Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n part_n zeal_n zealous_a 68 3 8.7572 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A17418 The doctrine of the Sabbath vindicated in a confutation of a treatise of the Sabbath, written by M. Edward Breerwood against M. Nic. Byfield, wherein these five things are maintained: first, that the fourth Commandement is given to the servant and not to the master onely. Seecondly, that the fourth Commandement is morall. Thirdly, that our owne light workes as well as gainefull and toilesome are forbidden on the Sabbath. Fourthly, that the Lords day is of divine institution. Fifthly, that the Sabbath was instituted from the beginning. By the industrie of an unworthy labourer in Gods vineyard, Richard Byfield, pastor in Long Ditton in Surrey. Byfield, Richard, 1598?-1664. 1631 (1631) STC 4238; ESTC S107155 139,589 186

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Talents and Gifts of God should bee hidden in such earth One point of wisedome you have learned from the men of this generation that when your cause is too weake to indure any strong assault you would helpe it by chusing you an Adversary whom you could contemne as many wayes none of the ablest that so you might enter into almost all the degrees of triumph before any field was pitched But let not the Champion pride himselfe the stones of the Brooke that refresheth the Sanctuary of God may smite the forehead of his presumption In your writings I consider matter and manner In the manner I find strange scoffes unchristian censures confident bold and swelling brags of the clearenesse of your Conceits with an unseemely deale of such unsavory stuffe all this I wholly passe over as unworthy to be conceived in the brest or vented in the writings of any Scholer The matter is both propounded and of purpose repeated many times over in severall trickes of elocution the better to give a lustre to opinion it selfe The repetition I omit likewise In the propounding of the matter two things are principall fact and opinion In matter of fact you are troubled that your Kinsman should be seduced and ruined by the poison of ill advice sucked from my mouth This you would be answered in And to this you have been answered that it is a falshood raised by your Kinsman if hee affirme it and magnified and blowne to the highest by your selfe And you doe well to hold fast the pretence of your opinion that such counsell was given or else I cannot see so much as a glimpse of any colour why you shuld in this spitefull manner use me or any Minister of the Gospell when you have no occasion given you And so you may be answered as touching matter of fact Thus farre Christian Reader thou hast Master N. Byfield● Answer to this Treatise the rest had been printed and I had saved my labour if we had had a perfect Coppy It is likely they that set forth Master Breerwoods have one which they conceale and put in stead thereof a Letter written to Master Breerwood refusing on good grounds to give an answere which they call Master Byfields answer So indig●ely every way hath that worthy man been used in this businesse Out of this that hath been set downe I leave every one to judge of the occasion and of the spirit of the man solution they are abundantly discovered his knowledge in those briefe grounds for the Sabbath which hee hath laid his zeale that sweetly guided stifled that fire of contention beginning to flame so that it brake not forth and therein no small measure of charity to the soule of the Opposer which being resty and set to contend wanted but one to answer that matter might bee ministred for him to worke upon and to the soules of all when these boisterous windes should be kept in their dennes of privacy and laied with a short and grave repulse What want of zeale for the truth could there bee in this case when the opposition being privat was dangerous only to the Opposer and if hee should make it publike would have raised an holy Armie of defendants in both the famous Cities and other parts of the Kingdome to the great impeachment of the Opposers reputation who disperseth his loose and Atheisticall conceites upon an occasion occasionlesse Or what want of Charity It never commanded to attend the saying of every Prater nor requireth more than reprehension ● Ioh. 1● of the error with arguments to confirme the truth this is Direction There may bee never the lesse zeale for the truth where is wanting a zealous affectation of quarreling about the truth and there may bee no want of charity where yet the erroneous person remaines unreformed What impressions of excesses his letter contained shall bee seene God willing in time and place convenient But this I say your excesses not only swarme in your Reply but also in this Preface stand out to the view For you say you are hopelesse of him and yet you will provoke him to give satisfaction and to disclaime his error Would not satisfaction and disclaiming of an error answer your hopes Or delight you to provoke to give that which you cannot hope for only that you might provoke What Hopelesse if hee cannot bee provoked and hope enough if hee bee provoked enough What Nothing satisfaction with you but to call the truth error when you call it error Againe you intend you say to abate his stomacke and high conceit Would you abate it by invectives scoffes Ale-house language with the like such as is scattered in this Reply In this case therefore I hold it no way against just and plaine dealing to give an answer to your words that have any shew of truth and sobernesse and by no meanes to put downe verbatim your words Syllabicall froth before this my ensuing answer For though while you seemed to seeke satisfaction to your arguments I could afford you the first place yet now that you jeere at the person and thinke to scoffe out the truth held by my dearest Brother I can give you no place in my bookes The first Section of the Reply answered First herein Master Breerwood being charged by Master Byfield that he opposed Gods Sabbath cryeth out Farre be it from him he acknowledgeth the Sabbath of Iewes and Christians to be both of them Gods Sabbath Compare then what he saith here with what he said in the former Treatise and beleeve your owne eyes Here hee saith I acknowledge on the Christian Sabbath the worship of God and vacancy from all worldly affaires which may impeach that worship to bee by the morall Law Before hee said pag. 42. The celebration of the Lords day can with no enforcement of reason be drawne out of the moralitie of the fourth Commandement Is not the Lords day the Christian Sabbath you speake of And is the celebration thereof any other than the worship of God thereon and vacancy from labour that may impeach that worship Pag. 37. To worke on the Lords day is no breach of any divine command Pag. 33. Onely workes of toyle and tending to gaine are restrained by the commandement Againe he saith he never taught worse of Gods Sabbath enjoy himselfe No the c Lord rested on the seventh that he might teach thee to rest the seventh Or did God ever consecrate to himselfe either day or place for any other cause than that he might b●stow sanctification and benediction on men when they did in an holy manner observe them Gods personall sanctification of the Sabbath say you was nothing else but his resting in himselfe that resting from creation was his Sabbath that resting in himselfe was the sanctifying it other institution or sanctification will never be proved Tell me why did you not goe on in your new interpretation and shew how he blessed it and wherein that consisted The Text saith He blessed it also
THE DOCTRINE OF THE SABBATH VINDICATED In a confutation of a treatise of the Sabbath written by M. Edward Breerwood against M. Nic. Byfield wherein these five things are maintained First that the fourth Commandement is given to the servant and not to the master onely Secondly that the fourth Commandement is morall Thirdly that our owne light workes as well as gainefull and toilesome are forbidden on the Sabbath Fourthly that the Lords day is of divine Institution Fifthly that the Sabbath was instituted from the beginning By the industrie of an unworthy labourer in Gods Vineyard RICHARD BYFIELD Pastor in Long Ditton in Surrey Verily I say unto you till heaven and earth passe one jot or one title shall in no wise passe from the Law till all be fulfilled Matth. 5. 18. LONDON Imprinted by Felix Kyngston for Philemon Stephens and Christopher Meredith at the golden Lyon in Pauls Church-yard 1631. To all that loue the LORD IESVS in sincerity DEare Christian bought with a price most happy in this that thou art not thine owne for thy sake I have undertaken to answer this Treatise to thee doe I Dedicate it who mayest of right challenge all that I am or can Thou whether noble wise mightie learned unlearned weake or meane neare or farre off art interessed in all that maketh for the Truth and in all that is done against it Paul Apollo Cephas are thine 1. Cor. 3. all thine for thou art Christs and Christ is Gods In the broaching of Heresies thou art wounded in the making of schismes thou art racked in every lie thou art layed at nothing commeth against a painefull Minister but reacheth to thy heart through his sides nothing from a laborious Minister but aymeth at thy setling stablishing comforting perfecting Wert thou the meanest that ever lived who can thinke this too much for thee seeing God withholds not himselfe as a Father his Sonne as a Redeemer and Brother his Spirit as sanctifier Comforter and the Spirit of Sonne-ship in thy heart and thy very body also hee ownes as his Temple For a recompence bee inlarged give thy selfe to God receive nothing against but all that is for the Truth Let the reproaches wherewith Christ and his Ministers are reproached fall on thee owne the Ministers gifts and labours as thine reigne but not without them be honourable but not when they are despised When I first received this booke intituled A learned Treatise of the Sabbaoth a little before November last though I was utterly ignorant of any such controuersie to haue passed betweene my Brother and Master Edward Breerwood and had not yet cast mine eye on the base language of the reply in the end of that Treatise yet the very noveltie and dangerous vilenesse of the Doctrine without any reference to things personall strucke me My spirit was stirred in me when I saw the whole right of the Law for the time of Gods worship alleviated the consequence whereof must needs be this the whole kingdome wholy given to Atheisme and prophanenesse The zeale of Gods glory and thy good began to eate upon me I throw my selfe into the open field that thou mayest be nourished I resolved what I was or am or may be should be Christ strengthning mee Gods and thine that God the Lord of Heaven might have his Royaltie untouched man his dutie laid out Superiors directed to stand for God and Men in the things of God and Inferiors be Gods while mens and mens in and for God Now knowing that there are none but are flesh as well as spirit and that the unregenerate part will catch at the most excellent truths to sucke thereout advantage to it selfe by tearing a sunder things inseparably united and taking to things hand over head in a wrong application fearing thy miscarriage I could not but advertise thee a little in that part that concernes thy duty The superiour or master may conceite his power intrenched upon the inferiour or servant may suppose some unwarranted liberty granted him all may thinke of an over-rigid construction of the unchangeable precept This D●spute yeelds none of those neither prejudice to the master nor occasion of liberty to the servant nor other then a received and allowed sense to the never-failing law as will appeare to him that thorowly peruseth it But for prevention of over-hasty conceits in all behold thy way-markes before thou reade or receive any thought to fore-stall thee take what I set here before thee which hath beene seene and heard and allowed and received Blessed be Gods holy Name and I doubt not but shall be maugre the malice of contradicting spirits For I admonish thee of no other things then what are already received in the printed Bookes of Mr. Nich. Byfield Consider I say what that Master of Assemblies hath left in his writings as stakes to bound out the way of both master and servant superiour and inferiour in running the race of this fourth commandement and as goades to quicken thy heart in the embracing of that divine Law For the Doctrine of the Sabbath he thus explaineth himselfe in two places First God hath provided by his unchangeable law that one day in seven servants shall rest from their labour M. Byf. on 1 Pet. 2. 18. pag. 723. Secondly Servants must shew their feare of God in their callings by carefulnesse to doe Gods service as well as their masters not onely by spending the Sabbath in the duties of religion but in redeeming the time in the weeke dayes as may bee without hinderance of their worke or offence to their masters to imploy themselves in prayer reading conference c. And the reason is because as servants must doe their masters worke as they are servants so they stand bound in the common obligation to do Gods service as they are men and no man but is subject to the law of God who hath given all his commandements to servants as well as to masters Byf. in 1 Pet. 2. 18. pag. 734. For the servant he layeth downe these godly and savory limitations as Caveats First the subjection of servants is of Divine institution to which God hath bound them by the fift Commandement and so is a morall and perpetuall ordinance in 1 Pet. 2. 18. p. 721. Secondly no faults in Superiors can free inferiors from their subjection in matter or manner in 1 Pet. 2. p. 742. Thirdly if the matter bee onely inexpedient and unmeete thou must obey in Col. 3. 23. p. 130. Fourthly thou must bee sure that it bee sinne that thou refusest if thou must needs doubt it is better to doubt and obey than doubt and disobey Id. ibid. Fiftly thou must in unlawfull things yeeld to obey by sufferings Id. ibid. Sixtly the servant must avoide inquisitivenesse the servant knoweth not what his master doth Ioh. 15. 15. in 1 Pet. 2. p. 735. For the master he giveth these heavenly admonitions First the master must give account of all hee doth to God though he be not bound to doe