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A53694 Exercitations concerning the name, original, nature, use, and continuance of a day of sacred rest wherein the original of the Sabbath from the foundation of the world, the morality of the Fourth commandment with the change of the Seventh day are enquired into : together with an assertion of the divine institution of the Lord's Day, and practical directions for its due observation / by John Owen. Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1671 (1671) Wing O751; ESTC R25514 205,191 378

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And hereby are we delivered from that anxious solicitude about particular instances in outward duties which was a great part of the yoke of the People of old For 1 Hence we may in all our duties look on God as a Father By the Spirit of his Son we may in them all cry Abba Father For through Christ we have an access in one Spirit unto tho Father Ephes. 2. 18. To God as a Father as one that will not alwayes chide that doth not watch our steps for our hurt but remembreth that we are but dust One who tyeth us not up to rigid exactness in outward things whilest we act in an holy spirit of filial obedience as his sons or children And there is great difference between the duties of servants and children neither hath a Father the same measure of them The consideration hereof regulated by the general Rules of the Scripture will resolve a thousand of such scruples as the Jews of old while servants were perplexed withall 2 Hence we come to know that he will be worshipped in spirit and in truth Therefore he more minds the inward frame of our hearts wherewith we serve him than the meer performance of outward duties which are alone so far accepted with him as they are expressions and demonstrations thereof If then in the observation of this Day our hearts are single and sincere in our aims at his Glory with delight it is of more price with him than the most rigid observation of outward duties by number and measure 3 Therefore the minds of Believers are no more influenced unto this duty by the curse of the Law and the terror thereof as represented in the threatned penalty of death The Authority and Love of Jesus Christ are the principal causes of our Obedience Hence our main duty lyeth in an endeavour to get spiritual joy and delight in the services of this Day which are the especial effects of spiritual liberty So the Prophet requires that we should call the Sabbath our delight holy and honourable of the Lord Isa. 58. 13. As also that on the other side we should not do our own pleasure nor do our own wayes nor find our own pleasure nor speak our own words And these Cautions seem to regard the Sabbath absolutely and not as Judaical But I much question whether they have not in the interpretation of some been extended beyond their original intention For the true meaning of them is no more but this that we should so delight our selves in the Lord on his holy Day as that being expresly forbidden our usual labour we should not need for want of satisfaction in our duties to turn aside unto our own pleasures and vain wayes which are only our own to spend our time and pass over the Sabbath a thing complained of by many whence sin and Satan have been more served on this Day than on all the Dayes of the Week beside But I no way think that here is a restraint laid on us from such Words Wayes and Works as neither hinder the performance of any religious duties belonging to the due celebration of the worship of God on the Day nor are apt in themselves to unframe our spirits or divert our affections from them And those whose minds are fixed in a spirit of liberty to glorifie God in and by this Day of Rest seeking after Communion with him in the wayes of his worship will be unto themselves a better Rule for their Words and Actions than those who may aim to reckon over all they do or say which may be done in such a manner as to become the Judaical Sabbath much more then the Lords-Day § 10 Thirdly Be sure to bring good and right Principles unto the performance of the duty of keeping a Day of Rest holy unto the Lord. Some of these I shall name as confirmed expresly in or drawn evidently from the preceding Discourses 1. Remember that there is a Weekly Rest or an holy Rest of one Day in the week due to the solemn work of glorifying God as God Remember the Sabbath to keep it holy We have had a Week unto our own occasions or we have a prospect of a Week in the patience of God for them Let us Remember that God puts in for some Time with us All is not our own We are not our own Lords Some time God will have to himself from all that own him in the World And this is that Time season or Day He esteems not himself acknowledged nor his Soveraignty owned in the World without it And therefore this Day of Rest he required the first Day as it were that the World stood upon its legs hath done so all along and will do so to the last Day of its duration When he had made all things and saw that they were good and was refreshed in them he required that we should own and acknowledge his Goodness and Power therein This duty we owe to God as God 2 That God appointed this Day to teach us that as he rested therein so we should seek after Rest in him here and look on this Day as a pledge of eternal Rest with him hereafter So was it from the beginning This was the End of the appointment of this Day Now our Rest in God in general consists in two things 1 In our Approbation of the Works of God and the Law of our Obedience with the Covenant of God thereon These things are expressive of and do represent unto us the Goodness Righteousness Holiness Faithfulness and Power of God For these and with respect unto them are we to give Glory to him What God rests in he requires that through it we should seek for our Rest in him As this was the duty of man in Innocency and under the Law so it is ours now much more For God hath now more eminently and gloriously unveiled and displayed the Excellencies of his Nature and the Counsels of his Wisdome in and by Jesus Christ than he had done under the first Covenant And this should work us to a greater and more holy admiration of them For if we are to acknowledge that the Law is holy just and good as our Apostle speaks although it is now useless as to the bringing of us to Rest in God how much more ought we to own and subscribe to the Gospel and the declaration that God hath made of himself therein that so it is 2 In an actual solemn compliance with his Will expressed in his Works Law and Covenant This brings us unto present satisfaction in him and leads us to the full enjoyment of him This is a Day of Rest but we cannot Rest in a Day nor any thing that a Day can afford only it is an help and means of bringing us to Rest in God Without this design all our Observation of a Sabbath is of no use nor advantage Nothing will thence redound to the Glory of God nor the benefit of our own souls And this they
Gentiles shall keep the Sabbath one day in seven in Hell 6. For the Distinction which they have invented that a Proselyte of the Gate might work for himself but not for his Master it is one of the many whereby they make void the Law of God through their Traditions Those who of old amongst them feared God knowing their Duty to instruct their Housholds or Families that is their Children and Servants in the Wayes and Worship of God walked by another Rule § 21 It is farther pleaded by the same Author p. 53. That the Gentiles knew nothing of this Sabbatical Feast but that when it came to their knowledge they derided and exploded it as a particular Superstition of the Jews To this purpose many Instances out of the Historians and Poets who wrote in the time of the first Roman Emperors are collected by Selden which we are again directed unto Now it could not be but that if it had been originally appointed unto all mankind that they should have been such strangers unto it But this matter hath been discoursed before And we have shewed that sundry of the first Writers of the Christian Church were otherwise minded for they judged and proved that there was a Notion at least of the seventh Dayes Sacred Rest diffused throughout the world And they lived nearer the times of the Gentiles Practice than those by whom their Judgement and Testimony are so peremptorily rejected It is not unlikely but that they might be mistaken in some of the Testimonies whereby they confirm their Observation yet this hinders not but that the Observation it self may be true and sufficiently confirmed by other Instances which they make use of For my part as I have said I will not nor for the security of the Principle laid down need I to contend that the seventh Day was observed as a sacred feast amongst them It is enough that there were such Notices of it in the World as could proceed from no other Original but that pleaded for which was common unto all The Roman Writers Poets and others do speak of and contemn the Judaical Sabbaths under which Name they comprehended all their Sacred Feasts and Solemn Abstinencies Hence they reproached them with their Sabbatical Fasts of which number the seventh day Hebdomadal Sabbath was not But they never endeavoured to come to any real Acquaintance with their Religious Rites but took up vulgar Reports concerning them as did their Historians also who in the Affairs of other Natitions are supposed to have been curious and diligent § 22 Indeed after the Conquest of Jerusalem by Pompey when the People of the Jews began to be known among the Romans and to disperse themselves throughout their Provinces they began every day more and more to hate them and to cast all manner of reproaches on them without regard to Truth or Honesty And it may not be amiss here a little by the way to enquire into the Reasons of it The principal cause hereof no doubt was from the God they worshipped and the manner of his Worship observed amongst them For finding them to acknowledge and adore one only the true God and that without the use of any kind of Images they perceived their own Idolatry and Superstition to be condemned thereby And this had been the condition of that people under the former Empires of the Chaldaeáns Persians and Grecians God had appointed them to be his Witnesses in the world that he was God and that there was none other Isa. 44. 8 9 10. Ye are my Witnesses is there a God besides me there is no God I know not any As also Chap. 43. 10 11 12. Ye are my Witnesses that before me there was no God formed neither shall there be any after me I even I am the Lord and besides me there is no Saviour therefore ye are my Witnesses saith the Lord that I am God This greatly provoked as other Nations of old so at length the Romans as bidding defiance to all their Gods and their Worship of them wherein they greatly boasted For they thought that it was meerly by the Help of their Gods and on the account of their Religion that they conquered all other Nations So Ciccro Orat. de Respon Harusp Quam volumus ipsi nos amemus tamen nec numero Hispanos nec robore Gallos nec calliditate Poenos nec artibus Graecos sed pietate religione atque hac una sapientia quod deorum immortalium numine omnia regi gubernarique prospeximus omnes gentes nationesque superavimus Let us love and please ourselves as we think meet yet we outgo neither the Spaniards in number nor the Gaules in strength nor the Africans in craft nor the Grecians in Arts but it is by our Piety and Religion and this only Wisdom that we refer all to the Government of the immortal Gods that we have overcome all Countreys and Nations And Dionysius Halicarnassaeus Antiquit. Rom. lib. 2. having given an account of their Sacred Rites and Worship adds that he did it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That those who knew not before the Piety or Religion of the Romans might not now think it strange that they should have such success in all their Wars To be judged and condemned in those things by the contrary witness of the Jews they could not bear This made them reflect on God himself as the God which they worshipped They called him incertum and ignotum affirming the Rites of his Worship to be absurd and contrary to the common consent of mankind as Tacitus expresly Hist. lib. 5. The best they could afford when they spake of him was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who ever he be And Tully will not allow that it was any respect to their God or their Religion which caused Pompey to forbear spoiling the Temple when he took it by force Non credo saith he religionem impedimento praestantissimo Imperatori fuisse quod victor ex illo fano nihil attigerit Orat. pro Flacc. whereunto he adds as high a Reproach of them and their Religion as he could devise Stantibus Hierosolymis pacatisque Judaeis tamen istorum religio sacrorum à splendore hujus imperii gravitate nominis nostri majorum institutis abhorrebat nunc vero hoc magis quod illa gens quid de nostro imperio sentiret ostendit armis quam cara diis immortalibus esset docuit quod victa est quod clocata quod servata Whilst Jerusalem stood that is in its own Power and the Jews were peaceable yet their Religion was unworthy the splendor of this Empire the gravity of our Name and abhorrent from the Ordinances of our Ancestors how much more now when that Nation hath shewed what esteem it hath of our Empire by its Arms and how dear it is to the immortal Gods that it is conquered and set out under Tribute The like Reflections yea worse may be seen in Trogus Tacitus Plutarcb Strabo and Democritus in Suidas with others §
of the Sabbath by the Patriarchs before the giving of the Law Instances hereof collected by Manasse Ben Israel Farther confirmation of it 12 Tradition among the Gentiles concerning it Sacredness of the septenary Number 13 Testimonies of the Heathen collected by Aristobulus Clemens Eusebius 14 Importance of these Testimonies examined and vindicated 15 Ground of the Hebdomadal Revolution of time It s Observation Catholick 16 Planetary Denominations of the Dayes of the Week whence 17 The contrary Opinion of the Original of the Sabbath in the Wilderness proposed and examined 18 First Argument against the Original of the Sabbath Answered c. The Second Exercitation Of the Original of the Sabbath § 1 HAving fixed the Name the Thing it self falls nextly under Consideration And the Order of our Investigation shall be to enquire first into its Original and then into its Causes And the true stating of the former will give great light into the latter as also into its Duration For if it began with the World probably it had a cause cognate to the Existence of the World and the Ends of it and so must in Duration be commensurate unto it If it ows its Rise to succeeding Generations amongst some peculiar sort of men its Cause was arbitrary and occasional and its continuance uncertain For every thing which had such a Beginning in the Worship of God was limited to some seasons only and had a Time determined for its Expiration This therefore is first to be stated And indeed no Concern of this Day hath fallen under more diligent severe and Learned Dissertations Very Learned men have here engaged into contrary Opinions and defended them with much Learning and Variety of Reading Summa sequar Vestigia rerum and shall briefly call the different Apprehensions both of Jews and Christians in this matter unto a just Examination Neither shall I omit the consideration of any Opinion whose Antiquity or the Authority of its Defenders did ever give it Reputation though now generally exploded as not knowing in that Revolution of Opinions which we are under how soon it may have a Revival § 2 The Jews that we may begin with them with whom some think the Sabbath began are divided among themselves about the Original of the Sabbath no less than Christians yea to speak the Truth their Divisions and different Apprehensions about this matter of Fact have been the occasion of ours and their Authority is pleaded to countenance the mistakes of others Many therefore of them assign the Original or first Revelation of the Sabbath unto the Wilderness Station of the people in Mara others of them make it Coaeval with the World The first Opinion hath countenance given unto it in the Talmud Gemar Babylon Tit. Sab. cap. 9. and Tit. Sanedr cap. 7. And the Tradition of it is embraced by so many of their Masters and Commentators that our Learned Selden de Jur. Gen. apud Heb. lib. 3. cap. 12 13 14. contends for it as the common and prevailing Opinion amongst them and indeavours an Answer unto all Instances or Testimonies that are or may be urged to the contrary And indeed there is searce any thing of moment to be observed in all Antiquity as to matter of Fact about the Sabbath whether it be Jewish Christian or Heathen but what he hath heaped together or rather treasured up in the Learned Discourses of that third Book of his Jus Gentium apud Hebraeos Whether the Questions of Right belonging thereunto have been duly determined by him is yet left unto further enquiry That which at present we are in the consideration of is the Opinion of the Jews about the Original of the Sabbath at the Station of Marah which he so largely confirms with Testimonies out of all sorts of their Authors and those duly alledged according to their own Sense and Conceptions § 3 Mara was the first Station that the Children of Israel fixed in in the Wilderness of Shur five Dayes after their coming up out of the Red Sea Before their coming hither they had wandred three dayes in the Wilderness without finding any Water until they were ready to faint The Report of this their thirst and wandring was famous amongst the Heathen and mixed by them with vain and monstrous Fables One of the Wisest amongst them puts as many Lies together about it as so few words can well contain Effigiem saith he Animalis quo monstrante errorem sitimque depulerant penetrali sacravere Tacit. Histor. lib. 5. He feigns that by following some Wild Asses they were led to Waters and so made an End of their Thirst and wandring on the Account whereof they afterwards consecrated in their Temple the Image of an Ass. Others of them besides him say that they wandred six dayes and finding Water on the seventh that was the Occasion and Reason of their perpetual Observation of the seventh Dayes Rest. In their Journey from the Red Sea to Mara they were particularly pressed with Wandring and Thirst Exod. 15. 22. But this was only for three dayes not seven They went three Dayes in the Wilderness and found no Water The Story of the Asses Image or Head consecrated amongst them was taken from what fell out afterwards about the Golden Calf This made them vile among the Nations and exposed them to their Obloquy and Reproaches Upon the third Day therefore after their coming from the Red Sea they came to Mara that is the place so called afterwards from what there befell them For the Waters which there they found being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bitter they called the Name of the place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Bitterness Hither they came on the third Day For although it is said that they went three Dayes in the Wilderness and found no Water Exod. 15. 22. after which mention is made of their coming to Mara v. 23. Yet it was in the Evening of the third Day for they pitched that night in Mara Numb 33. 8. Here after their murmuring for the bitterness of the Waters and the Miraculous Cure of them it is added in the Story There the Lord made for them a Statute and an Ordinance and there he proved them And said If thou wilt diligently hearken unto the voice of the Lord thy God and wilt do that which is right in his sight and wilt give ear to all his Commandments and keep all his Statutes I will put none of those diseases upon thee which I have brought upon the Aegyptians for I am the Lord that healeth thee v. 26. It is said that he gave them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Words whereby Sacred Ordinances and Institutions are expressed What this Statute and Judgement were in particular is not declared These therefore are suggested by the Talmudical Masters One of them they say was the Ordinance concerning the Sabbath About the other they are not so well agreed Some refer it to the fifth Commandment of honouring Father and Mother others to the Ceremonies of
or teach men to break any one of them And men make bold with him when they so confidently assert that they may break one of them and teach others so to do without offence That this reacheth not to the confirmation of the seventh Day precisely we shall afterwards abundantly demonstrate In like manner St. James treats concerning the whole Law and all the Commands of it Chap. 2. 10 11. And the Argument he insists on for the Observance of the whole namely the giving of it by the same Authority is confined to the Decalogue and the way of Gods giving the Law thereof or else it may be extended to all Mosaical Institutions expresly contrary to his Intention § 49 It is known that many things are usually objected against the Truth we have been pleading for namely the Morality of a Sacred Rest to God on one Day in seven from its Relation to the Law of Creation and the Command for it in the Decalogue And it is known also that what is so objected hath been by others solidly answered and removed But because those Objections or Arguments have been lately renewed and pressed by a Person of Good Learning and Reputation and a new Reinforcement indeavoured to be given unto them I shall give them a new Examination and remove them out of our way § 50 It is then objected in the first place Disquisit de Moralitate Sabbati p 7. That the Command for the Observation of the Sabbath is a Command of Time or concerning Time only namely that some Certain and Determinate Time be assigned to the Worship of God and this may be granted to be Moral But Time is no part of Moral Worship but only a Circumstance of it even as Place is also Therefore the Command that requires them in particular cannot be Moral For these and the like Circumstances must necessarily be of a Positive Determination § 50 An. 1. The whole force of this Argument consists in this that Time is but an Help Instrument or Circumstance of Worship and therefore is not Moral Worship it self nor a part of Moral Worship nor can so be But this Argument is not valid For whatever God requires by his Command to be religiously observed with immediate respect unto himself is a Part of his Worship And this Worship as to the kind of it follows the Nature of the Law whereby it is commanded If that Law be meerly Positive so is the Worship commanded however it be a Duty required by the Law of Nature that we duly observe it when it is commanded for by the Law of Nature God is to be obeyed in all his Commands of what sort soever they are If that Law be Moral so is the Duty required by it and so is our Obedience unto it The only way then to prove that the Observation of Time is no part of Moral Worship is this namely to manifest that the Law whereby it is required is Positive and not Moral for that it is required by Divine Command of the one sort or the other is now supposed And on the other side from the Consideration of the thing it self naturally as that it is an Adjunct or Circumstance of other things no consequence ariseth to the determination of the Nature of the Law whereby it is required 2. Time abstractedly or one Day in seven absolutely is not the adequate Object of the Precept or the fourth Commandment But it is an Holy Rest to be observed unto God in his Worship on such a Day And this not an Holy Rest unto God in general as the Tendency and End of all our Obedience and living unto him but as an especial Remembrance and Representation of the Rest of God himself with his Complacency and Satisfaction in his Works as establishing a Covenant between himself and us This is the Principal subject of the Command or a stated Day of an Holy Rest unto God in such a Revolution of Dayes or Time This we have proved to be Moral from the Foundation and Reason of it laid and given in the Law of Nature revived and represented in the fourth Command of the Decalogue Now though Place be an inseparable circumstance of all Actions and so capable of being made a circumstance of Divine Worship by Divine Positive Command as it was of old in the Instance of the Temple yet no especial or particular Place had the least Guidance or Direction unto it in the Law of Nature by any Works or Acts of God whose Instructive Vertue belonged thereunto and therefore all Places were alike free by Nature and every Place wherein the Worship of God was celebrated was a natural Circumstance of the Actions performed and not a Religious Circumstance of Worship until a particular Place was assigned and determined by Positive Command for that purpose It is otherwise with Time as hath been shewed at large And therefore although any place notwithstanding any thing in the Law of Nature might have been separated by Positive Institution unto the Solemn Worship of God it doth not thence follow as is pretended that any Time a Day in a Monthly or annual Revolution might have been separated unto the like purpose seeing God had given us Indication of another Limitation of it in the Law of Creation § 51 It is farther objected Disquisit p. 8. That in the fourth Commandment not one Day in seven but the seventh Day precisely is enjoyned The Day was before made known unto the Israelites in the Station at Mara or afterwards at Alesh namely the seventh Day from the foundation of the world This in the Command they are required to observe Hence the words of it are that they should Remember 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that same Sabbath Day or that Day of the Sabbath which was newly revealed unto them This Command therefore cannot be Moral as to the Limitation of Time specified therein seeing it only confirms the Observation of the seventh Day Sabbath which was before given unto the Hebrews in a Temporary Institution And this is insisted on as the principal strength against the Morality of the Command I shall first give you in my Answer in general and then consider the especial improvements that are made of it 1. Instances may be given and have been given by all Writers concerning the Hebrew Tongue wherein the prefixed Letters sometimes answering the Greek Praepositive Articles are redundant and if at all emphatical yet they do not at all limit specifie or determine See Psal. 1. 4. Eccl. 2. 14. Lev. 18. 5. The Observation therefore of prefixing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which may possibly denote an Excellency in the thing it self but tends nothing to the Determination of a certain Day but as it is afterwards declared to be one of seven is too weak to bear the weight of the Inference intended Nor will this be denyed by any whoever aright considered the various use and frequent redundancy of that Praefixe 2. The Sabbath or
Directions for the manner of the observance of such a Day are to no purpose And many by degrees have declined from that strictness which they could not come up unto a delight in untill they have utterly lost all sense of duty towards God in this matter And these things are true only the Reasons of them are not agreed on § 4 And in things of this nature those who are called to the instruction of others are carefully to avoid Extreams For he that condemns the righteous and he that justifieth the wicked are both of them an abomination to the Lord. And several Instances there are of the miscarriages of men on the one hand and the other On the one lay the sin of the Pharisees of old When they had gotten the pretence of a command they would burden it with so many rigid observances in the manner of its performance as should make it a yoke intolerable to their Disciples getting themselves the reputation of strict observers of the Law But in truth they were not so wanting unto their own ease and interest as not to provide a secret dispensation for themselves They would scarce put a finger to the burdens which they bound and laid on the shoulders of others And this is the condition of all almost that hath an appearance of Religion or Devotion in the Papacy And a fault of the same nature though not of so signal a provocation others may fall into unadvisedly who are free from their hypocrisie They may charge and press both their own consciences and other mens above and beyond what God hath appointed And this they may do with a sincere intention to promote Religion and Holiness amongst men by engaging them into the strictest wayes of the profession of it Now in the Directions of the consciences of men about their duties to God this is carefully to be avoided For Peace is only to be obtained in keeping steady and even to the Rule To transgress on the right hand whatever the pretencebe is to lye for God which will not be accepted with him § 5 On the other hand there lyeth a rock of far greater danger And this consists in the accommodation of the Laws Precepts and Institutions of God unto the lusts with the present courses and practices of men This evil we have had exemplified in some of late no less conspicuously than the fore-mentioned was in them of old A mystery of iniquity unto this purpose hath been discovered not long since and brought forth to light tending to the utter debanchery of the consciences and lives of men And in it lyes the great contrivance whereby the famous sect of the Jesuits have prevailed on the minds of many especially of Potentates and great men in the earth so as to get into their hands the conduct of the most important affairs of Europe And this abomination as it is known hath lately been laid open by the diligence of some in whom at once concurred a commendable care of Christian Morality and an high provocation in other things by them who endeavoured to corrupt it A search hath been made into the Writings which that sort of men have published for the Direction of the consciences of men in the practice of moral duties or unto their Disciples for their guidance upon confessions And a man may say of the discovery what the Poet said upon the opening of the House of Cacus Panditur extemplo foribus domus atra revulsis Abstructaeque boves abjurataeque rapinae Caelo ostenduntur Non secus ac si qua penitus viterra dehiscens Infernas reseret sedes regna recludet Pallida Such a loathsome appearance of vizards and pretences for the extenuating of sin and countenancing of men in the practice of it was never before represented unto the eyes of men The main of their design as is now manifest hath been so to interpret Scripture-Laws Rules and Precepts as to accommodate them all to that course of corrupt conversation which prevaileth generally in the world even among them who are called Christians Gratum opus Agricolis A Work exceeding acceptable and obliging to all sorts of men who if not given up to open Atheisme would rejoyce in nothing more than in a reconciliation between the Rule of their consciences and their lusts that they might sin freely without trouble or remorse To this end having learned the inclinations and temptations of men from their private confessions and ●nding it a thing neither possible in it self nor at all conducing to their own interest to endeavour their Reformation by and recovery unto the fixed stable Rule of Truth and Duty they have by their false glosses subtle distinctions and resined imaginations made it to justifie and countenance them in the highest abominations and in wayes leading constantly to the practice of them And there is nothing in their whole course which faithfull interpreters of the mind of God ought more carefully to avoid than a falling in any instances into that evil which these men have made it their design to promote and pursue The World indeed seems to be weary of the just righteous holy wayes of God and of that exactness in walking according to his institutions and commands which it will be one day known that he doth require But the way to put a stop to this declension is not by accommodating the commands of God to the corrupt courses and wayes of men The Truths of God and the Holiness of his Precepts must be pleaded and defended though the World dislike them here and perish hereafter His Law must not be made to lacquey after the wills of men nor be dissolved by vain interpretations because they complain they cannot indeed because they will not comply with it Our Lord Jesus Christ came not to destroy the Law and the Prophets but to fulfill them and to supply men with spiritual strength to fulfill them also It is evil to break the least Commandement but there is a great aggravation of that evil in them that shall teach men so to do And this cannot be done but by giving such Expositions of them as by virtue whereof men may think themselves freed from an obligation unto that obedience which indeed they do require Wherefore though some should say now as they did of old concerning any command of God Behold what a weariness it is and what profit is it to keep his Ordinances yet the Law of God is not to be changed to give them relief We are therefore in this matter to have no consideration of the present course of the world nor of the weariness of professors in the wayes of strict obedience The sacred Truth and Will of God in all his commands is singly and sincerely to be enquired after § 6 And yet I will not deny but that there have been and are mistakes in this matter leaning towards the other extream Directions have been given and that not by a few for the observation of a Day of