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A73399 An examination and confutation of a lawlesse pamphlet, intituled, A briefe answer to a late treatise of the Sabbath-day: digested dialogue-wise betweene two divines, A and B. By Dr. Fr. White, L. Bishop of Ely White, Francis, 1564?-1638.; White, Francis, 1564?-1638. Treatise of the Sabbath-day. 1637 (1637) STC 25379.5; ESTC S124620 96,141 174

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prate and not to prove that Christians under the Gospell have received an expresse Commandement from God for the Observation of a certaine particular day in every weeke In such manner as they have received the Commandements touching the non-adoration of Images and giving the Cup in the Eucharist But untill hee performe this which will bee impossible hee declareth himselfe a Rude Accuser and withall a foolish and babling disputer B. A second reason why it is not left in the power of the Church to Prescribe what time men please is Because it is God's prerogative as a Master to appoint his owne worship and service So the time a The time commanded in the fourth Commandement is Saturday the Old Legall Sabbath wherein hee will bee served This God Himselfe commandeth in the fourth Commandement Now as the King will not take it well that any meddle with his prerogative and arrogate that to himselfe which is the King 's right So God is justly offended when men presume to assume to themselves that power which is proper and peculiar to God alone b God is wel pleased when the Church assumeth such ministeriall power as he hath granted If any will take upon him to coine money by counterfeiting the King's stamp and name his act is Treason How then shall they escape who presume to coine what time they please for God's solemne worship though they set the counterfeit stamp of God upon it Now the Sabbath Day is of the Lord 's owne making c The Sabbath day of the fourth Commandement was of God's owne immediate making and if this day is the Lord's day Then Th. Brab is in the right and stamping and therefore called the Lord's Day Answ There is no colour of truth in this second reason 1 The Author of it dealeth falsely For the Bishop maintaineth not that it is in the Churches power to appoint what time men please for Divine Worship But hee saith the contrary to wit The Church must appoint such a measure and proportion of time for God's worship and for Religious Offices as is convenient competent and every way sufficient But hee that teacheth this leaveth it not in the power and liberty of the Church to prescribe what time men please Because such time as men please to appoint may be inconvenient incompetent and insufficient for so great and holy a worke 2 The argument it selfe is of no force For although all power of constituting time for his owne worship bee eminently and originally in God himselfe as likewise is the teaching of all supernaturall truth Matth. 23.8 Yet there is given to the Pastors of the Church a derivative delegate and ministeriall power both to teach God's people and likewise to appoint set fixed and convenient dayes and times and places for religious worship pag. 187. Where the great Lord and Master himselfe hath by his owne expresse or immediate Law ordained a particular day or time for his owne worship It is not lawfull for man to alter the same and therefore the Iewes in the Old Law might not change their Sabbath into another day But the Church by ministeriall and delegate power may adde and increase the number of Religious holy dayes if it be necessary or expedient for the peoples edification For in the very time of the Old Law when many festivall dayes were ordained by God's speciall mandate the Iewish Church notwithstanding upon speciall occasions appointed some new Holy Dayes Hest 9. 17. 1 Machab. 4.56 and our blessed Saviour Himselfe honoured one of these feasts with his owne presence Ioh. 10.22 But now in the time of the N. Test the Church of Christ must of necessity have power to ordain set times and festivall dayes for Divine worship and the spirituall edification of People because such dayes and times are necessary to the ends aforesaid and the Lord Himselfe by no expresse particular mandate of Holy Scripture hath commanded them 3 The Objector's similitudes borrowed from Royall Prerogative and coining or stamping monies are nothing worth for although no Subject may lawfully usurpe the Kings's authority or prerogative yet a Subject may receive power from the King's authority and Prerogative to do many things which otherwise were unlawfull for him to doe As appeareth in Iudges who from the King's prerogative in sundry cases have power of life and death In privy Counsellors c. So likewise the Pastors of the Christian Church by a Ministeriall power given them by Christ exercise authority many wayes in ordering times and places and many other actions and circumstances which concerne God's worship Also It is very lawfull for subjects to Coine and stampe monies when the King being supreme Lord granteth them licence and authority It is Treason in such only as presume to doe it without license and because it is a thing prohibited by Lawes and Royall Authority And so it fareth with the Governours in the Christian Church If they presume to appoint any thing which God hath prohibited they are Delinquents But if in their Ecclesiasticall Precepts they exceed not the power given them by Christ they doe well and they ought to be obeyed 4 This Mangie Objection which the Dialogue-dropper hugs in his bosome and when he blatters it out of his wooden deske he is applauded with the loud Hem of his seduced Auditory is borrowed from Old Thomas Cartwright who in his dayes poysoned many credulous people with such Scabby Similitudes and with some other such like popular insinuations pag. 95. B. A third Reason why it is not left in Man's power to institute the solemne day of God's worship his Sabbath Day or to appoint him what proportion of time they please is Because an indefinite time must either binde to all moments of time as a debt when the day of payment is not expressely dated is liable to payment every moment Or else it bindes to no time at all a The natural equity of God's positive Law requires convenient and sufficient time The precept of the Church determines the day or time in speciall Now t●is being performed the d●y and time for the solemne worship of God is made definite and certaine For if the Law of God binde Vs not to an expresse determinate time or day consecrate to his service Then the not allowing of him a set time or day is no sin at all For what God's Law commands not therein man is not bound And where no set Law is of a set time or day there is no transgression if a set time or day be not observed So as by this reason If the Law of the 4th Commandement prescribe no set sacred time or day for rest and sanctification it is a meere Nullity For to say there is a naturall equity in it for some sufficient and convenient time and yet no man can define what this sufficient and convenient time is nay all the heads and wits in the world put together are not able to determine it it is as
simple as to trouble himselfe about the Premisses as the Subtle Logitians use to doe but he holdeth it a more commodious and compendious way to passe by the Premisses with humble silence and then to spend his fury upon the conclusion raving and declaiming against his Opposites in manner following 1 I note how poorely he playes the Divine or Doctor 2 The Adversary hath abused the Scripture 3 It is a Lunaticke Opinion 4 H. B. hath shewed it to be absurd and ridiculous 5 It makes mee tremble to thinke and it amazeth me how one White is contrary to another 6 This seemes strange to mee that so great a Clerk as Francis White should so farre forget himselfe 7 It will be a cooling Carde and no small disgrace to his Lordship 8 He once approved a book which containes and maintaines many and sundry Tenets b●th Pelagian and Popish and one Capitall and enormious error is found in the same taken out of S. Iohn's Canonicall Epistle to wit no murderer hath eternall life abiding in him He that committeth Adultery committeth sinne and he that committeth sin is of the Devill and consequently being formerly just according to Br. B. hee remaineth in the state of grace who during his continuance in sin without actuall Repentance is of the Devill and hath not eternall life abiding in him 9 But let me a little excuse the good Old man and the rather because the Puritans sticke not to cast him in the teeth with White died Blacke 10 In the meane time it is good policy a little to pull in the H●rne● and perhaps the Buzze may somewhat possesse the good Old man with a Panick feare lest not only be loose what he hath but which is much more what his many merits may hope for saving that Saints merits are not so high flowne in the Church of England but they are easily over soared by Simon Magus flying to the top of every Pinacle of the highest Temple upon Angels wings 11 Examine I pray thee whether the long custome of Court-smoothing and Eare-pleasing specially in Divine matters have not bred such a delicacy in the soules tast as that down right Zeale a Iam. 3.14 If ye have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bit●er zeale envying and strife in your hearts glory not for God's glory can handly finde a stomacke to take it downe or digest it but is rejected as a bitter Pill or Potion of such Patients as account the Remedy worse than the Disease 12 How many yer are there in these dayes who would be counted Bishops of Christ's flocke and not Popish or Antichristian who yet looke to little else but the silencing of such as stumble at their Ceremonies and Hierarchie Now these and other such like scandalous and irreverent calumniations are vented by H. B. who stileth the Puritan ● reformed Christian b H. B. Plea to an Appeale as he hates to bee reformed so one peece of his Sermon must be an invective against a Reformed Christian his Puritan instead of reall answer and solution of such Arguments as confound his erroneous and presumptuous dictats The Conclusion THE Author of the late Treatise of the sabbath-Sabbath-day against Th. Bràbourne having duly and impartially examined a briefe Answer digested Dialogue-wise betweene A. and B. is able to observe nothing at all therein materiall substantiall or subservient to truth but the whole Dialogue consisteth of vaine jangling absurd disputing factious cavelling and his maine Position to wit that the fourth Commandement was naturally morall in respect of one particular weekely day is repugnant to all Orthodoxall Divines both ancient and moderne and it crosseth his owne Tenet concerning the observation of the lord's-Lord's-Day If the man were of a meeke and humble spirit or a lover of truth one might perswade him to entertaine a fairer meanes of resolution than his irregular and unlicensed Dialogue way To wit if hee finde himselfe unsatisfied touching the question of the Sabbath he should addresse himselfe to some learned and judicious Persons a Bernard Ep. 8● Plerisque imo cunctis sapiētibus cōtingere solet in rebus videlicet dubiis plus alieno s● quam proprio judicio credere and submit himselfe to a private conference as Theoph. Brabourne did for there is no meanes so profitable so speedie and ready for discovery of truth as this In writing and printing unlicensed Pamphlets a H. B. Plea to an Appeale Truth she complaines of hard usage how shee is driven to seeke corners sith shee cannot passe the Presse cum privilegio there useth to bee much mistaking sometimes of the true state of the question and many times of the Adversaries Tenet likewise false and sophisticall Argumentation mis-understanding of termes impertinent digressions tautologies and unnecessary repetitions false citing of Authors c. But in conference the former things may easily be avoyded or presently be discovered Now if the Author of the Dialogue or if any other that is unsatisfied think good to entertaine the former course he may reape much benefit by it and thereby declare himselfe to be a lover of Vnitie Verity and Peace But on the contrary the venting of Lawlesse and contentious Pamphlets is infamous scandalous and factious it fomenteth schisme and contention in Church and State it disquieteth and offendeth peaceable and godly mindes the same provoketh publike authority and the Adversaries of our Doctrine and Religion are thereby much confirmed in their error Therefore I desire all those who are lovers of truth and sincerity to be men of peace b Cypr. de simpl Pral Pacem quaerere debet sequi filius pacis à dissensionis malo continere linguam suam debet qui novit diligit vinculum Charitatis and to shew themselves adversaries to schisme c Id. de unit Eccles Possidere non potest indumentum Christi qui scindit dividit Ecclesiā Christi and contention in the Church and State wherein they enjoy their lively-hood and their liberty And for your selfe Dialogue B. cease to affect popular applause be not overwise and wilfull in your owne conceits referre the handling and deciding of profound Questions of Theologie to such persons as are qualified with judgement and learning and with greater humility and modesty than your selfe a Hier. c. Ruffin Navem agere ignarus na●is timet Abrotonum aegro non audet pr●p●●●re nisi qui di●●●ci● dare Quod medicorum est promittunt medic● tractant fab●il●● fabri Nec erubescas de commutation● sententiae tuae Non es enim tantae authoritatis famae ut errasse se pudeat Thinke it no disgrace to alter your opinion for you are not of so great Authority or fame as that it can be any shame for you to relinquish your error Also consider impartially with what irreverent language b Cypr. de unit Ecclesia Lingua Christum confessa non sit maledica non turbulenta non conviciis litibus perstrepeus audiatur non contra fratres Dei sacerdotes serpentis venena jaculetur you have entreated many worthy Fathers and Pillars of our Church and with what bitter and envious zeale you have traduced conformable Persons of very good quality and what scandall you have given to many people by abating as much in you lyeth their love and due respect towards that Religion and forme of Church-government which is setled in our State Lastly consider well Saint Hierom his Instruction Bonum est obedire Majoribus parere Praefectis c Erasm Schol. in Hieron In some Copies it is read Praefectis and in some other Perfectis post regulam Scripturarum vitae suae rationem ab aliis discere Nec Praeceptore uti pessimo praesumptione sua It is a good and safe way for people of meaner quality to be teachable and obedient to their superiours to be guided and instructed by such as are of greater perfection than themselves and after the rule of holy Scripture to order the course of their actions by direction of others but in no wise to make presumption which is a perverse Counsellor to be their Leader Salomon's Counsell is Heare instruction and bee wise and refuse it not Pro. 9.33 Hee that loveth instruction loveth knowledge but he that hateth Correction is a foole Pro. 12. When Pride commeth then commeth shame but with the lowly is wisdome Pro. 11. Only by pride doth man make contention but with the well-advised is wisedome Pro. 13. Now let all this which hath beene spoken perswade Dialogue B. to cast away from him pride envy and contention to cease to be arrogant d Chrys in Rom. hom 20. Nihil hominem adeo stultum facit quemadmodum Arrogantia to learne yet at the last to understand his distance e Ib. Qui seipsum ignorat quomodo quae supra se sunt cognoscat Quemadmodū enim qui phrenesi laborat cum seipsum non agnoscat oculus cum ipse caecus sit omnia reliqua mēbra in tenebris sūt ita Arrogantia se habet and in the feare of God to humble and submit himselfe to his learned lawfull and godly superiors And let him not give just occasion to have Salomon's sentence applyed unto him Though thou shouldest bray a foole in a morter like wheate with a Pestle yet will not his folly depart from him Prov. 27. ver 22. FINIS
AN EXAMINATION AND CONFVTATION of a Lawlesse Pamphlet INTITVLED A briefe Answer to a late Treatise of the sabbath-SABBATH-DAY Digested Dialogue-wise betweene two Divines A and B. By Dr. FR. WHITE L. Bishop of ELY ● COR. 13. We can do nothing against the Truth but for the Truth Hieronymu● de Luciferianis dicit Facilius eos vinci posse quam persuaderi LONDON Printed by Richard Badger and are to be sold in S. Pauls Church-yard 1637. TO THE CHRISTIAN AND IVDICIOVS READER THe Reason and Occasion inducing my Superiours to imploy mee in a service of the Church for penning and publishing a Treatise of the Sabbath and of the Lord's-day is delivered in my Epistle Dedicatory to the Lord's Grace of Canterbury And my intention in performing thereof was to deliver and maintaine the Orthodoxall Doctrine of the Primitive Church and the Doctrine of the Church of England authorised by the Lawes and Statutes of our Kingdome against the Sabbatarian Error of one Theophilus Brabourne and because this Errant had grounded the most of his Arguments upon certaine Principles borrowed from some Moderne Teachers of our owne Nation I was compelled to examine and confute the same This service being with much Care and Diligence performed by me I expected some thankes for convicting and converting that Errant and for preventing the farther spreading and infection of his Error But at least I presumed to have obtained a charitable Construction of such Passages in my Treatise as were subservient to a farther discovery of Verity and that if any had found cause of dissenting from me they would in a charitable and peaceable manner have propounded their Exceptions It hath now so fallen out that contrary both to my desert and expectation A certaine clamorous and audacious Scripturient a Person of a very weak judgement but yet exceeding confident and arrogant hath vented a Lawlesse and unlicensed Pamphlet digested Dialogue-wise c. wherein he Proclaimeth with open mouth that my Treatise of the Sabbath overthroweth the publike Doctrine of the Church of England touching that Question Now the whole matter and frame of his Dialogue is so rude and indigested and the Author thereof is so notorious for his ignorance envy and presumption that it rather merits execration than confutation and many Persons of worth and quality have perswaded me rather to contemne than to confute either the worke or the workeman But when I consider the cause it selfe and the humour of factious people who are alwaies ready to conceive their owne fancies to be irrefragable Verities if they passe in publike without just reproofe I conceive it can be no indiscretion in Me or dishonour for Me to appeare in defence of Veritie against falsitie and iniquitie how base and unworthy soever the Author is with whom I shall contest Now all which I shall desire of the judicious Reader is first that he take into consideration the maine accusation of the Dialogist which is That in my Treatise of the Sabbath I have overthrowne the publike Doctrine of the CHURCH of ENGLAND touching this Question Secondly that he will duely and impartially consider and examine in the ballance of true judgement the Adversaries Exceptions and Objections against my Arguments and Positions and my Answere and confutation of the same Concerning the maine accusation of the Objector before mentioned the Reader may easily discerne the falsity and iniquitie of it for the Doctrine of the Church of England concerning the Sunday and other Holy dayes is in plaine and expresse termes delivered in the Statute of Quinto and Sexto of King EDWARD the sixt cap. 3. in manner following Neither is it to be thought that there is any certaine time or number of dayes prescribed in holy Scripture but that the appointment both of the time and also of the number of the dayes is left by the authoritie of God's Word to the libertie of CHRIST'S Church to be determined and assigned orderly in every Countrey by the discretion of the Rulers and Ministers thereof as they shal judge most expedient to the setting forth of God's glorie and the edification of their people Be it therefore enacted by the King our Sovereigne Lord with the assent of the Lords Spirituall and Temporall and the Commons in this present Parliament assembled by the authority of the same that all the dayes hereafter mentioned shall bee kept and commanded to be kept holy dayes and none other that is to say All Sundayes in the yeere The dayes of the Feasts of the Circumcision of our Lord IESUS CHRIST of the Epiphanie of the Purification of the blessed Virgine of S. Matthias the Apostle c. And that none other day shall be kept holy day or to abstaine from lawfull bodily labour The former Statute being repealed Anno primo Mariae cap. 2. was revived An. prim R. IACOBI cap. 25. and is at this day in force as appeareth by the booke of Statutes pag. 894. and by the judgement of the Reverend Iudges and Masters in our Lawes A Second passage which I desire the judicious Reader to observe is That the Doctrine concerning the Sabbath day and the Lord's day maintained in my Treatise agreeth exactly with the unanimous Tenet of the Orthodoxall Catholike Church of ancient times and the same agreeth likewise with the Tenet both of all the Schoole Doctours ancient and moderne and also with the Tenet of the best learned and most religious Divines of the reformed Churches beyond Sea And lastly the same is agreeable to the Tenet of the Holy Martyrs of our owne Church Bishop Cranmer Iohn Frith William Tindall D. Barnes c. And the other opinion That the fourth Commandement is a Precept of the Law of Nature and purely and intirely Morall And that the observation of the Lord's Day is expresly commanded by that Precept of the Decalogue is a novell Position repugnant to all or most Orthodoxall Divines who have instructed Christian people in the wayes of godlinesse in former or moderne times Every one of the former passages is so fully prooved and confirmed in my Treatise of the Sabbath that no just exception can be taken against my proceeding in handling this Question and therefore the boldnesse and impudency of this blattering Dialogist is detestable when he affirmeth that my Treatise of the Sabbath overthroweth the Doctrine of the Church of England Lastly all the Reward which I desire to reape for my travell in this or in any other service of the Church is that the Truth which I have faithfully delivered may bee maintained and my integrity be protected against gracelesse impudent and irreverent Calumniators such as the Author of the Dialogue hath proclaimed himselfe to be in this and in some other of his lewd and lawlesse Pamphlets For although this Dialogue penner hath concealed his name yet Ex ungue Leonem the world may easily conjecture who the Creature is by his foule paw The Scope of his writing in his Pamphlets is to magnifie his owne Zeale piety
and integrity to perswade the World that he alone is left a Prophet of the LORD and is guided with the spirit of Verity and Fidelity and that the present Fathers and Rulers of our CHURCH and other conformable Persons who comply with them are little better than Hirelings and blinde Guides And besides his ignorance which is notorious the violent Man is so far transported with bitter Zeale that whatsoever proceeds from him is litigious clamorous scandalous and abusive and his Pamphlets are fraughted with such Materials as are apt to poyson Christian people with contempt and hatred of Ecclesiasticall Government and present Religion established in our CHURCH Also he is possessed with a gracelesse and malignant humour to wit looke whatsoever gives all other judicious and godly Persons best content enrageth him against such as are imployed in the Governement and publike service of the CHURCH But I shall detaine my Reader no longer from the Examination of this Man's Quarrels and Objections vented in his Dialogue and my Answer and Reply shall make it evident that the Doctrine propounded and maintained in my Treatise of the Sabbath maugre the malice of this Blatterant standeth firme and is not subject to any just Reproofe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Prove all things and hold fast that which is good A devout Friend of all those who are lovers of Truth and Peace Fra. Eliens The Title and Inscription of the Dialogue A BRIEFE ANSWER TO A LATE TREATISE OF THE SABBATH-DAY Digested Dialogue-wise betweene two Divines A and B beginning with these words Brother You are happily met THE saying of Saint Augustine may justly bee applyed to this Dialogist to wit It is an easie matter for such as cannot be silent to frame babling answers and none are so forward to crake as empty Casks puffed up with Vanity but although Vanity can make lowder noise than Verity yet it will have no power to prevaile against Verity a Aug. de Civ Dei l. 5. c. 27. Facile est cuiquam videri respondisse qui tacere noluerit Aut quid est loquacius vanitate Quae non ideo potest quod veritas quia si voluerit etiam plus potest clamare quā veritas Now upon due examination of the Cavils and Objections contained in this Dialogue it will be manifest that the Author thereof is not a person in any measure qualified with endowments and abilities requisite and necessary for such an Vndertaker to wit with sound Iudgement sufficient Learning love of Verity together with Modesty and Humility For instead of solid and substantiall proceeding the judicious Reader shall finde nothing in his Dialogue but presumptuous Dictats absurd and non-concluding Objections perversion of the true state of the question solution of Arguments by denying the Conclusion and pretermission of the Premises abuse of Terms when he citeth Authors rude and irreverent Behaviour b Hieron ad Nepotian Nolo te declamatorē esse rabulam garrulumque sine ratione sed mysteriorum peritum Sacramentorum Dei tui eruditissimū Verba voluere celeritate dicendi apud imperitum vulgus admirationem sui facere indoctorum hominum est Attrita frons interpretatur saepe quo● nescit cum aliis persuaserit sibi quoque usurpat scientiam toward the Person Calling of Him whom he stileth his Adversary And the most of his Positions concerning the Sabbath and the Lord's-day are repugnant to the common sentence of all learned and godly Divines who have treated of this Argument in ancient or moderne Times This rude and gracelesse creature had not the honesty to consider that the Author of that Treatise against which he barketh undertook his Work by command of High and lawfull Authority and the true Reason inducing his Superiours to imploy him in this service was urgent and important For a pestilent and subtile Treatise was published and dedicated to his Royall Majestie in which the Author maintained with much confidence a Theoph. Brab I am tyed in conscience rather to depart with my life than with this truth so captivated is my conscience and enthralled to the Law of God H. B. Law and Gosp reconcil ●p Dedicat. A Booke lately come forth which would utterly evacuate the Lord's-day and reduce us to the Iewish Sabbath againe which will be a worke so much the more necessary by how much this Iewish Sabbatarian findes already many idle g●ddy-brained Christians to imbrace th● his Booke which is written with a mighty confident and Gyant like spirit as if the arguments thereof were invincible and with sundry probable Arguments That the old Sabbath of the 4th Commandement and not the Sunday or Lord's day of every weeke ought by divine Law to be religiously observed in the Christian Church Now the Grounds and Principles upon which that Sabbatarian builded his errour were the same Positions and Dictats which this Dialogue weaver and some late Teachers of our owne Nation have peremptorily maintained in their Pamphlets Lectures and Catechismes and had those Positions and Dictats beene divine Verities it would have beene impossible to have solved Th. Brab his Objections in a cleere and substantiall manner For it is most certaine that the Sabbath-day commanded to be kept holy in the 4th Precept of the Decalogue was Saturday the seventh and last day of the Weeke b Aug. Ep. 119. c. 10. Sabbatum cōmendatum est priori populo in ocio corporali temporaliter ut figura esset sanctificationis in r●quiem Spiritus Sancti Nusquam enim legimus sanctificationem per omnes priores dies de solo Sabbato dictum est et sanctificavit Deus diem septimum That day of the weeke in which Almighty God ceased or rested from the worke of prime Creation That very day which the Iewes perpetually observed in their Generations The same day concerning which the Pharisees so often contested with our Saviour The day which was a figure of Christ his resting in his grave and of our Christian Sabbatisme or spirituall Resting from sin Reade the Bishops Treatise pag. 182 183. Now this being a certaine and undeniable verity it will be consequent that if the 4th Commandement of the Decalogue be simply entirely and properly morall and of the Law of Nature as this Objecter pretendeth Then the Saturday-Sabbath of every Weeke must be observed by Christians and not the Sunday or Lord's Day in the place thereof A necessity therefore was cast upon the Bishop to examine this and such like Sabbatarian Principles and to demonstrate the falsity of them For He was not otherwise able by any course of true Disputation to solve Th. Brab his objections Sine causa enimaliquis ramos conatur incidere si radicem non conatur evellere a Aug. li. 50. Homil 8. It will prove lost labour for any one to endeavour to lop off the boughes or branches of a Tree if he shall still suffer the Roote to grow Also because Th. Brab had ●●on
desperate cause B. The Homily saith All Christians ought and are bound in conscience of the fourth Commandement to keepe the Lord's-day holily Ans 1. The equity and Analogie of the fourth Commandement obligeth Christians to observe a convenient and sufficient time for Gods worship and service and for the exercise of spirituall and religious duties 2 After such time as the Orthodoxall Catholike Church hath upon the example of the holy Apostles and for other weighty reasons devoted the Sunday of every Weeke to the exercise of Religious duties Christian people in obedience to the Law of the Church grounded upon the equity of the fourth Commandement and the example of the Apostles are bound in conscience to observe that Day holily in the performance of religious duties pag. 100. B. The Lord's-day is and may be called our Christian Sabbath-day and therefore it is not Iewish to call it so Answ 1. The Lord's-day is not the litterall Sabbath of the fourth Commandement and therfore in propriety of speech it cannot be called the sabbath-Sabbath-day expressely or in particular commanded in the Decalogue but the same is stiled by the Homily our Christian Sabbath in a mysticall and analogicall sense even as mort●fication is called Circumcision Rom. 2.29 and sincerity and truth are called unleavened bread 1 Cor. 8.5 B. That this day is wholly to be spent in holy rest and duties of sanctification and therefore no part of it to be spent in vaine pleasures and profane pastimes Answ 1. The Homily according to the Tenet also of other Divines a Bucer in Mat. 12. p. 113. Eximatur è cordibus hominum opinio necessitatis ne quis credat eum diem per se esse aliis sanctiorem vel operari in eo per se esse peccatum Danaeus Eth. Christ l 2. c. 9. Nobis Christianis non tanta tamve severa rigida observatio ne laboremus in die Dominica imposita est Nam ex lege Constantini licet serere metere in die Dominica si commodum sit Aquin. 2. 2. q. 122. ar 4. ad 4. Non est ita arcta prohibitio operandi in die Dominica sicut in die Sabbati sed quaedam opera conceduntur in die Dominica quae in die Sabbati prohibebantur sicut decoctio ciborū c. permitteth some kinde of labour upon the Sunday Therefore by wholly it understandeth not every houre and minute of the day but so much thereof as is necessary and morally sufficient for the performance of the religious duties of the day pag. 218 219. 225. 231. 2 If the Objector would have proceeded sincerely he should have declared whether by vaine pleasures and profane pastimes he understandeth all bodily exercise and recreation in generall or such only as is vitious in quality or by reason of circumstances pag. 229. If he meane the first we finde no words in the Homily condemning in generall all recreation to wit such as is sober and honest in quality and which is not attended with evill circumstances But if he understand the Homily in the latter sense to wit that it condemneth ungodly pastimes Then he might have observed the Bishops words pag. 258. The Lawes of our Church and Common-wealth condemne and chastise all things profane and vitious upon the Lord's-day And pag. 259. All obscene lascivious and voluptuous pastimes are prohibited on this day And pag. 229. All kindes of Recreations which are of evill quality in regard of their object or which are attended with evill circumstances c. If they bee used upon the Lord's-day or on other Festival daies they are sacrilegious c. And in the Ep. Dedicat. Profanation of the Lords-day and of other solemne Festivall dayes which are devoted to religious offices is impious and hateful in the sight of God and all good men and therfore to bee avoided by such as feare God and to be corrected and punished in those which shall offend and pag. 109. 110. This Ordinance and observation of the Lord's Day began in the holy Apostles age and hath universally beene continued ever since to the great honour of Christ our Saviour and to the marvellous benefit of Christian soules who upon that holy day are edified weekely in godlinesse vertue and true Religion And therefore we justly account all those who maligne the honour of this blessed day prophane and sacrilegious A. The Author seemes to acknowledge some morality naturall to be in the fourth Commandement for pag. 135. He saith Our resting from labour in respect of the generall is grounded upon the Law of Nature or the equity of the fourth Commandement B. This is nothing to the purpose to acquit him from being an Adversary to the expresse doctrine of our Church Dolosus versatur in Vniversalibus it was the speech of King Iames. The naturall morality of the fourth Commandement is not in generall to imply some Individuum Vagum some certaine uncertaine indefinite time for God's Worship a Vrsin Cat. de Sabba Non sumus allegati ut diem vel Iovis vel Saturni vel Mercurij vel ullum alium certum habeamus Rivet in Exod. 20. pag. 193. Petitur principium cum id pro confesso sumitur ad substantiam mādati quarti quatenus morale est pertinere circumstantiam die● septimi Phil. Melancht loc Com. d. 3. praecepto Recte dicitur in tertio praecepto duas esse partes unam naturalem seu moralem seu genus altera pars est caeremonia propria populo Israel seu species de die septimo De priore dicitur naturale seu genus esse perpetuū non posse abrogari videlicet mandatū de conservādo ministerio publico sic ut aliquo die populus doceatur caeremoniae divinitus institutae exerceantur Species vero quae nominatim de septimo die loquitur abrogata est for the Commandement is expresse for a certaine day in the weeke for the Sabbath Day Remember the Sabbath to sanctifie it It saith not remember to set apart and allow some time for the service of God but it determines the time and day lest otherwise being left undetermined man should forget God Himselfe and allow no time or day at all for God's service or if he did God should bee beholden to him for it Ans 1. Is he Dolosus a deceiver who maintaineth there is a generall equitie in Divine Positive Lawes No man living is able to justifie this For in the Old Iudiciall Lawes yea in many Ceremoniall Lawes there is contained a generall Equity grounded upon the Law of Nature In the judiciall Law set downe Exod. 22.1 2. there is a generall equity implyed obliging Christians to restitution of goods unjustly by them taken away In the Law of Deuteronomy 25.4 Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the Oxe that treadeth out the Corne there was contained a generall naturall equity 1 Corinth 9.9 Therefore he is not Dolosus who maintaineth a generall equity in the fourth Commandement but he is a Dolt who denies
of prescribing a time and day of holy rest unto the Lord of the Sabbath who hath expressed his will and pleasure herein in his Law of the fourth Commandement as our Homily saith Answ The Bishop acknowledgeth a morall equity in the fourth Commandement for the observation of necessary sufficient and convenient times dayes houres c. For Gods publike worship and the performance of spirituall and Religious of fices And for ought this Objector hath said or can say to the contrary more than this cannot bee proved out of the Law of the fourth Commandement or by any necessary illation from any sentence of the Commandement Or from any principle of the Law of Nature b Lorea 1. 2. de leg Disp 8. Legis naturae alia sunt prima principia practica per se nota alia sunt conclusiones ex principiis deductae cōclusiones autem aliae universaliores proximiores primis principiis aliae quae à primis principiis magis distant sunt specialiores de particularibus objectis For the Principle of naturall Law is God is duly and religiously to be worshipped but unlesse convenient and sufficient time be appointed God Almighty cannot bee duly and religiously worshipped Therefore a necessary convenient and sufficient time must bee appointed c Alex. Hal. 3. q. 32. m. 2. De ratione benè ordinata est quod cum semper non possumus vacare Deo propter temporales corporales necessitates quod aliquādo vacemus oportet igitur habere tempus aliquod determinatū either expressely by God Himselfe or by such as he hath ordained to bee his Stewards and Officers in the Church for Divine worship 2 The fourth Commandement enjoyned the Iewes to keepe holy the seventh day being our Saturday but from hence we cannot conclude by necessary inference that the fourth Commandement enjoyneth Christians to keep holy the Sunday being the first day of the weeke For the speciall and proper materiall object of every Law is a substantiall part of that Law but if the substantiall part of any Law be changed and taken away a new Subject or materiall Object is no part of the old Law but another law must be ordained for the se●ling of that new Subject and materiall object in the place of the former 3 Whereas the Objector pretendeth that the Church of England disclaimeth all power of setling the particular time of God's publike worship how then commeth it to passe that this Church commandeth the solemne observation of Easter Whitsuntide Christmasse and of many other Holy-dayes to be dayes and times for the religious service of God and Christ A. But the Homily seemes to favour his opinion saying godly Christian people began to chuse them a standing day of the weeke c. and therefore it seemes to be at the Churches choyce B. Our choyce doth not necessarily imply a power of institution we are said to chuse life and truth before death and error are we therefore the Authors of them Againe our choyce herein is according to God's Commandement Thirdly the Homily saith expressely that those godly Christian people did in their choyce follow the example and Commandement of God Now what example c The Example of God specified in the fourth Cōmandement was his own resting ceasing upon the olde Sabbath Day from the worke of prime Creation and not our Saviour his resting from the work of Resurrection upon the first day of the weeke had they but Christ's rising and resting that day after the example of God's resting the seventh day And for Commandement they had both the fourth Commandement and an Apostolicall Precept 1 Cor. 16. d No generall commandem●t common to all Christians for the weekely observation of Sunday is delivered in these two Texts of holy Scripture And that place in the Revelation appropriating this Day as holy to the Lord and so ratified by God himselfe And who were they which taught those godly Christian people to keep that day viz. The Apostles And therefore we must put a vast difference betweene the unerring Apostles and the succeeding Churches so as the Homily is cleare against him Answ The Objector saith The Churches choice doth not necessarily imply a power of institution c. It is answered making choyce many times implyes a free election and institution both in Scripture Deut. 26.2 1 Sam. 17.8 and in Ecclesiasticall and Humane Authors and that it is thus to be understood in the Homily is proved in manner following The sense of the Homily is according to the authorized Doctrine of the Church of England But the authorized Doctrine of the Church of England is That the appointment both of the time and number of dayes is left by the authority of Gods Word to the liberty of the Church to be assigned orderly by the discretion of the Rulers and Ministers thereof as they shall judge most expedient to the true setting forth of Gods glory and the edification of the people Ergo the Churches choyce according to the Homily is a free election of a convenient day and of other convenient and sufficient time for the service of God and the edification of Christian people 2 There is a great difference betweene a Precept and an Example The Homily saith that godly Christians to wit by imitation of God's example observed a seventh day but it affirmeth not that they did this by an expresse Commandement of any Divine Law Also godly Christians made the fourth Commandement of the Decalogue a motive to induce them to make one day of seven a weekly Holy day but that which is only a motive or a reason inducing and perswading to performe an action is not an expresse imperative or formall Law The sense therefore of the Homily is That Christians made choyce of a weekely standing day by the rule of the equity of the fourth Commandement and not by any expresse or formall Divine Law c Walaeus d. Sab. ● 7. Nec Christus nec ipsi Apostoli ex praescripto Christi de observatione hujus diei ullū expressum mandatum quemadmodum de aliis pietatis officiis reliquerunt Non videtur autem ullo modo verisimile Si Christus nos ad observationem ullius diei ut partem cultus voluisset astringere fuisse fucurum ut id nullo praecepto indicasset Bulling Apoc. 2. Non legimus eam ullibi praecep●am Hospinian d. se● cap. 8. Non invenitur Apostolos aut alios lege aliqua aut praecepto observationem ejus instituisse 3 Our Saviour's Resurrection upon one Sunday in the yeare cannot of it selfe unlesse some precept were added be a Law to enjoyne Christians to observe every Sunday of the Weeke throughout the whole yeare reade pag. 302. 4 The fourth Commandement is directly and in plaine termes for Saturday pag. 182 183. and therefore if that Commandement is still in force according to the literall sense then the Christian Church is obliged to observe the old legall
though not expressed For prophane Atheisme is more unlawfull at least more hainous than the worshipping of false Gods yet this last only is expressed in the very letter of the Law So Perjury is more hainous than meere taking the Name of God in vaine in ordinary discourse and common swearing Sodomie Incest and Buggery more odious sinnes than Adultery or Fornication though the other bee only within the intention of the Law and by way of consequence prohibited by the 1. 3. and 7th Commandements the latter by the expresse letter and words thereof Answ That which is directly formally expressely literally or by a necessary and immediate inference prohibited by any Law is ordinarily more unlawfull than those things which by a remote probable inference only are concluded to be repugnant to the Law The sins mentioned by the Objector Atheisme Perjury Buggery c. are not only prohibited by necessary inference and by the intention of the speciall precepts of the Decalogue but also by the Law of nature and by other expresse Negative Precepts delivered in the Old and New Testament But whereas corporall labour was expressely and in literall termes prohibited the Iewes upon the Legal Sabbath-day Honest and sober Recreation upon some part of the Lord's-Day in such manner as the Bishop maintaineth the same is prohibited neither by the expresse words of the 4th Commandement nor by any formall and necessary illation from the words and sentences of that Commandement nor yet by the Law of nature nor by any negative precepts of the Old or New Testament Therefore if bodily labour expressely and literally prohibited by the fourth Commandement was notwithstanding that prohibition in many cases lawfull among the Iewes Then honest and sober recreation such as is neither vicious in quality nor in circ●mstances being neither expressely nor virtually prohibited or condemned by any Divine Law naturall positive or Evangelicall must be held to bee lawfull untill the Opposers thereof shall bee able to make it evident by demonstrative reasons that the same is repugnant to some divine Law according to all or some of those formes which are before expressed A. There remaineth yet one thing to be cleared and that is about the judgement of the reformed Churches beyond the Seas which the Opposite Author pleadeth to be all for him B. It 's true and I cannot but smile when I thinke of it That they which make no bones even in open Court to vilifie the prime pillars of those Churches yea and to nullifie the Churches themselves as if they were no true Churches as having no lawful Ministers because in Prelates to put them in orders should notwithstanding daigne to grace them so much as to call them in and to account them competent witnesses in the cause But a bad cause a How can that be esteemed a bad cause which is confirmed by the common and consent●e● testimony of the most godly learned Divines both A●elent and moderne is glad of any Patron or Advocate to plead for it though the Clyent have openly stigmatized him for a Rascall But what stead will the reformed Divines stand him in Certainly in the point of sports and Recreations they will utterly faile him yea and disclaime him too In the point of the Institution of the Lord's-Day indeed and the Obligation of it to Christians a great part is for him though the better part b Br. B. Should have named some of those which he accounteth the better part for he is so precipitate and impudent in his affirmations that judicious persons can give no credit to his own bare word is for Vs this is confessed of Vs. Answ The Bishop in his Treatise hath made cleare ostension that his Tenet concerning the Sabbath and Lord's-Day is consonant 1. To the Vnanimous sentence of Primitive Antiquity 2. To the Doctrine of the Church of England testified and authorized by statute Law 3. To the common Vote of the best learned Doctors of the reformed Churches c The Augustane and Helvetian Cōfessions Melancton Calvin Bucer Bullinger Peter Martyr Musculus Beza Zanchius Chemnitius Visinus Brentius Hospinian Hemmingius Pareus Herbrandus Marbachius Zepper● Battus Wolaeus Rivetus Poliander Gomorus Thysius Gualter P●scator Zegedinus Steckelius Isenmánus alii beyond the Seas The former Remonstrance hath produced two effects 1. I hath giv●n 〈◊〉 all wound to Br. B. and to his Assistants by declaring that they are solitary and singular in their Sabbatarian Tenet 2. It hath yeelded full satisfaction to all judicious honest and godly Readers concerning this question But the Dialogue-Barker perceiving his cause to be desperate in his obstinacy neverthelesse spurneth against the prickes and proceedeth rudely and wildely in manner following 1 He introduceth his interlocutory Assistant one Br. A. who scratcheth his fellow Mule a Mutuû muli scabunt dictum ubi improbi illaudati se vicissim mirantur praedicāt and prateth in manner following You have so fully cleared this point about Recreation from all the Subterfuges of him that hath so moyled himselfe to make something of nothing c. But wherein hath Br. B. cleared the point c Hee hath alleadged some Decrees of Foraine States and Churches which nothing concerne the Bishop's Tenet for they doe not so much as intimate that all bodily exercise and Recreation and namely such as is neither vicious in quality nor in circumstance nor yet prohibited by the present state wherein people live is simply unlawfull or morally evill upon some part of the Holy day 2 Br. B. Himselfe to manifest his gravity saith I cannot but smile c. But besides his merriment the ridiculous man uttereth no word or sentence savouring of truth or sounding to reason For 1 Vpon the matter he confesseth that the positions of the Sunday Sabbatarians here in England are singular and different from the common sentence of other Churches for otherwise to what purpose serveth his speech pag. 6. The Church of England to wit Br. B. himselfe and his owne Sabbatarian Allies is more cleare and sound in the point of the Sabbath than any Church in the world for it is as cleere as the Noone-day that the Orthodoxall part of the Church of England accordeth with the Primitive Fathers and with the Schoole Doctors and with the best learned in the Reformed Churches and renounceth the temerarious Doctrine of H. B. and of other Novell Teachers concerning the Sabbath 2 Whereas this Objector denies us the suffrage of Reformed Churches pretending that some amongst us have vilified their prime Pillars c. Our Answer is That this man doth not alwayes write or preach Gospell a H●●●on ad Iulian Diacon Mendacia faciunt ut nec vera dicentibꝰ credatur for quite contrary to his report we reverence and much respect all learned and godly Divines in what Church soever they live or teach yea although in some Theologicall Questions wee take liberty upon just reason to dissent from them But