainted withall in the publick The Repetition of Sermons is a heart-penetrating and soul-edifying duty the very manuduction Quod toties Paulus eadèm scribit hoc est ad corroborandum ut Christiani sint tutiores cautiores et vigilantiores Alap John 6. 12. and leading of families into the fear of the Lord Holy truths are those divine fragments which must not be lost but gathered up by a faithful repetition When the Minister hath ended to preach we must begin to rehearse such repetitions being the musical ecchoes from that sweet voice we heard before If Paul thought it not grievous to write the same things which he had taught before Phil. 3. 1. We must not think it painful or impertinent to rehearse the same things which we have learned before The repedting of 1 Sam. 3. 10. Quaevis cogitationes et rationes naturales intellectus quantumvis artificiosae quantum vis sublime subjiciantur doctrinae Evangelicae et de facto subjectae sunt omnibus eadem doctrinâ conversis Mal. 13. 19. truth preacht casts a new light upon it it clincheth Gospel counsel the faster upon the heart and
so corruption receives a double and by consequence a deeper wound Samuel answered not God till the third time it may be conscience will answer that word in the repetition to which it did not listen in the delivery Repetition of Sermons is like the Sun beams in the repercussion and reflexion which shine in a more fervent heat and a more considerable warmth The second shoot often kills the bird when the first misseth We know not what the second hearing of Gods Word may act upon the soul And we repeat Sermons in our families not onely barely to pass away the time of a Sabbath but by this fruitfull exercise our memories are recruited the Sermon is more distinctly apprehended the heart is a second time assaulted and stormed that it may be taken and brought captive to the obedience of Christ Besides in the repetition of the Word we have a more private tender of life and salvation misappehensions are this way removed and the Original is cleared by the Copy We often mistake the Minister when the Word is delivered when we repeat the word the mistake is easily corrected and amended to all which may be added by this heavenly course and practice Families are trained up in Gospel discipline and the more we hear of Christ in publick and in private the more our love to him is courted and conquered and thus Servants better understand their duty and Children better learn obedience If we leave those Sermons we hear at the Church door and there take our farewell of them Satan quickly takes up our lost treasure Diabolus est inster avis famelicae semen verbi rapiens et sat habet si homo verbi alimento non pascitur Par. and then our attempt in the publick ordinances was in vain it being not probable that we should give those holy Sermons room in our hearts which we were careless to lodge in our houses by a conscientious repetition The strongest hold we lodge divine truth in is slack enough Satan is ready to untie the knot let mans care tie it as fast as it may and therefore we must tie truth upon the soul with a threefold cord 1. With a diligent attention in the publick Assembly 2. VVith a heedfull repetition in the private Family Chem. Exam. de dieb Fest 3. In ardent supplication running over the heads of the same Sermon in our more retired and severer Closets It was the custome of our sweet and dear Jesus after he had preached a Sermon to the multitude to examine his Disciples privately about it and to rivet what had before been revealed Mar. 4. Truths like stars are best when fixed and when Luc. 14. our hearts not our understandings are their Orbs to move in Vain controversies as the wise man speaks may not be repeated for that will separate friends Prov. 17. 9. But divine Counsels must for that will unite truths to the soul And moreover our slippery memory may be made more consistent by repetition and so retentive of that word which is apt to slide away Surely great are the advantages of repeating Sermons in our families it is like Lots holy violence to the Angels to force them into his house The rehearsal of holy Gen. 19. 3. truth is a sweet attractive to draw Christ into the family and it sents the house with sacred fumes which the fire of the Word sends up This worthy practice makes our Si medico non est oppro●r●um de aegroto s●●scitar● neque crimen est de auditorum semper inquirere salute Sic enim moniti quid expeditum sit c. Chrys houses Chappels of devotion and is nothing but Religion drawn in a smaller frame In a word when the Ministers blessing hath opened the door of the Sanctuary for our departure let us apply our selves to this experienced medium for soul advantage our souls which were tuning in the publick may be musical in private and the Sermon may be more sweet in the second gust and tast of it like the works of some learned men which are more refined and enlarged in the second Edition Another duty calculated for the Evening of a Sabbath is holy Prayer This powerfull service is a golden thread which must run through every space of a Sabbath it is the sacrifice of the Closet it is the service of the Family it is the ordinance of the Sanctuary it doth seasonably break Quartum praeceptum ponitur in gremio decalogi tan●uam testis amoris divini et nostrae obedientiae the morning of a Sabbath and usher in the following duties it doth sweetly concur with the mid-day of the Sabbath when our devotion like the Sun should be at the highest remembring that the Commandment for the Sabbath is in the midle of the Decalogue And there is more work for prayer it must shut up both the Morning and the Evening Worship there must be prayer to beg a blessing on truths already discovered that in their light we may see light Psal 36. 9. And indeed prayer doth most becomingly close the Mat. 13. 23. Evening of a Sabbath then the lifting up of our hands are Psal 141. 2. instead of an Evening sacrifice Prayer is like a setting Sun which is most glorious like a well fraught Ship after its Voyage which lands at the Port which is pleasing and joyous In the Evening Noahs Dove brings the Olive branch Prayer Gen. 8. 11. often is this Dove when after the travels of the Sabbath it sums up all and importunes success and acceptation then the soul is calmed with peace and rejoycing In the Evening Mat 14. 23. Dan. 9. 21. Christ wrestles with his Father alone in prayer as if the Sun should not see the triumphs of his Victory Daniel was praying in the Evening and then the Angel came unto him the messenger of glad tidings to this humble Supplicant 1 Kings 18. 37 38. Fire comes upon Elijahs Evening sacrifice when Prayer presented the oblation as a sign of pleasing acceptation We must then shut up Gods day at Gods feet that he may bid Luke 2. 29. Eph. 1. 6. us depart in peace for he hath accepted us in his beloved otherwise we may go to bed but not to rest And our conclusive prayers in the Sabbaths evening must be 1. Confessory Our best Sabbaths have not escaped the stains of sin there will be iniquity in our holy things our Condonet mihi deus etiam sacrorum meorum delicta Aug. best services are like the spotted moon or a jewel with flaws Augustine would beg pardon for the sins of his holy duties And we when our Sabbath is setting have more need of tears then triumphs and say as the Romans did of one of their Victories such another would undoe them Prayer Jam. 3. 2. Psal 119. 59. therefore in the close of the Sabbath must look up to God with a weeping eye and we must pray that God would
Momentum unde pendet aeternitas Alap Now if ever this is the Sabbaths Motto This is our moment on which eternity depends Though there be no vacation for sin yet the Sabbath is the Term-time for the Torius mundi opes non conducunt nec sufficiunt ad redimendam unam animulam deperditā sed omnes animae sunt redemptae pretio sanguinis Chemn soul the Sabbath is the Mart the Staple the Market for the soul and not to improve this opportunity judiciously savingly spiritually with the greatest intent of mind with the greatest severity of observance with the greatest inclinations and workings of spirit is the highest vanity and prophaneness A slight vain spirit on a Sabbath is like tears and sighs at a Nuptial Feast or laughter and jocularity in the house of mourning On the Lords day we must pray as for our souls hear as for eternity and improve Ordinances as those who are to deal with an infinite God in Ordinances What we do we must do with all our might as Qui rectè currit in Christianismo coron am gloriae accipiet Chrysost the Wise-man speaks Eccles 9. 10. Now especially we must run the race which is set before us and strive to enter in at the strait gate storm heaven that we may take it by force Sweat in our callings is our policy but sweat and labour in holy duties is our wisdom In the duties of the Sabbath 1 Cor. 9. 24. especially we wrestle for a prize we seek for life as those persons who fetched water for David from Bethlehem with Luke 13. 24. hazard and invincible magnanimity Frozen duties will Mat. 11. 12. speak cold answers and a light dead careless frame of spirit only teaches God to withdraw his presence from our 1 Chr. 11. 18. seeming approaches We must pray and hear on a Sabbath as David danced before the Ark with all our might 2 Sam. 6. 14. we must stretch out the hand of faith lift up the 2 Sam. 6. 14. voice of prayer and breath out the longings and anhelations of our souls These heights of spirit do exceedingly become the holy and blessed Sabbath Dir. 5 We must he frugall of the time of the Sabbath The filings of Gold are precious much more the filings of a Sabbath Every minute of a Sabbath is like a pearl small but of great value There are no loose minutes in the Lords day every little parcell of time is a holy fragment which must be gathered up that nothing be lost We must fill John 6. 12. up every space of a Sabbath either with holy thoughts divine meditations ejaculatory prayers reading of the Scriptures or some holy duty correspondent to that holy day Every branch of this consecrated time must bear precious fruit we should in our Sabbath below imitate our Sabbath above and there no time will be lost Not a drop of idleneness in an Ocean of rest Though there will be no pains in glory yet there will be perpetual praises eternall uninterrupted Hallelujahs and there shall be no breach or chasm in our Sabbatum e●t sanctum otium Leid Pros everlasting triumphs Indeed the Sabbath is rest from our callings but none from our duties it is an holy leisure for our souls which must not run waste Grains of Musk Fragmentorum collectione et asservatione Christus nos monet frugalitatis ne insumendo et prodigendo bona à deo nobis concessa uno impetu perdamus sed quae supersunt religiosè colligamus et seponamus Lyser are sweet and valuable so are the most minute pieces of a Sabbath The Romans were so ambitious of the Consulship that one Consul dying the last day of his Authority one sued for the remainder of the time whence that memorable speech of Cicero O vigilantem Consulem c. O watchfull Consul who slept not one night in his Authority Such holy ambition we should have for the time of a Sabbath we should sue for the smallest remains of it to improve for soul advantage The Author of the Practice of Piety complains of some who spent their Sabbath or a great part of it in trimming painting and pampering themselves and were like Jezabels doing the Devils work when they should be doing Gods Surely such are the greatest unthrifts Neque dominicis diebus quae sunt hilaritatis praeter sanctitatem aliquid dicere aut facere concedimus Clem. and are guilty of the most prodigious prodigality It was a pious constitution of Clemens That on the Lords day we should give no way to mirth or earthly delight but all our words and facts should savour of holiness Dr. Bound sadly bemoans the custom of some great personages who lay longest in their beds upon Gods holy day and made it a day of pleasing Sabbatum est observandum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the flesh which should be a day of sanctified rest And saith this worthy man in an extasie of zeal We must not give our selves to sleeping on this blessed day no more then to surfeting The Prophet Joel tells us On solemn Feasts the Priests were to lie all night in sackcloth Joel 2. 13. And we know Hester spent three nights and three dayes with her Maids in fasting and prayer Hest 4. 10. And can there be a greater solemnity then the Sabbath the day Imperatum suit ● deo ut sanctifices et consecres totum Sabbati diem et in illo toto die divinis vacare possis Zanch. Iren. contr valent for transacting the great affairs of eternity our golden spot of time to get a Christ to get a crown Zanchy observes That the whole of a Sabbath without abatement and curtail is to be consecrated to God Irenaeus one of the morning stars of the Church informs us That the Sabbath doth teach us there ought to be a perseverance and a continuance of a whole day in the service of God And the Council of Paris an assembly of learned men give in their suffrage to this truth in these words Let your eyes and hands be lifted up to God all this day To the same purpose speaks the Council Conc. Turon cap. 40. Calv. in Deut. Serm. 34. Muscul in quartum praeceptum Pet. Martyr in Gen. 2. of Turon But I shall not over-load or clog the Reader with humane testimonies Let me only subjoyn the attestation of incomparable Calvin This day saith he is not ordained for us only to come to a Sermon but to the end that we may employ the rest of our time to laud and praise God Here we may take up that of the Prophet Mat. 1. 14. Cursed is the deceiver And this is too much to imitate Ananias and Saphira to keep back part of the price of a blessed Sabbath Acts 5. 2. God will not have us to divide the Sabbath between himself and our selves this is to make a separation between God and us Gods day must be spent in
take notice that in the history of Gods raining down of Manna there is frequent mention made of the Sabbath and this was before the Law was given upon Mount Sinai In Exod. 16. 23. the Lord speaketh of the Sabbath wherein no Manna was to M●j●ris momenti et fi●●itatis est quod ass●r●ur Exod. 16. 24. ubi Sabbati tanquam diei inter Israelitas celebris et noti mentio sit et sic vers 26. His verbis Sabbatum non instituitur sed tanquam rem antea institutam propter Mannae collectionem violandum non esse à deo praecipitur Wal. be gathered as a thing in use amongst them and no unheard of novelty the Sabbath then was no wonder to the people of Israel but indeed the Commandment for not gathering Manna on that day was a new thing The Sabbath is again mentioned vers 25. To day is a Sabbath unto the Lord where we have no words of institution as if now the Sabbath first commenced a weekly festival but this blessed day is spoken of as of an usual and well known solemnity And which is very observable the Lord speaks expresly concerning the Sabbath vers 29. That he had given them a Sabbath in the preterperfect tense as a thing of former times not of any present institution he gives them Manna in the present tense but he hath given them a Sabbath in the preterperfect tense which most clearly evinces the antiquity of its institution Moreover the ready obedience of the people in resting upon the seventh day mentioned vers 30. evidences its former institution they did not dispute but obey not admire but submit New Laws raise Questions but here was none Every circumstance in this whole story gives in clear evidence to this truth Nay in the 28th verse God chides the people who went out to gather Manna on the Sabbath day as breakers of his Laws and Commandments So then the Sabbath was an antient Law among them nay an Eminent Law and therefore called Laws in the plural number vers 28. The Jews gathered Manna on the Sabbath and this was their sin and this could not have been their transgression unless there had been a Law for The mentioning of the Sabbath Exod. 16. 23. comes in occasionally as concerning Manna and not of purpose to institute a Sabbath Mr. Bern. the Sabbath for sin is onely the transgression of a Law 1 Joh. 3. 4. And one thing more is observable the Lord works a miracle at that time to honour the Sabbath the Manna which was gathered the day before did not putrifie on that day according to the nature of it Exod. 16. 24. by which God shewed how greatefull the due observance of that day was to him So then to wind up this particular we find in this Chapter the Sabbath observed which could not be unless instituted before for only institu●ions are the matter of our G. J. p. 11. observation and no less is acknowledged by our adversaries Cogita i● Egypto ubi serviebas etiam ipso Sabbato per vim te esse coactum ad labores Man Ben. Isr in this point And to fasten a naile on this argument that it may not unravel Manasseh Ben Israel one of the most eminent of the Jewish Rabbies very well observes that the Lords enjoyning the Israelites the observation of the Sabbath tells them they were Servants in Aegypt Deut. 5. 15. This the antient wise men among the Jews do apply in this manner Think with thy self how that in Aegypt where thou Quae dicuntur de Sabbato videntur innuere vel ejus observationem tum fuisse institutam vel saltem innovatam miraculo confirmatam Riv. servedst by force thou wast constrained to work even on the Sabbath day Thus the Jews most knowing in the doctrine of the Sabbath spake of a Sabbath in their Aegyptian bondage which was long before Mount Sinai smoaked to preface Gods giving the Ten Commandments Two things more must here be inserted as in their proper place 1. The Lord argues Exod. 16. 28. with the Israelites for violating the Sabbath with this expostulation How long will ye refuse to keep my Commandments which argues most clearly the Antiquity of the Sabbath for God would not thus reprove the first breach of this Commandment but it plainly discovers their custome in this sin 2. And so in Exod. 31. 15. the keeping of the Sabbath is not urged from the Commandment lately given in the decalogue as reason would in mans judgement but from Exod. 31. 15 16 17. the seventh dayes rest and refreshment after six dayes work which points clearly at the Sabbaths first institution The Apostles Argument mentioned in the beginning of the fourth Chapter to the Hebrews brings a fresh light to Heb. 4 5. Vis est in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ea quies praeteriit olim rursus tamen quietem promittit ergo haec alia est à priore Par. this truth there the Apostle seems to dispute ex concessis from the observation of the Sabbath from the beginning of the world The Question was how those words of the Prophet were to be understood viz. If they shall enter into my rest Now saith the Apostle there is a two-fold rest mentioned in the Old Testament the rest of the Sabbath and the rest of the Land of Canaan but it cannot be meant Ex dictis sequitur aliud Sabbatum aliam requiem restar● populo dei pu●à requiem gaudium et solennitatem caelestem figuratam per quietem et festum veteris et Judaici 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of either of these rests for they are long since passed one at the beginning the other at the time of Joshua and therefore it must be meant of a rest to come The minor of this syllogisme the Apostle proves by parts not the rest of the Sabbath for that was entred into by man from the beginning seeing the works were finished from the beginning Heb. 4. 5. not of the rest of Canaan for if Joshua had given them rest he would not have spoken of another rest vers 8. the conclusion then follows there remains therefore a rest for the people of God vers 9. And that is the rest of Heaven whereof Alap the other two rests were either types or fair resemblances We see therefore that the Apostle taakes the first viz. of the Sabbath as from the beginning of the world and this Divine Authority is beyond all dispute or exception and whosoever shall cast a cloud upon so clear a truth we may truly say the hand of itching currios●ty or design is in it nothing but singularity or interest could raise such a steam or vapour The Proemial word Remember prefatory to the fourth Commandement clearly speaks the primitive institution of the Sabbath For Memory alwayss looks backwards we Deus in Decalogo pronunciando memoriam refricat Israelitis primaevae ordinationis quando deus eam innovavit Riv. in Dec.
Primùm quievit deus deinde benedixit hanc quietem ut seculis omni bus inter homines fancta foret septimum quemque diem quieti dicavit Calv. in Gen. the most eminent of every age and Nation hath beheld this rising Sun and rightly calculated the time of its rise even from the first week in the world The Learned without the help of Astrology have cast the Sabbaths nativity It is a worthy saying of the Learned Andrews when putting the question But is not the Sabbath a Ceremony and so abrogated by Christ He thus answers Do as Christ in the cause of divorce look whether it was so from the beginning now the beginning of the Sabbath was in Paradise before there Dies ille Sabbati stetit a creatione mundi ad domini resurrectionem quando in diem dominicum demum ab Apostolis mutatus est Bez. in Apocal. was any sin and so before there needed any Saviour and so before there was any ceremony or figure of a Saviour Bullinger Aretius and Gualter rightly observe that the Sabbath was ordained in the beginning of the world but confirmed in the giving of the Law Paradise was the place of its institution Mount Sinai the place of its more solemn promulgation of its second and fairer Edition It were endless to run over the several authentick testimonies which are copiously and dextrously given to this truth Rivet reckons no less then thirty Hoc Sabbatum primò à deo fuit observation institu●um est à creatione mundi confirmatum autem per Mosen Aret. loc com loc 30. Zanch. l. 1. part tertia de oper Creat Gual in Mat. 12. Homil. 162. Merc. in c. 2. Gen. Protestant Divines of note who give in their concurrent verdict and what place can be left for stumbling when we have so much light to walk by And therefore Franciscus Gomarus was better employed in his fervent disputes against the Arminians then in raising batteries against a truth so generally owned and so strongly supported And as for that fancy of anticipation first Midwiv'd into the world by Abulensis viz. That God should only shew us what he intended to do in after-ages when he rested on the seventh day and blessed and sanctified it Gen. 2. 3. He did not appoint the Sabbath to be presently observed but only manifested his purpose what he intended for the future when the Law should be given on Mount Sinai I say let Catharinus answer Testatus who was of the samè Religion Bertram de Polit. Judaic with him a Papist and of the same order with him a Bishop and he calls this fancy ineptum figmentum a foolish Jun●us Paraeus Zepper Martin Allsted c. figment And Catharinus speaks only as the Fore-man of the Jury for Steuchius Eugubinus Gilbertus Genebrardus Jacobus Satianus Cornelius Alapide Emmanuel Sa Ribera and Steuch Eugub in Cosinopoea c. 2. Suarez all give in their verdict with their foreman This invention of Tostatus is so ridiculous that Amesius gravely saith No man ever thought of anticipation in this place who Gilb. Genebr in Cronol was not first anticipated with some manifest prejudice And he further goes on and saith No such kind of anticipation Jacob. Satian in Annal. can be found in the whole Scripture Nay the phrases of the Sabbaths institution Gen. 2. 3. convince the contrary for Corn. Alap in Gen. 2. the blessing of the seventh day and the sanctifying it i. e. making it holy for mans observation are so plain that to Emman Sa Riber Suarez create a Prolepsis is to paint the Sun to parget over a Rose and to raise an imaginary vanity to cloud the truth And Haec prolepsis meâ sententiâ omni probabilitate caret Wal. besides it is very injurious to Scripture to force figures upon the plain words of it when there is no necessity And it is a rule among Divines That the Scripture ought to be understood according to the true property of the Oportet ●cripturam intelligere secundum verborum proprietatem ubi non cogimur evidenti absurditate Eellar de Baptis l. 1. c. 4. words when we are not diverted by some manifest absurdity It is true it is an easie thing to invent Tropes and Figures or a vain prolepsis to supply a fancy but let us observe God blessed the seventh day what is this blessing but the dispensing a peculiar favour towards it And God fanctified the seventh day what is this sanctification but a separation and consecration of it to holy worship what more plain and clear And therefore furely who ever cherisheth Nihil sacilius est quàm dicere Tropus est figura est modus quidam discendi est Aug. this fiction in his brain or patronizeth it with his pen he may justly be attached either of singularity or design Bellarmine himself lays down this rule We must not recede from the plain words of Scripture unless some other text of Scripture or some Article of faith or the general sense of the Church enforce us to it which if Nisi cogamur ab aliquâ aliâ this be true as I suppose it will be easily granted we are Scripturâ aut ab aliquo articulo fidei c. Bellar. safe enough from this figment of anticipation Object The main matter which is yet behind is to free this truth viz. of the Sabbaths original from the beginning of the world from all sieges and disturbance which will be taken up in answering that Objection that the Patriarchs did not observe the Sabbath as we find mention'd in Scripture Sol. To which is answered That they did not keep the Sabbath because we find it not mentioned in Scripture is a large and loose inconsequence for as the historical Narration of Moses speaketh Non dubium est Sabbati observantissimos esse Patres quotquot ante legem vixerunt et quorum fides Scripturâ comcommendatur Gualt nothing of the observation of the day after its institution so we may find that after it was commanded in Mount Sinai no mention is made of it or its observation in the book of Joshua nor in the book of Judges nor in Ruth nor in the first and second Books of Samuel nor in the first Book of Kings shall we therefore conclude that in all this time valiant Joshua the worthy Judges holy Samuel zealous David and others did not observe the Sabbath In all the Book of Hester no mention is made of Jehovah shall we therefore say that neither Mordecai nor Hester nor the Religious Jews worshipped the adorable Jehovah The institution of the Sabbath from Gen. 2. 3. hath been plentifully proved and so the Patriarchs ought to have observed it which if they did not it was sin in them but the Reverence we owe to those holy men of God binds us to think better thoughts of them Surely good men could not forget their solemn and set day for converse with
themselves and sensualize upon Gods holy day let them not waste that golden spot in trifling recreations let not them formalize and dissemble away the Market-day of their Souls surely their doom will be aggravated with all circumstances of horrour and amazement Fond Christians who idle away and unravel their precious Sabbaths see not the Witness behind the Curtain viz. the blessed and glorious Gospel which will come in against them to sharpen their sentence and condemnation we Christians cannot violate Sabbaths at so cheap a rate as others may more especially a poor benighted Jew who hath lost his way and is wandering to eternal perdition Let every Christian consider Christ makes his flocks to rest at noon The Jews never had those patterns of Sabbath-holiness as we Christians have had It is true God rested the seventh day after the finishing and accomplishment of the stupendous Gen 2. 3. work of the Creation and his Rest was both exemplary and preceptive to the world to keep that day as a day of holy rest But the great Jehovah was in Heaven above the eye of observation But now Jesus Christ the great Archetype of sanctity he was a visible Pattern of Sabbath-holiness John 5. 8. to us and let us trace our dear Redeemer in his Sabbatical actions and wherein they are imitable they are admirable Mat. 12. 13. we shall find our Beloved on that day either working Luke 14. 4 5 6 7. 8 9. his Cures or shewing his Miracles or breaking out into holy discourses or preaching abroad his heavenly doctrines Luke 6. 6. or pouring out his Soul in holy prayers something or other Luke 6. 12. like the Son of God he is doing on the day of God And so the holy Apostles those blessed Spirits as one calls them Those Pen-men of the Holy Ghost as all call them they were rarely exemplary in Sabbath-observation Not to mention how affectionately they grasped the opportunity of the Jews Christus utitur exemple ovis in soveam incidentus in die Sabbati post ●e●●cta ea quae ad Sabbati ministerium et cultum pertinent Sabbath as a fit season to preach Jesus Christ and to throw their Net into many waters How did they manage the true Sabbath the Lords day now taking possession of its right in becoming the weekly Festival of the Church 1. They were most frugal of the time of it Paul preaches on this day till midnight Acts 20. 17. 2. They were most copious in the duties of it they preach they administer the Sacrament which undoubtedly was accompanied Chemnit with fervent and solemn prayer 3. They take care of the poor Acts 20. 7. And 4ly One of this Apostolical society is in high raptures 1 Cor. 16. 1 2. and sublime elevations on this day Nay the Apostle of the Gentiles acts charity to a miracle Acts 20. 10. thinking Revel 1. 10. nothing too great to add to the celebrity and honour of this holy day Now do the Jews tell you of a zealous Nehemiah who shut the Gates of Jerusalem the Evening before the Sabbath to keep God in and shut prophaneness out Nehem. 13. 17 18 19 20 21. we may reply a little to invert our Saviours speech A greater than Nehemiah is here one whose shoo-latchet that worthy man is not worthy to unloose to speak in the language of John the Baptist Mark 1. 7. We then having fairer Luke 11. 31. Copies it is no reason but we should mend our hand The Limner draws the Picture according to the person who sits and the more lovely the person is the more beautiful is the Picture How should we then keep the Sabbath holy who have the pattern of him who is the fairest of ten thousand Psal 45. 2. And how doth this upbraid their practice who make the Sabbath a day of sloth and idleness when the holy Apostle on the same day laboured in preaching of the Gospel Acts 20. 7. till midnight Let us then in the fear of the God of Jacob keep Sabbaths as we have Christ and his blessed Apostles for our ensamples We have more liberty and desirable freedom than the 1 Cor. 11. 1. Jews had in sanctifying the Sabbath their sanctification of that holy day consisted in a multitude of purifications washings and cleansings and in a number of Sacrifices and Oblations they had their burnt Offerings and their Num. 28. 9 10. Meat-offerings nay and their Drink-offerings and all these Sacerd●s singulis sabbatis lignum subji●it ad nutriendum ignem in Altari Movebantur panes propositionis c. were doubled as was suggested before on the Sabbath-day their observation of the Sabbath was more toilsom and laborious they were imployed in more drudgery they were to look after their Flour and their Oyl killing of Beasts and such things which were of a more inferiour and carnal nature their duties on the Sabbath were clogged and burdened with more sweat and ●●●poral painfulness and were of a grosser al●oy The Priests among the Jews on a Sabbath Mat. 12. 5. were busied in cutting of word to feed the fire of the Altar that it might not go out and in preparing of bread to put upon the Table of Shewbread and to remove that which 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was there before All these Operations as Chemnitius calls them required the hand not the heart and were works of the lower form To all which may be added that the Jews Levit. 23. 6. besides their weekly Sabbath they had the Passeover the Levit. 23. 16. Feast of Pentec●st the Feast of Trumpets the Feast of Tabernacles Levit. 23. 24. the day of Attonement which was the tenth day of Levit. 23. 27. the seventh Moneth and these were all called Sabbaths Levit. 23. 34. Levit. 23. 24 32 36. And some of these Feasts and Solemnities Levit. 23. 8. were celebrated divers days together Levit. 23. 36. Now it is not so with us under the Gospel the Apostle Exod. 12. 3. hath eased us at once of all these legal Festivals 2 Col. 16. Exod. 23. 14. Let no man condemn you in respect of an holy day or of the new Gal. 4. 9 10. Moon or of the Sabbath days viz. Jewisn And so Gal. 4. 9 Non sunt damnandi christiani tanquam divinae legis transgressores out violatae conscientiae rei quòd non observant festa legis ceremonialis quicquid contra superstitiosè ogganniunt Pseudo Apostoli Daven 10. Ye observe days and months and times which are weak and beggerly rudiments All these Festivals are of no use to us but are fully cancelled and cashiered Thus God hath sweetned our Sabbath far above that of the Jews Prayers are our onely Offering Sighs our Incense Sacraments our Passeover we have no Drink-offering but to drink in truth in the hearing of the word we have no Meat-offering but to feed upon
Gospel So the Apostle most expresly 1 Cor. 15. 14. If Christ be not risen then is our preaching in vain and your saith is also vain Christs death had been wholly ineffectual for the remission of sins if Christ had not conquered death but still had been Peccatum plenè aboletur quia ejus effectus i. e. mors aboletur Chrysost detained in his dust But Christ hath abolished sin because he hath conquered death the effect of sin by his glorious resurrection as Chrysostom well notes and observes All the sufferings of Christ were animated by his resurrection that glorious Act put worth and value upon them Had he not risen all our hopes had been buried in the same Grave with him but he is truly risen and this is the comfort of our Souls and the riches of his sufferings Christs resurrection makes faith a saving grace and therefore the rather is put upon Christs rising not upon his death Rom. 8. 34. His Resurrection makes the Gospel a lively and glorious Gospel 2 Cor. 4. 4. Totum Evangelium esset vanum et mera fabula si Christus non resurrexisset Par. and Christ an all-sufficient Redeemer When Christ rose the Jews blasphemy was execrated Scripture-prophesies and types verified the hearts of believers revived and the Gospel was made a Doctrine full of grace and truth fit to be preached for life and salvation The Prophet Hosea tells us Hos 6. 2. After two dayes he will revive us and the third day he will raise us up and we shall live in his sight which text Hos 6. 2. of Scripture Tertullian rightly accommodates to the Resurrection Quem locum Tertullianus lib. adv Judeos cap. 13. ad Christi resurrectionem rectè accomodat Ger. of Christ which was on the third day then did our life spring with his and the Sun rising caused our light The Resurrection of Christ is that pleasant spring which the Law foresaw the Gospel discovers and the Christian rejoyces in Had Christ been shut up in the Grave and there kept as Natures Prisoner all the truths of the Word had been as fading leaves and the believers faith an empty notion the Preachers pains unprofitable sweat and the sinners soul irrecoverably lost and the professors of Christianity truly of all men most miserable as 1 Cor. 15. 19. And that cursed Quantas divitias comparavit nobis ista fabula Christi Leo. 10. Pap. Rom. speech of Pope Leo the tenth viz. How much wealth hath this Fable of Christ brought to our Coffers might have escaped a reproof And now shall the Resurrection of Christ put life into the Gospel and none into us upon our Sabbath the commemoration of that glorious Act Shall every truth of the Gospel be confirmed by it and shall not we be established in our duties on this holy day Christ rose and our hopes sprang and budded with his rising and shall not this animate our services on the Lords day Either let us lay aside Faith in the Act or be more conscientious in keeping the day of Christs blessed Resurrection The Resurrection of Christ was not only the breaking of his own chains but the breaking out and harbinger of our joyes For Christ as a common person is become the first fruits of 1 Cor. 15. 20. them that sleep 1 Cor. 15. 20. which is an allusion to a rite and ceremony in the Law All the sheaves in a field being unholy in themselves there was some one sheaf in the name and room of all the rest which was called the first fruit lifted up and waved before the Lord and so all the sheaves abroad in the field by that act done to this one sheaf were Christus opp●nitur omnibus terroribus in die judicii quidem quadruplici ratione 1. Christi morte qua peccata expiavit 2. Resurrectione quâ j●stitiam peperit 3. Evectione ad dextr●m dei quâ sp sanctum effudit 4. ●ntercessione quâ meritum effi●acitèr applicat Qu●tu●r ●is●e gradibus totum Redemptionis opus à Christo peractum est Par. consecrated unto God by vertue of that Law Lev. 23. 10. Rom. 11. 16. And thus when we were all dead Christ as the first fruits riseth and this in our name and stead and so we all rise with him and in him we are all vertually risen in him and this in as true a sence as if we were personally risen As on the contrary hand we being personally alive yet are reckoned dead in Adam because he was a common person and had the sentence of death pronounced upon him by vertue of which we must die and this by the force of the same law 1 Cor. 15. 21 22. Adam was the first fruits of them who died and Christ of them that rise Hence we are said to be risen with Christ Eph. 2. 5. and which is yet more to sit together with him in heaven Eph. 2. 6. Because Christ is a common person representing us and he sits there in our name and in our stead Now let us a little canvass the equity of this law If sentence of condemnation was first passed upon Adam alone yet considered as a common person for us we were condemned in him therefore also this acquitting and justification which was passed upon Christ at his Resurrection for then he had fully suffered whatever divine justice could demand for our sin was passed upon him as a common and publick person for us yea in this his being justified Christ must much rather be considered as a common person representing us then Adam was in his condemnation V●va ego quamvis mortem feram resurgam et vos quoque vivetis i. e. quia videbitis me laetabimini et quasi o●cisi revi●is●e●●● in meâ manifestatione Theoph. For Christ in his own person had no sin so he had no need of justification from sin nor should ever have been condemned and therefore this must be only in respect to our sinnes imputed to him and if so then in our stead and so herein he was more purely to be considered as a common person for us then ever Adam was in his being condemned for Adam besides his standing as a common person for us was furthermore condemned in his own person but Christ being justified from sin could only be considered as standing for others Thus Christ rose as a common person in our stead and for our good to be the object of our faith the incentive of our hope and the forerunner of our glorious resurrection By Christs rising to life we receive A life of joy His springing from the grave was the blossoming of our joy The retirement of our beloved into his tomb was but transient the delay of three dayes and then In diem solis laetitiae indulgemus Tert. he came from behind the hangings and in this our joy is full This dried up Mary Magdalens tears and swallowed up the Disciples griefs and this inflames the Christians triumphs And
as Christ saith John 16. 22. I shall see you again and then your heart shall rejoyce And as Theophylact observes The Disciples as it were rose from the dead transported with joy A life of Righteousness For as Christ died for our sins so he arose for our justification Rom. 4. 25. It was the rising of Martis Christ● proprius finis erat peccatorum exp●●●● sed resurrecti●nis justitiae imputatio P●r. Ideò Christus promeretur nobis justitiam et vitam spiritualem quae consistit in remissione peccatorum et justitiae imputatione per quam coramdeo justi reputemur quia ex morte resurrexit Ger. Christ which made his death au●hentical and satisfactory Paraeus observes The proper end of Christs death was the expiation of our sins and the proper end of his resurrection was the imputation of his own righteousness The foundation of our comfort is laid in Christs death but we receive it in his resurrection Our peace and joy is sown in his death but we reap it and begin to possess it in his resurrection And though Christs rising adds nothing to the price which was paid in his death yet it is a demonstration of the sufficiency of it and thereby a confirmation of our comfort by it for if Christ had not rose again his death had done us no good and all our comfort had been a withered branch If death had overcome him wrath had overcome us Christ by rising hath promerited a righteousness for us Jer. 23. 6. our wedding garment came from this Wardrobe his breaking from the grave made our joys and his own merits full which are applicable to us by faith A life of Grace Christ by his resurrection hath purchased the donation of the spirit which he sent down extraordinarily Ex plenitudine Christi gratiam pro gratiâ accepimus non tantùm gratiam remissionis peccatorum sed 〈◊〉 vitam a ternam quae credentibus ex gratià datur Aug. presently after it upon his holy Apostles Acts 2. 2. and still in sweet and sutable measures upon his people John 1. 16. Now this True Vine John 15. 1. flourisheth in glory to which his resurrection was the first step he drops sap into his branches here below John 15. 4. Christ after his resurrection obtains the Holy Ghost for us and bestoweth it upon us and by this blessed spirit engraffeth us into himself regenerateth and quickneth us An evidence of this truth we have John 7. 39. The words of which Text run thus But this be spake of the spirit which they who believed on him should receive for the Holy Ghost was not yet given because that Jesus was not glorified This royal gift only waited the glory of his resurrection A Life of Glory The Resurrection of Christ opened the gates of Heaven to believers and from that first ascent he Christus coelum Ipsum ingr●ss●s est n●n t●m prose et s●● gloriâ quam pro nobis nostra gloriâ Christus praecurrit ut nob●● v●am ster●eret et pararet ●tque praecurren●em brevi subsequ●emur qui enim a●teri prae●urrit ut pertas aperi●● et aper●●● serv●t● parv● interv●ll● qui sequitur intr●●b●t Theoph. Null● operatio in die dominico agatur nisi tantùm Hymnis et Psalmis et cantionibus spirita●libus dies ill transignur Linw. went up to his Father to prepare a place for us John 14. 2. Had Christ been locked in the Grave we had been locked out of Glory but Christ rose to go to his Father and in this he is our fore-runner as the Apostle saith expresly He is entred into Heaven for us Heb. 6. 20. to take up our room and prepare our eternal Thrones Theophylact hath a pretty similitude When one goes before saith he and opens a gate it is but a little space but those who are to follow come and enter so the Saints shall not be long before they shall enter within the vail whither our fore-runner is gone before and this sublimates a Believers hope Our Su●ety hath taken our places for us and after a few breaths a few flying moments we shall come and take up our eternal abode and residence And what is the issue of all this Shall Christs resurrection be the fountain of our good and not the incentive of our duty Shall we rise with him and not live to him on his own holy day Had the Resurrection only concerned himself and been the Emblem of his own personal glory some Apology might have been made but when it is not an inclosure but a Common for the Saints to live upon how should this influence us upon the Lords day How should our hearts rise in holy affections how should our voice rise in praise and thanksgivings how should our thoughts rise in heavenly meditations A couchant earthly frame upon this day no way accords with this beneficial nay beatificall resurrection The Resurrection of Christ is the certain assurance of ours The Head is risen and the body must follow the Elder Eph 1. 21. 22. Hoc sperate mem●ra quod in capite praecess●● Aug. Brother is sprung out of the dust and the Younger Brethren shall not always lie there The Vine is now planted in Heaven and there the Branches must receive their eternal flourish Christ rose again not as the Jews prisoner under a Dies vitae nostrae est dies Parasceves succedit dies qutetis in sepulchro quem sequitur dies resurrectionis ad vitam Ger. sentence of condemnation but as the Christians Harbinger for their unspeakable consolation It is worthily observed of a learned man The day of our life is our Preparation day then follows our Rest in the grave to which succeeds our Resurrection day to life and eternity As Christ died to make the purchase so he rose again to see it made good to believers and his Resurrection is but the earnest of ours This glorious act of Christs rising gives us security for these ensuing particulars That Divine Justice is satisfied When the Prisoner for Debt is freed it is presumed the debt is discharged and the Quia Christus resurrexit ideò non amplius sumus sub peccatis quia praestita est plena pro iis satisfactio c. Ger. Creditor fully satisfied Christ in his Resurrection opened the prison doors of the grave and shewed himself to many witnesses free and discharged from all incumbrances which fully speaks that divine Justice is paid to the utmost farthing That God and Man are fully reconciled For sin only commenced the controversie and kept up the difference Isa 59. 2. Now sin being removed by a full acquittance and discharge ●am Christus mortuus est immò jam resurrexit ergo peccata nostra non amplius coram dei judicio nos condemnare possunt viz. By the delivery and Rising of our Surety the wound naturally closeth and all is peace between God and believers And so the Sun of Righteousness arose with
of Rom. 16. 5. Gods people being scattered as fruitful clouds which Col. 4. 15. are melted into their several drops let us repair to the lesser Church our family and follow Christ home and entertain Privata familia quae ob religiosam sanctitatem illustris est ecclesiae nomen promeruit Daven him there with holy communion Christ hath his lesser as well as his greater banquetting house Cant. 2. 4. And will meet us in our houses as well as in his own Mal. 21. 13. the place of more solemn assemblies He who will come to the house of a Pharisee Luke 14. 1. will come to the house of a believer Therefore after the publick ordinances are done and finished let us haste to our habitations as fast as Zacheus to his Luke 19. 6. to the same end with Familiam suam privata fecit ecclesia eam pietate religione exornans Theod. him to entertain our dear Jesus and pursue those family duties which are incumbent upon us which now shall be opened and discoursed upon There are several duties which must take up this interval that it may not be an empty and unbeautiful chasm Let our meal be adorned with temperance and made lushious and sweet with holy and savory discourse Heavenly communication is salt at the table is sauce in the dish Non prius discumbunt quàm Oratio ad deum praegustetur editur quantum esurientes capiunt bibitur quantum pudicis est utile ita saturantur ut qui meminerint etiam per noctem sibi adorandum deum esse Tertul. is a flavour in our drink Full meales are those which are spiritualized and they have most of rarity which have most of heaven Our tables are spread with variety not from our dishes but from our discourse Tertull. speaking of the carriage of private Christians at their meals tells us That they do not sit down before they have prayed they eat as much as may satisfie hunger they drink so much as is sufficient for temperate men and are so filled as they that remember that God must be worshipped even in the night season O the golden temper of these golden times Temperance must be the Caterer and holy discourse must be the musick of our tables Our tongues are instruments but the good spirit must tune them Holy discourses are perfumes which are not only pleasant to our selves but delightful to others they are the trumpets of our piety the sparks which fly from our zeal the disburdening of a gracious soul they are a celestial harmony which makes a meal on a Sabbath pleasant and seraphical Vivunt impii ut bibant et edant sed bibu●● èt edunt bène ut vivant Socr●t And therefore let us discourse at our Sabbath meals on some things delivered by the Minister or some spiritual matter which may administer grace to the hearers and let us avoid the common rock of vain and worldly talk Xenocrates the Philosopher being in company with some who used evil language he was very mute and being asked the reason he replyed It hath often repented me that I have spoken but never that I have held my peace Oh that our hearts and lips were heavenly on the Lords day that there might be more sprinkling of grace in our discourses Sermo noster sit ad aedificationem necessitatis Theoph. This would turn our food into Manna and drop dissolved Pearls into our Cup and turn our board into a Communion table Holy discourse it Et ad aedificationem utilitatis Erasm First Warms the heart Secondly It gives vent for grace Thirdly It is the bellows of zeal Et ad aedificatione● opportunitatis Sermo aedificet quoties opus vel opportunitas est alios docere Theoph. Fourthly It often awakens conscience Fifthly It is the Gangrene of sin as silence and flattery are the promoters of it Sixthly Nay it countermines Satan and turns him out of the room where our table stands Seventhly Holy discourses are the freedom of imprisoned piety and the Midwife of that holiness which lies in the womb of the heart the turning up of that truly golden Ore they are the Saints Shibboleth which distinguishes him from the foolish world which travels with froth and vanity In a word holy discourse is the ease of Conscience the sacrifice of Religion the Saints refreshment the sinners chain and astonishment heavens eccho the delight of Christian Society It is a twofold Charity First To our selves it enfranchises our affections to Christ our heart is full of love to him and holy discourse gives vent to our full hearts it is the discharge of our duty Cant. 5. 10 11 and so frees us from the guilt of disobedience and Col. 4. 6. moreover it gives fire to our dedolent hearts Our hearts Luke 24. 31. must be awakened and raised sometimes by ordinances Mal. 3. 16. sometimes by prayer sometimes by holy discourses Sequi debet in una●uaque familiâ mutua communicatio et mutua familiae institutio Rivet in Decal Secondly Which likewise are charity to others They may be their satisfaction an answer to their scruples a corrosive to their lusts a check to their sin thou knowest not but thy good discourse may be as an Angel in the way to stop some sinfull progress or a flame to anothers zeal and a salve to anothers sore Such discourse becomes our table on the Lords day and becomes the Sabbath as rich attire the Luke 14. 1 7. beautiful person the garment sets off the person and the person adorns the garment It is reported of the hearers of holy Mr. Heldersham that they would go home from Church discoursing of he powerful and precious truths which were delivered and so they did strew the way home with Roses and made their miles short by heart-sweetning discourse Christ when he was with his little family his twelve Apostles he would always be speaking of the things Deut. 6. 6 7. of heaven Mark 4. 10. Gracious words would flow from Job 32. 18 19 20. him as drops from the fountain or the morning dew from above It was a charge laid upon the Israelites to discourse Deut. 11. 19. of the statutes of God when they were in their Mat. 12. 34. houses sitting with their Children and Servants about them Deut. 6 6 7. The two Disciples going from Emaus Christus suo exemplo declaravit quomedo tempus inter matutinos et vespertinos caetus Sabbati insumendum est Ipse enim suos discipulos dissipatâ turbâ de rebus regni examinavit Chemn were talking of the sufferings and the affairs of Christ and then their dear Mediatour joyns in with them Luke 24. 15. Dr. Bound observeth That when we have heard the word upon a Sabbath we must discourse of it unless we will lose a great part of the fruit of it A talking of worldly affairs will chase away that truth we have been made
the spring of all irreligion Every flowr the beast feeds upon we have the sweetness of it in the milk and so all those truths we insinuate into the hearts of our Families in a chatechistical way we shall find in their behaviours and carriages The cost we bestow on our Gardens we find in the spring and then the sweetness of the Rose and the beauty of the Tulip will court both our eye and our smell so in this case our pains in chatechizing will be found in the towardliness of the youth of our Families and if we would turn our houses into little Churches chatechism must be Col. 4. 15. the chiefest consecration But if we lay aside this successful duty Ignorance will overgrow the Family and then a cloud of ignorance will easily melt into a shower of profaneness The darkness in the head will turn into darkness 1 C●r 2 8. in the deed and our Family may not love Christ probably because they do not know him Well instructed are usually well governed Families Let something then of the Sabbath Evening be spent and employed in this influentiall Duty CHAP. XXXV Singing of Psalmes is the Musique of a Sabbath THe Feast of a Sabbath is not to want the musique of a Ephes 5 19. Psalm The Lords day saith the Psalmist Psalm 118. Revel 5. 11. 24. is a day which the Lord hath made we will rejoyce and be glad in it And Psalms are the ecchoes of joy the hearts Revel 4. 11. melody the Saints tuning his Hallelujahs When we sing Revel 5. 13. Psalms we seem to joyn issue with the 24 Elders mentioned in the Revelation and with the Quire of Angels the Psalm 100. 2. subject of whose Song is the Lord and the Lamb who sit 2 Sam. 23. 1. upon the Throne David was not onely the great King of Judah but the sweet Singer of Israel and he did not onely 1 Chron. 13. 8 compile his psalms for the Church but himself did sing Nehem. 12. 27. forth his Songs to the Lord nay the whole body of the Judg. 5. 3. people of Israel though they cannot be Psalmists they Psalm 30. 4. will be joyous in the praises of the Lord 1 Chron. 13. 8. The wall of the City was not dedicated without singing Psalm 147. 1. much more the worship of the Temple was not celebrated without the same method of praise thanksgiving Singing is the commanded mirth of Mountains Isa 44. 23. It is the Exultation of the Earth Isa 49. 13. It is the pleasant triumph of Saints Isa 51. 11. It is the Trophie of Victories Exod. 15. 21. It is the Musique of Israels Quire 1 Chron. 16. 9. And then surely it is the joyful melody of Gods holy day Gods praise is much set forth by singing and all varieties joyn in consort The trees of the Wood 1 Chron. 16. 33. The sphears of the Heavens Isa 44. 23. The Kingdomes of the Earth Psalm 68. 32. The Saints in their greatest numbers Psalm 149. 3. The Saints in their greatest straights Isa 26. 19. The Saints in their greatest flight Isa 42. 10 11. The Saints in their greatest deliverances Zeph. 3. 14 15. The Saints in their greatest necessities Isa 52. 9. Isa 54. 1. The Saints in their greatest plenties Isa 65. 14. Jer. 31. 12. How comely then doth singing divine praise to the divine Majesty befit the holy day of God And we are to take notice that Psalms are not onely calculated 1 Cor. 14. 26. for the publick Congregation but likewise for private Col. 3. 16. families There must be a Quire in our houses Our Loquitur Aposto●us non tantum de publicis in ecclesiâ cantatis hymnis sed etiam de privatis Dr Jun. children like the lesser birds must sing the praises of the Creatour Our servants must understand the chief service in singing forth thanksgivings to the Lord and Governours of Families must be guides of the Chore they must be Presidents in this complacential service Tertullian tells us That the Christians in the Primitive times had their meetings before day to sing to Jesus Christ so sweet was this Duty to Christiani habuere caetus antelucanos ad canendum Christo et Deo Tertul. Lib. ●0 Epist 97. Hymnipro sympanis sumantur Psalmodia pro fl●gitiosis cantibus Naz. Niceph. lib. 13 cap. 8. Ruffin Histor lib. 10. cap. 9. them and reputed so necessary Eusebius mentions some Hymnes which the Christians in the early times of the Gospel used to recite and sing forth And Nepos compiled many of these divine Songs for the service of Dyonisius and his Brethren Plinius secundus though an Heathen makes mention of Christians singing of Psalms to their great praise in his Epistles to the Emperour Trajan Gregory Nazianzen much presseth the singing of Psalms and Hymns upon Christians in their solemn days for the avoidance of fidling Instruments and of light and jocular songs And as if psalms were not onely the discharge of our duty but the confutation of the errours of others Chrysostom commanded Psalms to be sung in the night for the suppression of the Arrian Heresie Basil as Ruffin attests commanded the people to meet for the pouring out of their prayers and singing of Psalms The Eastern Church from the time that the Mos cantandi in Orient●li ecclesiá jam inde ab Apostolis est observatus Dr. Jun. Sun of Righteousness arose in the East did propagate the use of singing of Psalms and Hymns to successive Generations Nor was the Western Church defective in praising and practising of this sweet and reviving Duty Holy Ambrose so zealously pressed this duty of singing of Psalms that he would not allow times of persecution a sufficient reason to intercept it But the Empress Justina raging against Plebs in ecclesiá excub●bat et tum psalmi et hymni cantabantur secundum morem in Orientalium partium ut populus reficeretur c. him He commanded the common people to lye in the Church and there sing Psalms and Hymns according to the practice of the Oriental Christians that they might not be sensible of any sorrow or tediousness and this custom prevailed in after-times and was scattered into other places the Churches in other parts imitating this worthy practice And Paulinus testifies that the same excellent Ambrose brought Hymnes and Psalms to be sung in publick in the Churches of Millain and this practice overspread almost the whole Western Per omnes penè Occidentis provincias manasse resert Paulin. Church Paulin. in Vit. Ambros And if you ask what Psalms were sung in those Early dayes of the Church Augustine informeth us The Psalms of David Aug. confes lib. 10. cap. 33. And Theodoret joyns in the same assertion Theodor Hist lib. 2. cap. 24. And these Oracles were warbled forth with a lively and sweet voyce that the truths which were sung did seem to get a new life by the tune as
the same Augustin averres Chrysostom assures us That the words of Ipse de cantatorum psalmorum Davidicorum verba inter canendum prolata recenset Chrysost Homil. de verbis Isai 1. lib. 5. Davids Psalms were the constant matter which was sung that which did feed the voyce and the rejoycing of Christians in his time Thus singing of Psalms was the usual and commendable practice of the golden times of the Church And sing to the Lord Psalm 47. 6. must be the command which must lead us up and down a Sabbath and especially put an Higgaion Selah upon the close of it Now for our more comfortable management of this heavenly service and spiritual recreation we must consider Singing of Psalmes hath excellent Presidents That service is much sweetned which is exemplified by the best Patterns We have the best of Persons going before us in this Job 38. 7. way of holy delight The Morning stars of the Church have sung together Heb. 2. 10. 1. Christ himself the Captain of our sanctification as well as our salvation hath gone before us in this holy practice he sang a Hymn with his Apostles Mat. 26. 30. He sang with the Apostles to shew us that Psalms are calculated not onely for the publick Congregations but private Families He sang not with the multitude but with the Disciples And Christ sang in the Evening to evidence that the Evening of his own day is the most fit season for this heavenly duty And he sang immediatly before he suffered Hymni sunt laudes dei cum cantico Et si sit laus non dei non est hymnus si sit laus dei et non cantetur non est hymnus Oportet ergo ut sit hymnus habeat haec tria et laudem et dei et canticum August Psalmi Davidici sunt sacri hymni Philo. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Archimusico vincenti praecentori cui cura est de re musicà instatque ut ad debitum finem perducatur Prefecto cantorum Occurrit in Psalmis 35 vicibus Bithn to seal this Ordinance with his blood And if it be Queried what Hymn Christ sang Learned Expositors are various in their opinions and shoot so much at Rovers that I shall not stay to take up their arrows But it is not without remark that Augustin gives us the full and rare description of an Hymn which may help us in this case Hymns saith he are the praises of God set forth in singing If it be praise and not of God it is no hymn And if it be praise of God and these praises are not sung it is not an Hymn And therefore if it be an Hymn it must have these three things It must be praise the praise of God and that with a song Christ then was versed in this holy practice and so the Holy Ghost pens a Psalm for the Sabbath viz. the 92 Psalm that as there is the Lords Prayer to guide us in that holy duty so there i● the Lords Psalm too to excite and stir us up in this feraphical Service 2. Godly Princes have glorified God in this duty 2 Chro. 29. 30. David composes Psalmes and Hezekiah commands them to be sung The chief Magistrate joynes with the chief Musician And he that takes the Scepter in his hand to govern the people he likewise takes the Harp in his hand to sing the praises of the Lord Psalm 98. 5. David and Asaph Hezekiah and the Levites all joyn to sing forth the praises of God There was among the Jews a Prefect of songs as well as a Governour of the People 3. The Holy Apostles those bright luminaries of the Church they have made this musick in their Sphears Acts 16. 25. Paul and Silas sang praises to God in their Exod. 15. 1. darkest Dungeon though their feet were their tongues were not in the stocks 4. Eminent Fathers Some have been cited already to give 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Just Mart. Quest 117. ad Orthodoxos in their testimony to the praise and practice of this duty I will onely superadd one more One most worthy among the worthiest famous Basil who thus discants upon singing of Psalmes Look whatever is profitably dispersed throughout the whole Scriptures the same is gathered together Est Psalmus animarum tranquillitas Pacis Arbiter optimarum disciplinarum promptuarium Psalmus turbas et fluctus cogitationum compescit iracundiam mollit est elementum incipientibus incrementum proficientibus c. Basil in the Book of the Psalmes and therefore this Book of Psalmes was preserved that those who are Children in years or altogether young in manners might in shew sing in meeter but in truth might instruct their own souls the instructions of the Psalmes being sung both at home and abroad A Psalm brings quietness to the mind is a peace-maker repressing the perturbations and passions of the mind it doth mollifie anger and procure love and friendship among men suggesting unto the mind a certain concord and a common bond to unite men together and compelling men to the harmony of one Quire A Psalm is instruction to the ignorant an increase to them that profit and one voice of the whole Church This doth beautifie solemnities and causes Godly sorrow for Psalms do pull tears out of the most stony hearts Thus far the Renowned Father launches forth in the praise of Psalmes Ho● institutum in hodierum diem retentum Aug. Confes that spiritual incense as he is pleased to call them And from the Primitive Church this heavenly service hath been propagated down to our very times This duty like the Sun which runs through the several signs of the Zodiack hath passed the tempers and dispositions of every Age. Singing of Psalms hath not onely excellent presidents but enforcing reasons The Psalmist saith It is a good thing to sing unto our God Psal 47. 1. This duty being like a fruitfull Cloud in the Summer season which is not onely our screen against the heat but melts into a showre for the earths refreshing It doth not onely make a Canopy for us to keep of the scorching Sun but makes a draught for the ground to satisfie its parching thirst So we do not onely magnifie God in singing of Psalms but we solace our selves and put our Josh 6. 20. own hearts into a spiritual delight This duty is much to Edification Our souls are built up as the walls of Jericho were pulled down by loud sounding forth the praises of the Lord while we praise God we engage him and as holy musicians after we have drawn our tongues and hearts into the Quire we shall have our reward The Apostle advises Cum hilaritati inservimus aedificationis et utilitatis mutuae memores esse debemus Daven the Ephesians to speak to one another in Psalms Eph. 5. 19. The Christian at the same time carrying on a three-fold design 1. He praises God 2. He works divine truth upon his
sorrow Titus an Heathen Emperour when a day was past and he h●d done no good Pedr. de Mex Hist Imper. on that day was wont to break out into sighs and sorrow to those who were about him and cry O my friends I have l●ft a day The loss of any day is matter of moan but Ezek. ●9 14. to lose the Lords day and the Lord in that day this is a lamentation and shall be for a lamentation In nature the interp●sition of the Earth between the Sun and the Moon causeth an e●clipse and surely when earth vain thoughts earthly discourse froth and neg●ect have interposed between God and thy soul on his own day what an ecclipse of sadness Eccles 12. 5. should it cause upon thy heart Upon the loss of friends we go in mourning and why not in the loss of Sabbaths which are good friends to the soul Christ waited for thee in every Ordinance thou didst not give him the meeting go home and like the Dove bemoan the loss of 2 Kings 2 12. thy m●●e It is most equal when Ordinances are not our Tristitia nobis data est ut dole ●m●s non de morte sed de peccato ibi sol●●● utilis est ●●●stitia alibi est inutilis Chrysost treasure that they should be our trouble and what we want in good we should make up in g●i●● When Elisha went with Elijah and a chariot of fire parted them asunder carrying Elijah to heaven and leaving Elisha on earth Elisha looked up and cryed my Father my Father Hath God and thee O Christian been parted asunder on a Sabbath and hath the Lord left thy heart on earth and himself gone to heaven O think sadly of this and with bitter moan cry out my Father my Father Repent for the loss of the Lords day and lament after the Lord of that day Sad hearts do well become empty Sabbaths It is very doleful to pine for thirst at the wells mouth If thy heart hath been dead in duties let it be drowned in sorrows Christ looks through the lattice in every Ordinance if thou hast turned thy back upon him by neglect or a vain spirit say with the Church Is any sorrow like unto my sorrow Lam. 1. 12. Search into the cause of this heartless and fruitless passing away Gods precious Sabbath It is good for a Christian to examine what way-l●id his work what kept God and his soul a sunder It may be thou didst not tune thy heart by holy preparation Lo●se strings make no musick every peg must be wound up Vndressed gardens yield no delightfull prospect Mattaina praeparatio necessaria est per diligentem cultus consideratiorem et opis divinae implorationem Riv. in Decalog nor do the nowers grow but on the b●ds where the Gardiner hath used his industry and his artifice Thou hast not happily pl●wed up thy heart aforehand by prayer and meditation and so it is fallow when it comes to Ordinances Holy duties themselves are harsh when the heart is out of tune Marshalled armies engage in battle and prepared hearts engage most properly and most beneficially in Ordinances 1. Cor. 11. 28. To examine our selves is not onely the preface to a Sacrament but to every holy Ordinance No wonder thou art dead in the Sanctuary if thou art deficient in the Closet thou didst lose the morning and therefore thou didst lose the day See is not this the cause thou art so heavy and so stupified in holy Administrations The clock was not wound up and therefore it did not strike Thou wast not Jer. 14. 9. with God in secret and therefore thou didst not meet God in publick so thou looked'st for healing and behold trouble The fire must be blown before it turn into a flame Prepared physick contributes to the cure there must be the Apothecary to prepare as well as the Physician to prescribe Medicines Barascue est feria sexta qu●m nos vocamus diem veneris quae praeparationis nomine appella tu● quia Jud●i s●l●bant illo the necessaria pa●are ●● prox●me 〈◊〉 Sabbatu● 〈◊〉 ●b omni op●re servili cess●●d●m erat Ger. Our hearts must be taken pains withall before they are fit for the Ordinances of a Sabbath The Jews had a Preparation day as well as a Sabbath day John 19. 43. The heart must be broken by repentance raised by meditation spiritualized by prayer over-awed by a sense of the Divine Majesty before it is fit for communion with God It was a serious prayer of holy Hezek●ah 2 Chron. 30. 18 19. The good Lord pardon every one that prepareth his heart to seek God and the Lord God of his Fathe●s though he be not cleansed according to the purification of the Sanctuary And in the subsequent verse it is said The Lord hearkened to Hezekiah and healed the people Experiment this preparatory work and no doubt but thy complaint will cease and the case will be satisfied It may be thy thoughts are low of Sabbath gains Men will not run a race for a trivial prize Merchants venture to Sea Phil. 1. 14. not for Pibbles but Pearles Thou lookest on Ordinances as empty breasts and so thou liest carelesly at them But this is a strange and a sinful mistake Faith the best of graces is the fruit of hearing Rom. 10. 17. The Spirit the best of gifts is the fruit of praying Luke 11. 13. And Christ Christus ill● tri-d●● 〈◊〉 et sepulturae fuit ●●●ciculus My●rhae propter d●l●rem sed p●st triduanum dol●rem absorpsit laetitia et f●ctus est ●t botrus Cypri●n vine●s enged●i illa myrrha ●●mmutata est in vinum suavissinum et salutare the best of banquets is the fruit of Sacramental receiving Mat. 26. 26. Are not Ordinances the Exchequer of soultreasure more sweet then the clusters of Camphire Lam. 1. 14. more transcendent then mountanes of Spices Cant. 8. 14. More pleasant then the Vineyards of Enge●di Cant. 1. 14. Surely thou art mistaken sinner Didst thou ever consider Prayers have held the hands of the Father Exod. 32. 10. Gospel doctrines have employed the tongue of the S●n Luke 4. 43 44. And a shower of the spirit hath fallen upon the Congregation at a Sermon Acts 10. 44. Nay the whole Trinity have been present at a Baptism Mat. 3. 16. Such fruitfull womb● must not be called Barren But this sinfull level which so prostrates Ordinances is no more then the evidence of Satans power and that he leads thee to much Del Rio. captive at his pleasure None will call Ordinances empty but the Father of lies What is it which causeth thy neglect of or slightness in Sabbath duties It may be the force of a temptation Satan hath an enmity to our communion with God It was the Evil one hindred Paul from going to the Thessalonians to scatter and disseminate the truths of the Gospel 1 Thes 2. 18. He stirred up the Jewes against the
Apostles when they were Mat. 13. 19. propagating the blessed Word Acts 14. 2. Acts 17. 13. He John 13. 27. endeavours either to keep us from the Word or to steal the Acts 20. 9. Word from us The evil one enters Judas at the Passeover Mat. 4. 6. rocks Eutichus asleep at a Sermon useth the word as a weapon against Christ and attempts to make it a sword to destroy Ephes 6. 17. which is given for a sword to defend In Ordinances we are seen by good Angels and tempted by evil Good Angels observe our behaviours and evil Angels corrupt them God is no where more pleased and the Devil no where more 1 Cor 11. 10. busied then in the Assemblies of the Saints And therefore it may be Satan hath shaped his temptations into wedges Isa 4. 5. to divide between God and thee in Ordinances and this makes thee complain of slightness of spirit in those holy seasons It may be some unrepented sin damps thy heart to and in Ordinances Jonah when he had sinned then he falls asleep in the ship Sin clogs thee and therefore opportunities do Jon 1. 6. not please thee Thou fearest thy title to Christ and that makes rhee so remiss in thy pursuits after him Stopped stomacks have no appetite Holy David longs to appear before Psalm 42. 1 2. God Trembling consciences like aguish fits take away all delight Musick sounds not to a Prisoner Guilt unremoved by repentance flats the tast of any Ordinance David will wash his hands in innocency so he will compass Gods Altar Psalm 26. 6. The Curtizan in the arms will keep the wife from the bosome Purity and repentance make ordinances as the honey combe It is Christian prudence first to throw out the beam of sin before we look up to the Sun Psalm 19. 10. of Ordinances and to cast out that which grieveth the spirit Job 6. 6. before we come to taste the spirit in holy Communion with Ephes 4. 30. God Offending slaves love not to see their Master Sin makes Isa 59. 2. us shie of Gods presence Adams fall drives him to the trees for a hiding place and sowred Paradise it self to him Choice Gen. 3. 8. dyet doth not fatten one in a consumption Any one sin not vomited up by hearty repentance and self-abhorrency will nauseate the soul in Ordinances Sins are the souls obstructions which may cause more flushes but less digestion of the holy Word VVhen Jonah was thrown over-board then the Sea was calm Let sin be thotowly bemoaned and repented and Christ will be sweet in Ordinances Sin not disgorged sucks the sweetness out of all holy duties and makes them dry and jejune If thou art slight in or omissive of Sabbath duties read lectures upon thy own heart thy formality arises from disproportion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thy heart is not sutable to holy Duties The Apostle speaks of a savour of the Gospel 2 Cor. 2. 14. We want this savour and rellish and this straines the juyce out of every Ordinance our hearts must be assimilated by grace Psalm 42. 4. before they leap for joy in Ordinances as John the Baptist in Luke 1. 41. the womb or as David danced before the Ark. Carnal 2 Sam. 6. 14. hearts are dragged to the Sanctuary Rom. 8. 7. As we see paint drops from the face that not being its proper place but it stayes and remains upon the sign The unsanctified heart is in Ordinances as a Bird in the Cage it flutters a little Cognitio Christi est dulcissimus et fragrantissimus odor tanquam ex praestantibus herbis aut pretiosi● aromatibus exhalatus but it doth not flye it is cooped up and wants its desired freedome it works at an Ordinance as the Israelites did at their bricks they work because they must give an account to their task-master When we are superficial in Ordinances let us see the naughtiness of our own hearts Sickish palates find no meat savoury There are three glasses in which we may best see our hearts 1. In the glass of temptations Sharp storms try the house sharp encounters try the souldier and soft temptations 2 Sam. 11. 4. try the heart How soon did Bathsheba's beauty enthral David though otherwise he was a pattern of sanctity 2. In the glass of afflictions Fire which refines mettals burneth up drosse When Christ was seized upon then all the Disciples left and forsook him Mark 14. 50. Birds which sing in the spring hide in the winter 3. In the glass of Ordinances If the Spirit hath not breathed upon thy heart it will not be lively in holy Ordinances Indeed a gracious heart melts at a reproof clasps Gen. 2. 7. about a Promise hides truth as its treasure but a slight heart will either rage at the smart fret at the length or be Luke 2. 51. offended at the spirituality of an Ordinance Nothing more puts the heart upon the test then holy duties Many followers of Christ left him upon the account of a Sermon John 6. 66. If therefore thou hast not understood more of God on a Sabbath then study to understand more of thy self thy heart is an useful book to read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Take up resolutions of stricter communion with God for the future Bones which are broken if well set grow the stronger Let the sence of former neglects prompt future Ex malis moribus bonae nascuntur leges care thou hast been slight in Ordinances resolve thou wilt be serious and wherein thou hast done evil to do so no more Joh. 5. 14. The heart of man stands in need not onely of Gods work but of mans care the Spirit must sanctifie it Prov. 4 23. and man himself must watch it When thou comest to Ordinances bend thy ear gird up the loynes of thy mind incline 1 Pet. 1. 13. thy heart and summon thy conscience to every truth Cant. 8. 14. in hearing to every petition in praying Ordinances are like Mountains of spices sweet when we are got up but there is some difficulty to get up we must keep our foot Eccles 5. 1. when we go to the house of God and we must keep our heart when we come there Gods Ordinances are high and sublime and the Psalmist saith Mans heart is deep Psalm 64. 6. Now there must be some toyl some labour and Per labores magnos ad praemia magna pervenitur pains to bring them both together God must make an Ordinance stoop and man must pullice up his own heart to an Ordinance It is mans priviledge to enjoy Ordinances but it is his artifice to improve them much strength must be put forth to over-master the heart in holy duties there must be a sense of Gods eye and mans account to enforce a sutable frame The Scholar can scrible by himself but the Masters hand and his own eye