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

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men to rest from such workes and pleasures as wee haue seene We must rest also from speaking and hearing of worldly matters but also from speaking and talking of them seeing his purpose is not onely to restraine the hand and the foote but the lippes and tongue also because they hinder our selues and others from keeping holy the day as well as any thing else For vnlesse we will restraine and shorten this commandement more then all the other why should not idle words bee forbidden here as well as in all the rest And seeing in the first both Atheisme prophane speeches are forbidden it is a sin against the second cōmandement to name false gods vs well as to worship them Psal 16.4 and in the third the name of God is dishonoured by our vngodly conuersation and by our vaine and false othes why should not the lawe of the Sabbath bee as large in forbidding long communication and large discourses about worldly busines and pleasures as well as the things themselues especially when wee see the same equitie and proportion in the lawes of the second table also In which not only murder is forbidden but all rayling words Math. 5.22 proud and scornefull speeches and that lawe which forbiddeth adulterie Ephes 4.29 ● 3 sayth that no filthy communication must proceed out of your mouthes therefore seeing the other commandements are giuen to frame the whole body of man and euery part of it vnto obedience why should it not be presumed of the commandement of the Sabbath also that it ordereth our words as well as our works especially seeing the one is more disordered then the other and they which can rule their hands and their feet cannot so well gouerne their tongues of which trueth seem it neuer so new and strange vnto vs though no truth indeede be new we shall so much the rather be persuaded if we consider that much talke about worldly matters doth as well hinder the sanctification of the day as much worke and so much the more because wee may worke with our selues alone yet cannot talke but with others and so doe hinder both our selues and them For our mindes cannot bee wholly set vpon the worship of God as they should and at the same time bee speaking of and listning vnto the affaires of this life euen of our commodities profites and pleasures Besides that the Lord would haue our mouthes and eares otherwise occupied vpon this day as well as our handes and feete as shall more fully appeare hereafter So that vpon this day men must cease from making of bargaines and broaking of matters from talking about their marchandise trades from questioning and debating of things about their cattel corne and white meate and generally from all worldly matters incident to our calling and then we must speake with new tongues as it were and put newe words into our mouthes as well as new works into our hands that it may appeare vnto all men which beholde vs that it is a day of rest indeede when wee thus rest in whole not in part and that it is a new day differing from the other sixe when we are so altogether made new and as it were differ from that which we were before both in worde and deede And therefore we must be farre from the practise of a great many who make this the onely day of reckoning with their seruants and of accounts with their labourers and chapmen and bestow it for the most part in hearing what hath been done the weeke before and prescribing what should be done the weeke following Much lesse should we draw neere the practise of such who as they know no end of their pleasures so they can neuer make an end of talking and hearing of them so ouerfilled are they with them that out of the aboundance of their hearts their mouthes must needes speake and as they haue many fruitles discourses abuot their hawking and hunting at home in their houses before and after it besides that which they haue abroad in their fields when they are in the game so that there is more time and words mispent afterwards about it then was well spent before in it euen so they make all daies alike and looke how farre their hawkes are from their fists and their dogges from their heeles vpon that day so farre are the vnprofitable and endlesse tales concerning the same from their mouthes and cares and a little lesse because when necessitie driueth them to leaue the one because they are at their meate such like yet they cannot giue ouer the other but pursue it to the vttermost euen to the disturbance of others and filling their heads so full of vanitie as their own are besides their owne sinne in abusing of the time and the dishonor of Gods name in breaking of the Sabbath And now if vnto all this which hath been spoken you will giue me leaue to adde but one thing more you shall see how absolute and perfect this lawe is euen like vnto the lawgiuer himselfe who as he is a spirit so will bee worshipped in spirit and trueth in all the seuerall parts of his worship which he requireth in euery one of his commandements For this is that which was deliuered vnto vs in the first entrance into the Commandements namely that the whole lawe of God was giuen vnto whole man and as the Lord God created him both in soule and bodie redeemed him by Christ Iesus sanctifieth and preserueth here and is purposed elsewhere to glorifie him in both for euer so he hath set him down that forme of obedience whereby in both he might bee reformed to that image according to the which hee was first created in righteousnes and true holines and therefore in this commandement doth shew vs And from hauing our minds occupied about the same what in bodie and soule wee should keepe vs from euen that we must rest from hauing our mindes occupied about all those things which are not lawfull to be done vpon that day and that we must not only lay our worldly busines out of our hands but put them out of our heads so that we may not spend our time in studying about the workes of our calling nor beate our heads about thē laying platformes as it were for the weeke following and so haue our heads fully fraught with thē but wee must haue our vnderstanding and affections cleane emptie voyd of them that there may be roome for such heauenly meditations to dwell in vs as the Lord would haue vs to be filled with them Caluin in Gen. 2.3 Master Caluin expounding these words The Lord blessed the seuenth day sayth this blessing is nothing els but a solemne consecration Qua sibi Deus studia occupationes asserit die septimo whereby the Lord doth chalenge to himselfe vpon the seuenth day all our studies and labours and therefore wee must not be such grosse hypocrites as to imagine that if
THE DOCTRINE OF THE SABBATH Plainely layde forth and soundly proued by testimonies both of holy Scripture and also of olde and new ecclesiasticall writers Declaring first from what things God would haue vs straightly to rest vpon the Lords day and then by what meanes we ought publikely and priuatly to sanctifie the same Together with the sundry abuses of our time in both these kindes and how they ought to bee reformed Diuided into two Bookes by Nicolas Bownde Doctor of Diuinitie Hieron Prolog Galeat In the Church of God euery one doth offer that which he is able some gold siluer and pretious stones others blew silke and purple and skarlet and fine linen t is well for our part if we offer skinnes and goates haire AT LONDON Printed by the Widdow Orwin for Iohn Porter and Thomas Man 1595. HONI SOYT QVY MAL Y PENSE TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE MY VERY GOOD LORD ROBERT Deuoreux Earle of Essex Ewe Vicount of Hereford Lord Ferrers of Chartley c. Master of the Q. Maiesties horse Knight of the most noble order of the Garter and one of her Maiesties most honorable priuie Counsel the increase of all true honor and fauour with God and men RIght Honorable if there were so many good reasons to moue your Honour graciously to accept these my labours as I haue iust causes to induce me to preferre them to your Honor then I should haue good hope that as they haue most willingly come from mee so they should haue good countenaunce at your Honors hands For besides your late Honorable fauour extended vnto me requireth this and al other duties of me wherby I might shew my selfe thankefull to your Honour for the same euen so the desire also that I haue that this truth of GOD might come forth with the best credite hath moued me in the conscience of mine ovvne tenuitie to become humble sutor in the behalfe thereof for your honorable gracious protection Wherein if I haue intruded my selfe further then I ought and pressed neerer to your Honor then it becommeth mee crauing your Honorable pardon for this my boldnes I beseech your Honor to accept either my feruent desire to tender all duties vnto you or my great care to purchase best fauour for this worke or both vvhich haue compelled me hereunto And herein I am so much the more importunate vvith your Honor not for my selfe but for this part of Gods holie truth that it might be countenanced as one of your Honors fauorites because as wee be fallen into these euil daies wherin too many are readie vnaduisedly to set themselues against whatsoeuer they dislike and therfore the best causes are driuen to seeke patronage where it maie doe them most good So the Lorde hauing inlarged your honorable name aboue a great manie which as a precious ointment flowing from your selfe comfortablie refresheth and perfumeth a great number this part of Gods trueth also might enioie the common benefit of it with other to be ouershadowed thereby and by that meanes haue entertainment there where otherwise happily it should be finally regarded And so it becomming for your Honors sake a welcome guest vnto them it might deliuer vnto them in the name of God as sent by your Honor that message of his that it centaineth to the honor of his name to whom all honor is due from whō all honour commeth whome trulie to honour is the greatest honor Thus ceasing anie further to interrupt your Honor from your weightie affaires my praier vnto God is long to preserue your Honor zealous of the glorie of God faithful to her Maiestie profitable to the whole realme and comfortable to your owne soule most humblie with all dutifulnesse taking my leaue Your Honors most humble at commandement alwaies in the Lord Nicholas Bownd Norton in Suff. Iune 1595. To the Godlie and Christian Readers and namely to the reuerend wise and godly learned Fathers and brethren Ministers and Preachers of the Gospell grace and peace hee multiplied RIght reuerend and welbeloued in the Lord when as about nine yeeres since I was solicited to publish my Sermons vpon the tenne Commaundements by certaine of my godly brethren auditors then of the same I had manie reasons that preuailed to disswade me from that enterprise and especially be●ause I thought it superfluous in such great variety of learned writers of that matter especially wherein I haue been since more ●onfirmed by all those who of later times haue trauailed in that ●●nde And moreouer besides mine own vnsufficiencie for so great 〈◊〉 matter J was of opinion that hee that bendeth himselfe vnto ●riting had neede to haue some relaxation from preaching vn●esse hee bee of great gifts and meruailously fitted for both and ●herefore being necessarilie tyed vnto the one I durst not vnder●ake the other yet their importunitie preuailed thus farre with ●●ne as to make triall what I could doe in this commaundement which I had then in hand whereunto also I was the rather indu●●ed because it contained that argument which as it is of all o●her most excellent so it was least of all dealt in by anie largely ●●nd of purpose Hauing then within a fewe moneths at my best ●●asure finished this treatise as diuers of my fellowe Ministers ●●n whose hands it hath bin are sufficient witnesses and by them further encouraged to communicate it vnto all men I yeelded thereunto slowly indeede because I knewe a reuerend godly M. Robert Greenchā and learned father who for the most part of his life time greatly trauailing in this matter by his own reading meditation and conference with sundrie learned men had long before finished a great volume and wayted but his opportunity to furnish it to the presse though I neuer read one leafe of that booke whome I did for iust cause so highly reuerence that I was vnwilling to preiudice any of his godly proceedings especially in this thing wherein I knewe he had trauailed aboue most of his time and thereupon suspending my purpose for a time when I had imparted vnto him what I had done he gaue me this aduise to take his booke and to compare it with mine owne and to make one of them both which I refusing as being vnmeete for such a purpose and not knowing how I should well sorte out to the Reader such varietie of matter as was like to arise out of them both nor cunningly to fit the one to the other as it were to put a new piece of cloth to an old garment determined wholly to suppresse mine own expecting the comming foorth of his in time whereunto also I solicited him by writing and that also was my iust defence to those that still called vpon me for the comming foorth of mine owne In which expectation I continued vntill most vntimely I vnderstoode to my great grief and to the vnspeakable losse of the Church of God that hee was fallen a sleepe in the Lord And then I reuiued my former purpose and
with his whole heart and mind attend vpon these as the worship of God required which he could not doe so long as in any part he should be occupied about the other Now if the perfectest man that euer was could not do this and therefore stood in need of this liberalitie of God in giuing him a day of rest how shall not we bee too foolish in thinking that we we I say that haue not only lost all the excellent graces that Adam was furnished with but also in stead of them great corruptiō hath ouerwhelmed vs so that our mindes are dull in concerning the goodnes of God in his word and workes and our hearts voyd of the true sense and feeling of it yet we should bee able to haue all our worldly businesse still in our hands and in our heads not resting from them any day and therewithall to haue the same vnderstanding and wit of ours so conceiuing and desiring by prayer the mercie of God in the Worde in the Sacraments and in all other things of God requireth Luk. 10.27 with all our heart with all our soule with all our strength and with all our thought Or rather must we not needes confesse as the trueth is that be●ng more bound to the seruice of God then Adam was ●n respect of our sinne yet are lesse able to performe it ●hen he in any tollerable measure when wee haue done all that we can and therefore haue more neede of a day of rest then he that nothing might hinder vs. Muscul loc com praecept 4. For if the bird that she might flye must flutter with her wings and deliuer her selfe from all things that might stay her shall wee thinke that it makes no matter if wee come not to Gods seruice with minds and affections freed from all lets in which we must in our spirits bee lifted vp higher then it is possible for any bird by flying to attaine vnto And doth not wofull experience tel vs that when we haue freed our hands from worldly matters neuer so much yet wee cannot so soone free our mindes from them and being once free they will yet renew themselues within vs without any present occasion by reason of our corruption euen in the Church and will iustle out as it were the meditation of Gods seruice many times whereof Gods children doe complaine how vnruly then wrould they be if there were not a day to rest from the occasions of them and how should wee euer bee occupied in the word and in prayer and the other parts of Gods worship with any good acceptation to God and comfortable practise to our selues if we should neuer a day rest in bodie from the labours of this world that in mind and heart we might be free from the cogitations studies delights and desires of the same So that we are not onely not to thinke the Sabbath to be needlesse as many Atheists prophane and ignorant men doe but also we are to be perswaded that we our selues should alwaies haue been ignorant prophane and Atheists not seruing God at all but continually drowned in ●he things of this world by reason of the workes in the sixe daies or at the least dissembling counterfeit and hypocritical seruing God rather in ceremonie and in shew thē in that manner of sinceritie truth which he requireth if God had not in respect of our weaknes at first appoynted a day to rest in from all things that might any way stay and hinder vs in it and now in regarde of the same weaknes but much more because of the sin which is within vs had not commanded the same to bee continued for our further good Gualt in Act. 13. Homil. 88. And so I may say with Master Gualter Because we are distracted with diuers businesse Necesse fuit it was necessarie that some time should be appoynted free fromal cares and busines in which wee should employ our selues wholly in soule and bodie about those things which doe make for the seruice of God Muscul in praecept 4. because in it as it is truely sayd Animum requirit non dimidiatum sed integrum God requireth not halfe but the whole soule and minde And that I might remember my former promise of being short in so large a matter wee may briefly consider the necessitie of continuing the Sabbath vnto all ages It is necessarie that a daye should be sanctified if wee remember that the Lord would haue Adam to sanctifie and keepe holie one seuerall day in the weeke by it selfe that by those holie meanes of Gods seruice whereof his soule did stand in neede as his bodie did of corporal food he might keepe himselfe in that perfect estate which he was placed in which he had also power to doe For though he was so glorious and excellent as he was and shined in all vertues of soule and bodie farre aboue the Sunne which he might haue possessed for euer yet so it was by Gods wōderfull dispensation that there were notable meanes ordained for both without which they could not be and therefore as in respect of his bodie there was aboundance of pleasant fruit in the garden to eate of Gen. 2.9 so in regard of his soule there was the word of God euen the Commandements the perfect knowledge whereof he had the sacrament of his life alreadie receiued of God Gen. 1.26 and Coloss 3.10 compared together Gen. 2.9 and to bee continued by him the tree that was in the middest of the garden he was commanded to pray and giue thankes and there was the wonderfull excellent frame of the world to stirre him vp to these things So that as his bodily life ●ould not be preserued God ordayning it so without ●●e vse of his creatures and therefore hee willed him to ●●dresse the garden and keepe it in the sixe dayes Gen. 2.15 that it might yeeld those things vnto him So the life of God which was in him could not continue without those ho●y and spirituall meanes appointed for that purpose and ●herefore hee was commaunded to keepe holy the seuenth day verse .3 that in the more plentifull vse of all the meanes vpon that day he might both make a supply of that which could not be done on the other dayes and also thereby be continued in all strength to doe all other dueties the dayes following Now if Adam because hee might fall did stand in need of this day to preserue him from falling how much more we being so horribly fallen alreadie as wee bee doe stand in neede of it againe againe to bring our selues backe into that estate from whence we are fallen and as it were to recouer our first footing if it was needfull for Adam I say being nowe most perfect to haue a day allotted out vnto him by true sanctifying of which he might still abide in his perfection can we bee so froward to imagine that now it is not most needfull for vs being so
of the yeare and that in the most necessary times and businesse that belong to mans life they must rest because God hath commanded it preferring his worship and the obedience to his commandements before all their owne priuate gaine and commoditie whatsoeuer And Master Caluin vpon this place saith Whereas the Lord doth expresly bid vs rest in the time of earing and haruest Caluin in Exod 34.21 it is not as though he did giue vs libertie for all the yeare besides but hereby doth more restraine vs because no necessitie ought to interrupt this holy obseruation otherwise it might seeme to haue some honest pretence if because of continuall raine or other vnseasonable weather the time of sowing were not so commodious that husbandmen might bee exempted from this lawes least by their resting a dearth should follow And so also might they thinke for gathering in the Corne least it should rotte vpon the ground Atqui Deus nullam dispensationem admittit But GOD admits no dispensation but that the seuenth day should bee kept Etiam cum periculo communis iacturae Euen with the danger of some common losse So that whatsoeuer our corrupt reason and the diuell might minister vnto vs for the dissuading of vs from this obedience yet if our care be vnfainedly to please GOD indeede and that wee would haue the testimonie of a good conscience in the things that wee doe before God not seruing him in hypocrisie after our owne harts lusts deceiuing our selues whatsoeuer we imagine to the contrarie we had need to haue at least as euident and plaine places of the scripture for the iustifiyng of our manifold businesse and great working vpon the Sabbath which is too common euery where as this one is euident and pregnant against them vnlesse we will haue it appeare that we make no conscience of our doings at al or rather that we do wittingly and willingly transgresse the knowen trueth and destroy the lawe of God Psal 119. part 17. as the Prophet speaketh For no doubt vpon this ground and the persuasion of this lawe that worthie and thrise noble Nehemiah dealt so zealously as it is written of him in the 13. chapter of that booke when hee saw men worke vpon the Sabbath in the time of haruest according to that wicked custome that had growen vp in the time of the captiuitie and did so mightily set himselfe against that manifest breach of the Commandement though it was not so taken before that through Gods good hand vpon him he preuailed in the end Nehem. 13.15 In those daies saw I in Iudah them that troad winepresses vpon the Sabbath and that brought in sheaues and which laded asses also with wine grapes and figges and all burthens and brought them into Ierusalem vpon the Sabbath day 17. Then reproued I the Rulers of Iudah and sayd vnto them what euill thing is this that you doe and breake the Sabbath day did not your fathers thus and our God brought all this plague vpon vs and vpon this citie yet you encrease the wrath vpon Israel in breaking the Sabbath In which words as it is euident that he speaketh against working vpon the Sabbath in the haruest time for he nameth such things as are proper vnto haruest as the bringing in of sheaues figges and grapes which were their fruite and the treading of winepresses so he chargeth them that thus to doe was an euill thing worthie of reproofe nay of punishment as he afterward threatneth it he sayth that they breake the Sabbath in so doing and did encrease the wrath of God against Israel euen as it was the cause that he had taken such punishment vpon their fathers alreadie Where it seemeth he had respect vnto the prophesie of Ieremie who had long before threatned destruction vnto Ierusalem Ierem. 17.27 for the polluting of the Sabbath and namely in this of open carrying and recarrying of things into Ierusalem When he sayth But if ye will not heare me to sanctifie the Sabbath day and not to beare a burthen nor to goe through the gates of Ierusalem in the Sabbath day then will I kindle a fire in the gates therof and it shall deuoure the palaces thereof and it shall not bee quenched And Master Caluin writing vpon this place sayth Caluin in hunc ●●●um Hoc emphatiè additur There is a great emphasis in this that he speakes of the gates of Ierusalem for it was not lawfull to doe any of those things in the fields and solitarie places it was therefore a great contempt to come so openly into the citie But to returne to the scripture alleadged before What can bee spoken more plainly then this for the ouerthrow of all such vaine excuses as men doe forge in their owne braine and for the establishing of this doctrine that to rest vpon the Sabbath is so necessarie that the imagined necessitie of haruest will not excuse our working before God neither will it goe for payment before him Which wee may assure our selues that those men did wel vnderstand out of the scriptures who in their Councell so decreed Instituimus We ordaine that vpon the Lords day Cabilonens concil cap. 18. nullus penitus praesumat no man at all presume to doe any worke of husbandrie that is to say not to plow to reape corne or what soeuer pertaineth to the husbanding of their ground For as Irenaeus sayth Non vetabat lex Iren. contra haeres lib. 4. cap. 20. The lawe did not forbid those that were hungrie to take meate and to eate of such things as were at hand metere autē colligere in horreū vetabat but it did forbid to reape and to carrie it into the barne And here that I might make an end of this place before I go any further this may most certainly be gathered from it that if the rest of the Sabbath will not beare this working no not in haruest without the breach of it then much lesse will it suffer the ordinarie keeping of Faires and Markets vpon that day 4 No faires to be kept vpon the Lords day the buying and selling of wares the carrying and recarrying of them for we see how all these abuses being among them this godly gouernour Nehemiah in the wisedome of the spirit espieth them and in the zeale of the same can in no wise winke at them for thus it is written of him in the same place as wee haue alreadie heard in part vers 15. In these dayes saw I in Iudah those that trode Winepresses on the Sabbath and I protested to them in the day that they sold victuals 16. There dwelt men of Tyrus also therein which brought fish and all wares and sold on the Sabbath vnto the children of Iudah euen in Ierusalem 19 And when the gates began to be darke before the Sabbath I commanded to shut the gates and charged that they should not be opened till after the Sabbath and some of my seruants set I
braines wee may iudge to the contrarie So that if any man when he hath had the whole weeke before him to make his prouision will neglect the oportunitie and passe the time ouer and then goe vpon the Lords day to the butchers or such like places to buie victuals hoping to get a better penniworth or because he would not lette his busines before or for that he maketh no difference of dayes and all this while grosselie imagineth that hee committeth no sinne excusing his fact with this that meate must needes bee had and it cannot bee deferred daubing it vp as it were with the vntempered morter of necessitie hee must bee admonished that howsoeuer hee may set a fayre face on his before men and may bleare their eyes that cannot well see yet in Gods iudgement i● is lesse then nothing who must be iudge of all but will melt away as snowe before the sunne seeing that hee hath to cut off the head and tayle of those idle pretences spoken aloude and proclaymed long agoe that the sabbath is to bee obserued and remembred for these causes which we must doe so much the rather because he promiseth vnto vs that in sixe dayes we shall be able to doe all our worke for so is it in the wordes of the commandement Sixe dayes shalt thou labour and doe all thy worke Euery man in the sixe dayes may doe all his worke in which words because he vseth it as a reason to perswade vs to rest vpon the seuenth day there must needs bee secretly included as there is a promise of the blessing of God vpon our labours in the sixe dayes that in them we shal be able to do al our work euen al our work I say which properlie belongeth vnto vs and which the Lord would haue vs to doe and therefore calleth it our worke As Master Caluin noteth vpon these wordes Calu. in Exod. 20.8 Vniuersum opus All thy worke hereby saith he is signified that though the sabbath be taken away there will be time enough for all our busines otherwise this reason we see were insufficient to perswade men to rest vpon the seuenth day if in the sixe wee might truelie obiect they cannot doe all their worke But the Lord who knoweth what hee would haue vs to doe and therefore what is our worke better then wee our selues and what is our strength to doe it and what time we haue allotted out for it he saith in the sixe days we may doe all our worke and this he speaketh to the busiest bodie in the worlde and to the most couetous who knoweth no ende of working whereby any gayne is gotten and therefore when we take vpon vs so many things that we are ouerwhelmed with them cannot bring them to an ende with the end of the sixe dayes then haue we intermedled with that which belongs not vnto vs and haue entered as it were vpon other mens busines and it is not the Lord but the diuell that hath set vs on worke and he will one day pay vs our hyre Master Caluin doth lay forth this whole matter very plentifully in most significant wordes Caluin vpon Deut. 5. serm 35. and followes it with great power in his sermons vpon Deuteronomie When it is sayd Thou shalt labour sixe dayes our Lords would hereby signifie vnto vs that wee ought not to complaine of yeelding vnto him one certaine day when hee leaueth vnto vs sixe for one as if hee did say shall the cost and charge bee great vnto you to chuse one day which may bee wholly giuen to my seruice that you doe no other thing in it but reade and exercise your selues in my lawe or heare my doctrine which shall bee preached vnto you a day to come to the Temple to the end you may there be confirmed by the sacrifices which are there made a day to call vpon my name to declare and protest that you are of the number and companie of my people ought this to bee grieuous and troublesome vnto you seeing you haue sixe daies free to traffique and to doe your busines in when I vse such gentlenes towards you that I demand but one day of seuen is not this an ouer gre●t vnthankefulnes on your part if you complaine of this time as being euill imployed If you bee such couetous and niggardly wretches as not to spare me one seuenth part of the time I haue giuen you your whole life wheresoeuer the sunne shineth vpon you you ought to acknowledge my goodnes and how that I am a liberall father towards you for this sunne which J make to shine is to giue you a meane to goe and walke by to the end that euery one may doe his busines and yet for all this why is it that I shall not haue one day among seuen in which euery one should withdrawe himselfe from his trauaile and labour that you bee not wrapped in the care of the worlde and so haue no care to thinke vpon me Now then we see that this sentence of trauailing the sixe dayes is not placed as a commandement but is rather a permission which God giueth and that to reproch the vnthankefulnes of men if they obserue not the Sabbath day and sanctifie it in such sort as we haue spoken So then when men shall haue well considered of this thing they shall be conuinced that God beareth with them as a father which should shew himselfe pitifull to his children and therefore let vs take diligent heede that we be not vngratefull but be prouoked and allured to serue our God so much the more seeing he commandeth vs not those things which might seem ouer bitter and painefull vnto vs but hath a due regard to our power and abilitie therefore when he beareth with vs after this manner and leaueth vnto vs our profits and commodities so much more dissolute wicked and inexcusable are wee if we be not inflamed to yeeld our selues wholly vnto him Thus farre Master Caluin See then what an impudency and rebellion this is that men are growen vnto the Lord sayth In sixe daies they may doe all their worke and therefore willeth them to rest vpon the seuenth and they most wickedly crie out as loud with more then a whorish face by their speeches and practises that in sixe daies they cannot doe all their worke and therefore they take vp also all our part of the seuenth what a crueltie then is this that they charge the Lord withall that he should bind them vnder the paine of eternall condemnation to rest vpon the seuenth day and yet should not giue them sufficient time vpon the other dayes to end their worke in which once but to imagine were horrible impietie But let vs iustifie the Lord in his mercie and confesse as the truth is that wee ought so much the more carefully to remember the Sabbath to rest vpon it because in the sixe daies wee may doe all our worke if wee will pray vnto God for
wisedome in our calling and so we shall be deliuered from that necessitie of working many times which otherwise we doe voluntarily pull vpon our selues Thus wee may conclude this point that seeing the Lord of his great liberalitie euen vpon that day wherein hee requireth our rest most precisely hath not cast vs into that bondage that we should doe nothing at all but hath left vs that freedome that in needfull things we may labour it standeth vs in hand so much the more carefully to looke to our selues that wee be sure the things we go about could not haue bin done before not deferred any longer and therefore were necessary to be done at that time which when wee bee throughly persuaded of by Gods word then may wee in faith and a good conscience take them in hand knowing that the Lord exempteth vs as it were at that presēt from the generall lawe of resting and by some speciall occasion calleth vs to worke and therefore wee doe it as vnto him Works of necessitie vpon the Lords day must not be done for gaine but of mercy and pitie In which consideration wee ought not to take any thing for our worldly labours vpon the Sabbath and we should not make a gaine of our trauaile vpon that day if necessitie driue vs vnto it for we do it not as a worke of our calling from the which wee must cease nor as that by the which wee get our liuing with which wee must not meddle but only because some of the creatures doe stand in neede of our helpe for whose preseruation the day of rest is appointed and therefore in pitie and compassion vnto them we yeelde them our labour and doe it as a deed of mercy and vnto the Lord. And therfore though that constitution of Gregorie the 9. Cent. 13. cap. 6. be not in all points sound when he saith Let men and cattell rest vpon the Lords day vnlesse vrgent necessitie compell them vel nisi gratis fiat or vnlesse it be done freely for the poore or for the Church because the free doing of a thing will not excuse it when there is no necessitie or when it is not a worke proper vnto this day yet it seemeth that herein he aymed at the truth when he requires that that which is done should not be for gaine but of loue to the poore and to the Church of God and therefore freely And this is that indeed which commonly men do pretend when they are charged with their needlesse trauailings that it was a good deed to help such a one in miserie and it did lye vpon his vndoing and hee could not but doe it for very pitie and a great deale more they can say for themselues Therefore let it appeare by their doings that nothing mooued them but pitie and that of very conscience to relieue the necessity of others thy were mooued vnto it by not onely not receiuing but not looking for any reward of men no more then you doe of the almes which you giue and for visiting the sicke and imprisoned that so it may be counted as an holy worke indeed when you doe it not respecting your owne profite in it but onely the good of others Therefore let the Phisition or chirurgian and such as attend vpon the sicke or are any wayes imployed about him take nothing for their paines vpon the Sabbath but let them doe it freely that it may be a gift and not accounted as a work of their calling but a deede of loue and the apothecarie though he receiue money for his stuffe yet let his labour be free The like must be vnderstoode of all other works of necessitie And therefore if the lawyer counsellor or sergeant will needs trauaile then about his clients cause let him doe it onely for Gods sake and not bee occupied about it as a worldly thing and a matter of gaine for that is proper to the sixe daies in the which God would haue them in the sweat of their face to eate their bread Obiection But if they say it may be the men with and for whom we deale stand in no such need of our liberalitie nay they would thinke scorne of it and they may better giue vs a pound then wee them a penny Answer then yet at least wise dedicate it to the poore and taking it with the one hand giue it with the other that you may haue the testimony of a good conscience the spirite of God bearing you witnes that your worke was onely for the Lorde as this day is appointed out wholly for his seruice and that no priuate commoditie of your owne mooued you vnto it for the Lord hath giuen you the sixe dayes to make prouision for yourselfe for otherwise we shall make no difference betwixt the sixe daies and the seuenth the works of the one and of the other if we shall in all of them alike be conuersant in the same things with the same minde and for the same ende and purpose Therefore that I might end this matter we doe see that excepting these cases of necessitie in which the Lord would haue vs thus cheerefully to be occupied as about the works of mercy and his seruice onely from whence no gaine is to be looked for 1. Tim. 6.6 though godlines indeed be great gaine and he that hath pitie vpon the poore lendeth vnto the Lorde and looke what he layeth out Prou. 19.17 it shall be repayed him wee are bound most straitly in this commandement to rest and that the Lord looketh for a rare and singular kinde of rest euen such a one as wee haue heard out of his worde and that hee will not dispence with vs in any wise but as it hath beene shewed and therefore that wee ought to haue a principall respect and regard vnto it as to the thing that doth most neerely concerne vs. And in this one point though I am not ignorant that I haue a great cloud of aduersaries against me who are otherwise minded and cannot be thus persuaded as indeed many things in this commandement are greatly controuersied yea among the learned as in any one that I know yet I desire them in the feare of God that as they will obserue the rule of the Apostle Iames 1.19 who would haue vs swift to heare slowe to speake and slow to wrath they would indifferently and as it were in an eeuen ballance weigh such things at haue been alreadie alledged for the proofe of it before they begin to giue out their censures against it Obiection If we be thus straitly bound to rest we are still in as great bondage as the Iewes were vnder the law Therefore whereas some men might hereupon gather that if the case be thus betwixt the Lorde and vs in the matter of the Sabbath and that the commandement of resting doth stand in such force and strength and bindeth vs so strongly as it doth then our estate is no better then the Iewes the same
we haue washed our hands clean from the workes of our calling so that none of them do cleaue to our fingers that this were an acceptable obedience vnto God when in the meane season our mindes are as worldly as euer they were and our thoughts bee as fresh vpon them and our affections are raysed vp to as great delight in them as though wee were in the middest of them But as the whole lawe is spirituall so this commandement hath a spirituall trueth in it and contenteth not it selfe with an outward obedience but requireth the inward truth of the heart that as we make a shew of resting from earthly things so we should doe it indeede without the which the other is but a fruitlesse and idle ceremonie For seeing this is the very end of putting our selues apart from all worldly busines that our mindes might not be entangled with them which because they must needes be so long as wee are dealing about them such is our nature that we cannot doe things and haue no feeling of them as though we were a sleepe or in a traunce therefore doe we dispatch our hands of them that our mindes might not bee disturbed by them Seeing then this is the principall ende that wee aime at to vnburden our mindes of these earthly cares that we might bee more quicke and free in Gods worship wee must especially labour for it and not stay in these other which though they be great in themselues yet are they but helpes and furtherances vnto this in so much that if on the Sabbath we leaue all our worke at home and come neuer so farre from it to the Church yet if our mindes be working as it were because they are occupied about it and wee would bee working if wee might and if we might not be knowne and if wee might not be punished or blamed and our mindes haue carried vs this way that wee would gladly haue stollen a working cunningly as wee say if wee might not haue been spied all that we doe is but meere hypocrisie so farre are we from the true obedience of this commandement And this wee haue seene sufficiently proued heretofore that we therefore rest from all worldly things Vt paratiores promptiores ad cultum diuinum as sayth S. Augustine in that excellent sermon of his That we might be more readie fit for Gods seruice Agust de tēp serm 251. when there is nothing to encomber vs and wee leaue at that time terrenam sollicitudinem the care of earthly things that wee might the more easily attend vpon the word of God which we cannot if still our mindes haue these burthens vpon them and be not released from worldly thoughts which presse them downe from being lifted vp vnto that heauenly life Master Caluin in his Sermons vpon Deut. giueth this reason why Christians should not goe to lawe vpon the Sabbath Caluin vpon Deut. 5. Ser. 39. Because vpon that day euery man ought to withdraw himselfe to Godward to minde his works that we may all of vs be prouoked to serue and honour him And afterwards addeth Common meetings are made that mē might heare the common doctrine of saluation and it is good reason that on the Sabbath day all other cares and thoughts should be layd aside And in another Sermon he sayth For we must rest Idem serm 34. and how rest forsooth wee must abide still and quiet our thought must not stirre to wander and deuise this and that Gualt in Act 13. Homil 88. For as Master Gualter sayth God doth therfore call the Sabbath his day that wee might knowe when that day is Ab omnibus alijs curis studijs abstinendum est that wee ought to abstaine from all other cares and dueties According vnto which exquisite rule if we doe measure out the obedience of all men we shall easily see how short they are of that perfect righteousnes which is here required and that many shall bee euen then found breakers of this commandement when they did most of all presume of the keeping of it and were puffed vp with a speciall pride for it For let vs graunt it vnto them which it may bee is true that they haue borne themselues in an euen and ciuill course not breaking out into any open contempt or wilfull and grosse breach of this Commandement yet if they will call themselues before Gods iudgement seate they shall find that many of these times they had a good desire to worke and would faine haue been at it if they might haue been couered and as wee say their fingers did tickle at it which as it hath been true at other times so most of all when as wee imagined that we might haue gained something if we would haue wrought and our ceasing from it was something vnprofitable vnto vs as in the time of any common Fayres or in the dayes of haruest of whom the Prophet Amos iustly complaineth speaking in their person Amos. 8.5 When will this new moone be gone that we may sell corne and the Sabbath that we may set forth wheate But if we iudge this doctrine too seuere and we cannot yeeld vnto it let vs compare this Commandement with the other which bee of the like nature with it and it may be they will perswade vs and leade vs into the trueth of it In the second Commandement we know that not only the making and worshipping of Images is forbidden but also to set vp an Idoll in our heart and to wish that we had it and to bee desirous to returne vnto Poperie liking of those times better then of this time of the Gospell and to be gaping after the Masse so that we are readie to imbrace it if it were thrust vpon vs againe and we could be very well contented with it so that we want but the oportunitie to furnish a Masse So in this not onely the bodily labour is forbidden which the lawes of men may prouide for but also the cogitations and desires of the minde towards them which none is able to meete with but the Lord that this law might bee like vnto himselfe And seeing that as our Sauiour Christ expoundeth the law he that is angrie with his brother vnadauisedly is guiltie of the law of murther Matth. 5.22 vers 28. And whosoeuer looketh on a woman to lust after her hath committed adulterie alreadie with her in his hearte why should we not say that hee that looketh on his busines with a mind desirous to bee occupied about them hath broken the commaundement of resting alreadie in his heart vnlesse he will make the one vnlike the other and to bee as it were of another broode For is not this that dignitie and preferment which wee giue to all the whole lawe of God aboue all the lawes of men that as they doe behold but the words and works of men therefore their lawes can forbid and punish sinne but when it thus breaketh out bewrayeth
as it were take our markes amisse of it Master Caluin vpon these words sayth Hinc colligimus Wee gather from hence that God speakes not of a small matter Caluin in Exod. 20.8 when he commends the sanctification of the Sabbath not in a word but doth exhort them vnto the diligent marking of it and so doth pronounce that their want of care to marke is a breach of the commandement And Master Musculus vpon the same words saith Notādum quod It is to be noted that he doth not simply say Sanctifie the Sabbath day but remember to do it This kind of commanding is not light but waightie hereby is signified Muscul in eundem locum that a matter of great importance is commaunded and that which by no meanes is to bee neglected but with great care to be kept For so do parents and masters vse to commend the doing of those things vnto their seruants children which aboue all other things they would haue least of all neglected So then if it be necessary to rest vpon this day as it hath been strongly prooued vnto vs then is it much more necessary to sanctifie the day as we haue seene in part and it shall more fully appeare vnto vs hereafter Which wee had need so much the more carefully to take heede vnto because the common practise of men is so cleane contrarie vnto it and the sinne as it is more common so it is greater and more dangerous And now we may more plainely vnderstand the great necessitie of that precise rest which hath beene so often spoken of and is so hardly receiued euen for because that otherwise we cannot so keepe it holy vnto the Lord as we ought to doe For this is the law of things consecrated vnto the Lord that they may not otherwise be imployed thē to his vse they must not be partly his partly ours but altogether his if they be holy to him therfore seeing the day must bee hallowed it must not be vsed in other affaires sauing in the lords busines it must not be partly ours by dooing our owne worke and partly the Lords by dooing his but his alone as it is called a Sabbath vnto the Lorde and therefore we are willed to doe no manner of worke in it And that the truth of this doctrine might appeare vnto vs so clearely as the noone daye The sanctification of this day is very precisely vrged in the Scriptures euen that the Sabbath ought most vndoubtedlie to be sanctified of all sortes let vs vnto all this which hath been alreadie spoken adde the consideration of so many scriptures wherein the spirit of God speaking of the Sabbath doth in most significant words commende according to our capacitie this truth againe and againe to vs. And first of all in the sixteene chapter of Exodus Exod. 16.23 vers 25. To morrow is the rest of the holy Sabbath vnto the Lord and afterwards To day is the sabbath vnto the Lord in both which places he calleth it a Sabbath vnto the Lord and in the former place an holy rest not onely shewing that they should rest vpon it but especially to what ende namely that they might keepe the day holy vnto the Lord by seruing of him and therefore he standeth vpon it calling it an holie rest and further adding a Sabbath vnto the Lord as purposing to let them see into the most especiall end of their resting euen the sanctification of the daye in the holy seruice of God Moreouer in the thirtie one chapter of the same booke Exod. 31.14.15 Ye shall keepe the Sabbath for it is holie vnto you Sixe dayes shall men worke but in the seuenth day is the Sabbath of the holy rest vnto the Lord where he calleth it both holie and holy vnto the Lord shewing what manner of rest it must bee not an idlenes or sleepie taking of our rest and ease but a carefull spending of that time in Gods seruice in which we must rest from all other things especially for that purpose Likewise in the 35. chapter of the same booke Sixe dayes shalt thou worke Exod. 35.2 but the seuenth day shall be vnto you the holy day of rest vnto the Lord where Moses declaring that message vnto the people which he had receiued before from the Lord for them telleth it to them fully and in the same number of wordes almost straightly requiring at their hands the keeping holy of the Sabbath day as a thing of great importance as appeareth by his speech so earnest and doubled calling it an holy Sabbath and then a day of rest vnto the Lord. But what should I here stand vpon all the places of Gods word in the olde and new testament which are infinite giuing most certaine testimonie and authenticall credite to this doctrine the time would not serue and the treatise would grow into a greater volume then I am willing it should these may suffice to shew vnto vs that the keeping holy of the Sabbath day must be the principall matter in this commaundement and as it were stand in the first ranke when it is in so many places and in such ample wordes commended and recommended vnto vs. For if it be the wisdome of a seruant there to be very attentiue where his master vseth many words and to be assured that that is a matter of great waight then much more ought wee to iudge the hallowing of the Sabbath daye to bee a thing then the which nothing ought more to be regarded of vs when vnto the words of Remembring and Marking that are set in the beginning of the commandement this thing also is in so many words spoken vnto vs and as it were beaten into our eares That I might not speake any thing of such other places wherein the seruing of God in the place appoynted by himselfe is adioyned vnto such exhortations as are made for the keeping of the Sabbath thereby declaring by what meanes especially the Sabbath is kept holie Leuit. 19.30 as ye shall keep my Sabbath and reuerence my sanctuarie where the Prophet Moses exhorting the Israelites to the diligent keeping of the Sabbath daye speaketh vnto them of that worship of God which was practised in the sanctuarie as the onely way to keepe it Vnto which agreeth that which is set downe in the 23. chapter of the same booke Sixe dayes shall worke be done Leuit. 23.3 but in the seuenth day shall be the sabbath of rest an holy conuocation Ye shall do no worke therein it is the Sabbath of the Lord in all your dwellings For in this place hee doth not onely call it a sabbath vnto the Lorde so many times before but also saith Holy assemblies were cōmanded to be kept vpō these dayes that vpon it must be an holie assemblie which assemblie then should be holie because they must meete for an holy purpose not to deale about any worldly affayres which notwithstanding they did at
admit no conference with their people at all whereupon many of Gods people are driuen to omit this part of Gods seruice whether they will or no to their owne great hinderance But to make an end of this matter we haue seene that it is the duetie of all men to conferre one with another and therefore no man can say I would faine doe it but I haue none that will conferre with me for hee may finde our some one or other that will ioyne with him in it and if not in that manner that hee desireth yet let him begin and it may bee that he may prouoke some that were vnwilling before and if not that if yet he shall finde that the very vttering of that which was taught before with his mouth vnto others shall be a singular helpe to confirme himselfe in it neither let any be so vntowarde Which they may doe though they can say but I or no or aske a question as altogether to drawe backe because they cannot speake so fruitfully of the word as they desire and it may bee they see some others before them doe For if they doe but listen diligently vnto that which is spoken in a desire to learne and will but giue their consent vnto it and seeme to like of it saying I or no they shall draw on the speaker and so continue that conference which may be profitable to them both which I knowe by experience the Lord hath so blessed in some that he hath nowe rewarded their obedience in the kingdome of heauen And we must remember that the Communion of Saints consisteth as well in receiuing as giuing euen in receiuing good from others as wel as in doing it vnto thē And therefore as wee must alwaies carrie about with vs these mindes that our desire is to further our selues or others in godlines so we may be assured wee haue spent the time well when wee haue attayned vnto either of both For as a Prophet must goe in the name of a Prophet to doe the dutie of a Prophet Math. 10.41 so the people that receiue him in the name of a Prophet that is to heare his doctrine to be made partakers of his prayer and to profit by both shall not lose their reward For this cause the Apostle writing to the Romaines sayth Rom. 1.11 He was desirous to come among them for the common good of both saying For I long to see you that I might bestowe among you some spirituall gift to strengthen you 11. that is that I might he comforted together with you through our mutuall faith both yours and mine Thus wee haue seene how we ought to meditate and conferre about the scriptures But wee must further know that though our meditations and conferences must alwaies be kept within the compasse of the worde least they bee wandring and so not onely friuolous and vaine but wicked and vngodly yet they are not so tyed vnto that but wee both may and ought fruitfully to meditate vpon and soberly to conferre about the workes of God that so wee might bee taught not onely by the worde but also by experience seeing that the inuisible things of God are seene by the creation and gouernement of the worlde Rom. 1.20 being considered in his workes We ought to meditate vpon and conferre about the works of God by which he manifesteth himselfe vnto vs. Which without the word I confesse is so litle because of our blindnes that it doth but leaue vs without excuse as the Apostle sayth in the same verse yet being holpen by the benefit of the worde as the dim sight of an olde man is holpen by the benefit of a paire of spectacles we are guided aright and see more cleerely into euery thing thereby especially when we are gouerned by Gods spirite herein For then we shall perceiue the infinite wisedome of God his great mercy and power his iustice and trueth c. which are so plentifully spoken of in the scripture not onely by his iudgements vpon the wicked and his benefites bestowed vpon his children in our owne times and in the dayes of our forefathers but also in all other the dumme and insensible creatures euen in the day and in the night winter and summer heate and cold c. whereby hee doth exercise his iudgements vpon the one or hee brings his blessings vpon the other Euen as the same Apostle testifieth vnto the mē of Lystra saying That God which made heauen and earth the sea Acts. 14.15 and all things that in them are in times past suffered all the Gentiles to walke in their owne waies neuerthelesse hee left not himselfe without witnesse in that he did good and gaue them raine from heauen and fruitfull seasons filling their hearts with food and gladnes For by those thinges they might haue seene how he in great wisedome and mercy gouerneth the world for their good so that thereby they shuld haue beene made more carefull to serue him which because they did not they were left without excuse and had nothing to say for themselues before Gods iudgement seate for the things should witnes against them and by the testimonie of their owne conscience they should confesse that the Lorde had by all his creatures sensibly allured and prouoked them to good And if the heathen were iustly condemned because they did not so profite by the view of the worlde as they should how much more shall we be without all shewe of excuse that we doe not labour to behold the inuisible things of God in his works euen his wisedome goodnes and truth and so forth which are so apparant in them and as it were written in great capitall letters to bee reade of the whole world seeing vnto them we haue the light of his word adioyned to helpe the blindnes of our eyes in this behalfe Psalm 92. That Psalme which was specially made to he sung vpon the Sabbath daye as appeareth by the title of it doth sufficiently declare how we ought then to be occupied in meditating vpon Gods goodnes and praysing him for it yea how wee ought to conferre and talke of the same And indeed this is the right vse of the creatures for which they were first made namely to set foorth the glorie of God and to serue man that hee thereby might bee made more fit to serue God therefore then doe wee vse them aright when they leade vs vnto God then are they abused when wee stay in them and so are thereby either turned away from God or at least wise kept from comming vnto him So then let vs account this one part of our duetie and seruice to Iesus Christ vpon his holie day to consider aduisedly of his workes who is now the heire of the whole world and gouerneth euery thing in it for the good of his people that he hath redeemed seeing all power is giuen vnto him in heauen and in earth that wee thereby might be more cōfirmed in
his fauor more assured of his promises and made more fit to serue him Euen as in the scriptures The seruants of God haue greatly profited in faith obedience by the consideratiō of his creatures we may see many times how the spirit of God sendeth vs to the creatures to bee confirmed by them in the things that are spoken of God in the word and the seruants of God haue by them strengthened their faith in the promises which they had learned out of Gods word before The Prophet Esay chap. 40. propoūding vnto the people most excellent promises whereof they should bee made partakers in the time of the Gospell which hee doth in the former part of the chapter frō the 12. verse he beginneth to confirme them in the certaine trueth of the same by the consideration of Gods omnipotent power whereby hee made all things at the first in such a wonderfull order that thereby they might bee assured that nothing should bee able to hinder him from bringing that to passe which he haid promised to his Church but that they should looke most certainly for it saying Who hath measured the waters in his fist and counted heauen with a span and comprehended the dust of the earth in a measure and waighed the mountaines in a waight and the hils in a ballance So likewise the Prophet Ieremie in his 33. chapter promising mising vnto the church deliuerance out of their trouble doth perswade them of the infallible truth of Gods word herein by setting before their eyes the immutable course of nature in the continuall interchange of the day and night Thus sayth the Lord Iere. 33.20 if you can breake tny couenant of the day and my couenant of the night that there should not be day and night in their season 21. then may my couenant bee broken with Dauid my seruant that he should not haue a sonne to raigne vpon his throne and with the Leuits and Priests my ministers 22. As the armie of heauen cannot be numbred neither the sand of the sea measured so will I multiplie the seede of Dauid my seruant and the Leuits that minister vnto me The Psalmes most of all are full of this matter and as it is a booke of practise especially so it is plentifull in these meditations and the treatise would be long if I should but in order reckon vp the principall places there tending to this purpose yet the waightines of the matter will not suffer me to passe ouer them all It is most apparant how Dauid in the 8. Psalme stirreth vp himselfe and all mankinde to praise the Lord for his great liberalitie towards them appearing in this that as he made him at the first Lord and ruler ouer all his creatures in heauen and earth so he hath restored him into the same dignitie by Christ when he had iustly lost it before because of his sinne when he thus beginneth and endeth the Psalme O Lord our gouernour Psal 8.19 how excellent is thy name in all the world And in another Psalme the Prophet complaineth of the greatnes of his affliction and being almost discouraged because the Lord deferred his helpe so long that he might not vtterly sink down vnder the heauie waight of his grieuous tentation Psal 77.10 strengtheneth his faith by remembring Gods former works that he might haue hope of his mercie towards himselfe I remembred the yeares of the rtght hande of the most high 11. I remembred the workes of the Lord certainly I remembred thy wonders of old 12. I did also meditate of all thy workes and did deuise of thine acts So likewise in the 22. Psalme the man of God being in such extremitie that he was almost past all hope beginneth with this heauie complaint Et. 21.1 My God my God why hast thou forsaken me and art so farre from my health and from the voyce of my roring But afterwards commeth to this verse 4. Our father 's trusted in thee they trusted and thou didst deliuer them 5. They called vpon thee and were deliuered they trusted in thee and were not confounded And then he sayth vers 10. I was cast vpon thee euen from the wombe thou art my God from my mothers bellie Where we see he getteth hope at the last of being heard and deliuered by the consideration of Gods workes both generally done to his seruants in times past and particularly shewed to himselfe heretofore And there is great reason of this for the Lord is alwaies like himselfe and Iesus Christ is yesterday and to day and the same for euer and therefore will doe as he hath done for there is no respect either of persons Psal 25.10 or times with him but all the wayes of God are mercie and trueth not only mercie in the beginning but trueth in the midst and ending For this cause the seruant of God thus praieth in the Psalme 119. Et. 119.132 Looke vpon me and be mercifull vnto me as thou vsest to doe vnto those that loue thy name And vers 149. Heare my voyce according to thy louing kindnes O Lord quicken me according to thy custome In both which places we see how he prayeth to God that he would shewe him that mercie which he was wont to shew to him himselfe others in the like case heretofore so by the former works of God strengtheneth himselfe in prayer Thus wee may easilie vnderstand what profit we might get by the earnest meditation and wise conference about the works of God which are done in great wisedome thereby to confirme vs in the trueth of those things that are written in the word and to draw vs to those dueties that are required of vs in the same and so generally to further vs in all godlinesse and therefore a thing not to bee neglected at any time but most of all to bee practised vpon the Lords day that we might leaue nothing vndone which might make all Gods worship most profitable vnto vs and make vs fitter vnto all other dueties which is the end why the Sabbath was ordained In the 104. Psalme the Prophet speaking of the wonderfull workes of God and the marueilous gouerning preseruing of them beginneth thus Et 104.1 My soule praise thou the Lord and towards the midst breaketh forth into this speech O Lord how manifold are thy workes vers 24. in wisedome hast thou made them all And in the end concludeth with Glorie be to the Lord for euer And 33. I will sing vnto the Lord all my life I will praise my God while I liue Hereby declaring what ought to bee wrought in all men by the reuerent cōsidering of Gods works and that we should not muse or speake of them vnprofitably but with that glorie vnto God and comfort to our selues which he requireth of vs and no doubt many of his children doe But that I might drawe to an ende one word of that which as it is most plaine so it is most comfortable
Gods workes will teach vs to profit by al things and in all estates Therefore if men will needes ouerlooke their grounds vpon the Lords daye as sometimes they must and bee dealing with their cattell talking about them let their cogitation and speeches tend to this ende and then in so dooing they may sanctifie a part of the daye otherwise they shall be as merely worldly vpon that daye as in any other of the sixe And in deed if we would thus bend our mindes and pray to God for his spirite and vse to doe it we should neuer want matter of profit to our selues and others in what estate and condition soeuer wee were about whatsoeuer wee had to deale either in the day or in the night at home or abroade alone by our selues or with others for thus in a meane estate of life whereas the wicked doe complaine and are not satisfied but enuie them that are aboue thē we might behold the goodnes of God towards vs prouiding so wel for vs according to the desire of the wise man Prou. 30.8 Giue me not pouertie or riches feed me with foode conuenient for mee 9. Least I bee full and denye thee and say who is the Lord Or least I bee poore and steale and take the name of my God in vaine If wee bee vnder the crosse either pouertie sicknes or any other distresse whereas the men of this world doe repine and grudge let vs vnderstand the wise dealing of our father towards vs Who by this meanes Rom. 8.29.17 maketh vs like vnto the image of his sonne that wee suffering with him might also be glorified with him If the Lord hath blessed vs with the aboundance of all things though the greater sort be puffed vp thereby and by abusing of them doe forget God let vs thereby bee humbled and vsing them well not haue our mindes set too much vpon them and know whiles we are here in the body we are absent from the Lorde and that this is but an earthly tabernacle which must be destroyed looking for an house not made with hands eternall in the heauens If then there bee so many good things here below what is the happines prepared aboue If so great contentation vpon earth what is the fulnes of ioye in heauen And not onely thus but whither soeuer we doe turne our eyes we shal haue matter not onelie to keepe vs from idlenes but to prouoke vs to all profitablenes For when the sunne ariseth how might it tell vs of the comforte of the sunne of righteousnes arising in our hearts How might the spring of the yeare put vs in minde of our regeneration and new birth What would the darkenes of the night teach vs but the horror and feare of ignorance where there is not Gods worde Would not our meate leade vs to the spirituall foode of our soules And our apparell to the righteousnes of Christ Iesus that being clothed therewith wee might bee comely before God and men and not ashamed And to be short if we were not beastes and no men might not our sleepe forewarne vs of death our bedde of the graue our rising againe in the morning of the day of our resurrection Thus al the creatures should lift vs vp to the creator and thus to be occupyed about them are the very works of the Sabbath indeede Thus if we did see or heare any of the iudgements of God vpon our selues or others wee should thinke and speake of them with humilitie and feare of any of his benefites with great ioy and comfort whereas now men for the most part doe neither the one nor the other And though I know very wel that the proper place to speak of these things is in the third cōmandement where the Lord willeth vs in al our thoughtes wordes deeds to seeke and set forth his glorie and therefore so alwaies to deale with his creatures that his most glorious name might appeare thereby For he is the creator of all things and this is his name yet to doe them vpon the Sabbath is the very worke of that day in which we should vse all the meanes that might make the publike ministery most profitable vnto vs and either drawe vs nearer vnto God or make vs more fitte to doe dueties to our brethren Therefore let vs set our hand to this trueth confessing that it is our bounden dutie to serue God in this right vse of his creatures and workes let vs be sorrowfull that wee haue ouerslipped this duetie so carelesly heretofore and let vs bee assured that it hath bereaued vs of much godlines that otherwise might haue been in vs and made vs so much the lesse profitable vnto others and therefore in the feare of God and in the care of our own Saluation let vs purpose performe this duetie most carefully hereafter that the blessing of God might be more vpon vs and we haue the testimonie of a good conscience of Gods creatures witnessing for vs and not against vs. And let vs be so much the more carefull of it in good earnest But all sortes doe greatlie fayle in it by how much we knowe too well that the common practise of most men is so farre from it In so much that euen they of the vniuersitie that make it their profession to search out the nature of Gods workes and to see furthest into them and therefore must needs haue many and deepe meditations besides often and long disputations about them doe not so much as propounde this vnto themselues and therefore no maruell if they neuer attaine vnto it namelie to beholde in them the inuisible things of God Gods wonderfull work in them thereby either to be confirmed in any part of his word or stirred vp to any duetie vnto God or men but they haue in stead of these many both vaine and too curious and also false and vntrue discourses about these with themselues and others euen vpon the Sabbath And I am sure that in the countrey men are not free from this sinne for it falleth out in them euen of the better sorte either of ignorance or negligence that when they haue sanctified the Sabbath in some other part of Gods worship this hath not been so much as once thought of Nay euen then when they endeuoured themselues to meditate conferre about Gods worde which is the chiefe they haue not done the like about his workes and so haue lost some further commoditie of the worde that they might haue reaped when thus they might haue been taught as it were by a double schoolemaster especially when the Lord punisheth vs for neglecting some parte of his seruice and we doe not vse al the meanes that God hath appoynted to serue his prouidence by Therefore let vs remember among all other things that wee haue heard of before to make this one parte of our priuat seruice of God vpon his holy day and so I shal grow to an end For as it
prince of the Iewes Nehe. 13.15 after their returne from the captiuitie as it is set downe in the last chapter of that booke where he thus speaketh of himselfe In those daies saw I them in Iudah that trode wine presses on the sabbath and that brought in sheaues and which laded asses also with wine grapes and figges and all burdens and brought them into Ierusalem vpon the sabbath day and I protested to them in the day that they solde victuales 16. There dwelt men of Tyrus also therein which brought fish and all wares and solde on the sabbath vnto the children of Iudah and in Ierusalem 17. Then reproued I the rulers of Iudah and saide vnto them What euill is this that ye doe and breake the sabbath daye 18. Did not your fathers thus and our God brought all this plague vpon vs and vpon this citie Yet yee encrease the wrath vpon Israel in breaking the sabbath 19. And when the gates of Ierusalem began to be darke before the sabbath I commanded to shut the gates and charged that they should not bee opened till after the sabbath and some of my seruants set I at the gates that there should no burdē be brought in on the sabbath day 20. So the chapmen and marchants of al marchandize remained once or twise al night without Ierusalem 21. And I protested among them and said vnto them why tarrie ye all night about the wall if ye doe it once againe I will lay hands vpon you From that time came they no more vpon the sabbath In which words is fullie described vnto vs a most liuely picture both of that religious boldnes and zealous courage that should be in a magistrate bending al his force to the suppressing of such abuses as doe most dishonour the name of God as the breaking of the sabbath and also of the good blessing and prosperous successe of God vpon the worthie labours and Christian interprises of all such For though this abuse of prophaning the sabbath by breaking the rest of it so many waies as we see was so vniuersall and that through the iniquitie of the time preuayled so long that it had gotten a strong head and could not bee bridled at the first for though the gates were shut yet they tarried without at the wals all night hoping to come in in the morning with the formost according to their former custome so obstinate and peruerse were they in their wickednes yet when hee was as constant in Gods cause which he knew he had taken in hand as they were froward in their sinne God gaue him to deale so wisely being not discouraged first by proclayming the lawe of resting which he knew before was in the word then by threatning imprisonment vpon them that would not keep it commanding the inferiour magistrates to looke to the execution of it and rebuking them for their negligence and sloth in it in former times fearing them by the consideration of Gods iudgement euen their present captiuitie which came vpon their forefathers from the which they were not all returned and into the which or some other they might fall againe because of this one sinne that hee preuayled with them euen as it is set downe to his great commendation and to the singular incouraging of all Christian Magistrates in their offices What good successe God gaue him in it to the vnspeakeable comfort of the church and the immortall prayse of God that from that time they came no more vpon the sabbath A worthie rewarde for so noble an enterprise an honourable triumph for so rare a conquest And if we doe see so happie an ende of the trauaile of one man in so corrupt a time dealing against a sinne so deepelie rooted so publickely defended by the practise of the common people so generallie winked at by the inferiour magistrates and that in Iudah and in Ierusalem what hope might wee haue of the blessed endeuours of so many Nehemias in a time more religious among so many worthie gouernours in the Church and common-wealth if our sinnes did not hinder it and if they would deale in the faith and zeale and constancie of Nehemiah and wee would helpe them with our prayers That so first of all it might bee established by a generall meeting of all estates ciuill and ecclesiasticall as it was in his dayes by the Priests Leuits and chiefe of the people that none should doe any thing contrarie to the obseruation of the sabbath Nehe. 10.8.9.14 no not vnder the pretēce of dealing with strangers and then that those lawes might be diligently executed with great seueritie vpon all transgressors yea though they were strangers as they were in his time rebuking and sharplie punishing all inferiour officers by whose negligence the faulte should bee committed as hee did with great grauitie and moderation So then to drawe this whole treatise into a narrowe roome and to shut it vp in a worde the summe of all is that the Lord hath commanded so precise a rest vnto all sortes of men that it may not by any fraude deceite or circumuention whatsoeuer be broken but that hee will most seuerely require it at their hands vnder the payne of his euerlasting displeasure And this is the first duetie here required that both wee our selues and all vnder vs doe vpon the seuenth day rest from all such workes as by vertue of our callings appertaine vnto vs vpon the other sixe and this is the thing that wee should bee perswaded of Obiection If men should thus rest from all worke how should they liue But now if any vngodly man through the coueteousnes that is in him cannot yeeld vnto this because hee sauoureth not the things that bee of God but is worldlie minded and therefore is ready to obiect and say if we doe not labour how shall we eate you see the world is hard and things are at a great price and we haue a charge of wife and children that must bee cared for and when wee haue wrought sore the whole sixe dayes it will scarsely find vs bread therefore what reason is it to binde vs from working vpon the seuenth And why may not a poore man then earne a pennie as well as at any other time What I thinke you would haue vs to starue It is true in deede as M. Caluin saith Caluin vpon Deut. 5. serm 35. That all of vs naturally are of that minde that if we endeuour to mounte on hye to the heauenlie life and bestowe our studies herein we thinke we shall dye for hunger and this shall be to turne vs from our profites and commodities For as hee further saith the diuell commeth alwaies to perswade vs vnder this shadow and wilines that if we imploy our selues to the seruice of God we must needs dye of famine and that we liue to be pittied of others for our miserie Answer Therefore for answer I first of all say as he doth Of a truth we cannot serue
God except we cast from vs these worldly cares which presse vs downe ouermuch then I doe further adde that surelie here we haue neede of faith to beleeue That godlines hath the promises of this life as well as the life to come 1. Tim. 4.8 and that if wee will first seeke the kingdome of God and his righteousnes all needefull things shall be giuen vnto vs. Matth. 6.33 And therfore if we rest vpon the seuenth day because the Lord hath cōmanded it he will so blesse multiplie the things that we haue that we shal receiue from him our daily bread vpon that daye as well as vpon any other For if the seruant that hath trauailed al the dayes of the weeke in his masters seruice may looke for his ordinarie foode and wages vpon the Lordes daye though he rest thereon then may we much more looke for this iust and mercifull dealing from God And that we might beleeue it the rather let vs remember the promise which the Lord maketh to the Israelites in the like case when he commanded them to let their ground rest from plowing and tilling the seuenth yeare as it is plentifully recorded by Moses Sixe yeares thou shalt sowe thy fielde and sixe yeares thou shalt cut thy vineyard Leuit. 25.3 and gather the fruite thereof 4. But the seuenth yeare shall bee a sabbath of rest vnto the land it shall be the Lords sabbath thou shalt neither sowe thy fielde or cut thy vineyard 18. Wherfore ye shall obey mine ordinances and keepe my lawes and doe them and ye shal dwel in the land in safetie 19. And the land shall giue her fruite and yee shall eate your fill and dwell therein in safetie 20. And if ye shall say what shall we eate the seuenth yeare for we shall not sowe neither gather in our increase 21. I will send my blessings vpon you in the sixt yeare and it shall bring forth fruite for three yeares 22. And ye shall sowe the eight yeare and eate of the olde fruite vntill the ninth yeare vntill the fruites thereof come yee shall eate the olde Where wee see how the Lorde doth aboundantly promise to supplie the want that might haue seemed to come vpon them by resting the seuenth yeare with a treble blessing vpon the reuenewes of the sixt which thing also he did most plentifully performe so long as they obeyed euen so no doubt the Lord will increase the wages of a poore man earned by his faithfull labour in his calling vpon the sixe dayes that it shall suffice him for the seuenth also so that for want he shall not neede to worke vpon it Caluin in Leuit 25.20 And here I must say as Master Caluin doth Nunquam Dei praeceptis morigeri erunt homines Men will neuer be obedient vnto the commandements of God till their distrustfulnes bee corrected and men are alwaies wittie enough to pretend many things why they should not obey but here was a speciall promise that no lacke should come to the Iewes by resting vpon the Sabbath whereof he had giuen them a sure pledge long agoe in the desert when on the day before the Sabbath a double portion of Manna was giuen to all that gathered And wee haue not seene men that haue been painfull indeed driuen to that necessitie that for the supply of their want they haue been compelled to labour vpon the seuenth day But contrariwise wee may many times obserue how they that are so wordly vpon the seuenth day doe not so greatly prosper but though they gaine one way they lose another But bee it that it were not so and that they alwaies gained be it neuer so much yea the whole world if it were possible and in the mean season lose their owne soule through their disobedience what will they giue for the redemption of it This ought to serue vs as Master Caluin setteth it downe in his sermons very largely and very pithily whose words therefore though they be many I will recite as a principle Caluin vpon Deut. 5. Ser. 35 to stir vp vs to follow that which God hath cōmāded vs. For the chiefest thing which stayeth vs from ordering our life to the obedience of God is this that being too much wedded to our selues we thinke this shal be against our profite and wee will alwaies prouide howsoeuer the case stands for our commodities in those things which appertaine vnto the world Behold how men cannot followe God but rather forsake him draw cleane backward from his law for that they thinke if they serue God they shall neuer thriue Now this is so wicked an vnthankefulnes that it serueth to aggrauate an hundreth times more our rebellion what must we doe then Let vs note well that wee shall not bee able to serue God with a franke and free courage except we be resolued that he prouideth for our whole life and that he will not forget vs as it is spoken in the person of Ioshua Iosh 1.9 Heb. 13.5 For the Apostle to the Hebrewes applieth this doctrine to all the faithfull yea to draw them from ouermuch care and carking he sayth Thy God will not faile thee he will not forget thee So that if once we can bee perswaded that God watcheth ouer vs and that he will liberally prouide for our necessities it is certaine we shall not be so busied in our earthly affections and we shall not bee so easily turned from seruing of God we shall not be hindered to meditate and thinke on the heauenly life we shall so passe through this world as to vse the creatures thereof as if wee vsed them not because wee knowe alwaies that wee ought to make our race further Obiection Many also take great libertie to themselues vpon that text where there is mention of a Sabbaths daies iourney Answere Act. 1.12 concerning which first of all it is not agreed vpon how farre that was Master Caluin vpon it sayth it was but two miles and of that iudgement are most of the Latin interpreters Doctor Tremelius in his notes vpon this place sayth it is but one mile Test Syria that he proueth both by the Syrian paraphrast out of the Iewes Talmud other Rabbins So that by this rule mens iournyes must be shortened a great deale lesse then they be except they haue better proofe Besides Master Caluin sayth in the aboue named place that there was no such thing prescribed in the law Hierom. in resp ad Algas quast 10. And S. Hierome sayth plainly it was but a tradition of theirs and especially of two Rabbins Atriba and Simon Heli. Therefore let vs not shut our eyes against so plaine a trueth and to day when we heare the voyce of God let vs not harden our hearts but subscribe vnto the veritie of it by our practise and let vs be willing to rest from al earthly affayres vpon the seuenth day and not to entangle our selues with any thing according