Selected quad for the lemma: work_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
work_n day_n rest_n sabbath_n 16,566 5 10.2403 5 true
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
A94296 Of religious assemblies, and the publick service of God a discourse according to apostolicall rule and practice. / By Herbert Thorndike. Thorndike, Herbert, 1598-1672. 1642 (1642) Wing T1054; Thomason E1098_1; ESTC R22419 207,469 444

There are 10 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

rest especially upon the Sabbath and that particularized to concern both Israelites themselves and their slaves and those that sojourn within their gates But that is very considerable which excellent Divines have observed That in the fourth Commandment where is so large provision for bodily rest there the purpose of that rest is onely pointed at in generall terms when it is commanded to be SANCTIFIED which is likewise done in all their Solemnities when they are called ASSEMBLIES but there is no mention made of any particular work of the Morall Service of God wherewith the Sabbath is commanded to be sanctified or for performance whereof they are commanded to Assemble unlesse it be the reading of the Law upon the seventh yeare commanded Deut. xxxi 12. So that it seemeth the Jews have reason when they observe that neither the Form nor Time of Prayer is appointed them by the Law of Moses but by the constitutions of their Elders Maimoni of Prayer C. 1. Numb 1 2. Indeed that the spirituall Service of God of Prayers and his Praises of hearing the Word and meditating upon his works was the thing for love whereof the Jews were commanded to keep the Sabbath those miserable people who in most things are blinded with the letter and never look under the vail upon Moses his face have been able alwayes to perceive as it is to be seen by the sayings of their late and ancient Writers Josephus ad v. Appionem ii 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Moses propounded to the Jews the most excellent and necessary learning of the Law not by hearing it once or twice but every seventh day laying aside their works he commanded them to Assemble for the hearing of the Law and throughly and exactly to learn it Philo de vita Mosis iii. relating the passage of him that gathered wood on the Sabbath of whom it is said Numb xv 33. They brought him unto Moses and Aaron and unto all the Congregation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They take him saith he and bring him to the Ruler with whom sate the Priests all the multitude standing by to heare He observeth that Moses was then expounding the Law as upon the Assembly of the Sabbath Aaron that is as he expoundeth it the Priests sitting on the Bench with him the Congregation standing by to heare The observation he prosecuteth with his reason in these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For the custome was alwayes when occasion gave way but principally on the seventh dayes as I shewed afore to be exercised in knowledge the Chief going afore and teaching the rest increasing in goodnesse and bettering in life and manners From whence at this day the Jews study their Countrey learning upon the Seventh dayes dedicating that time to knowledge and the contemplation of Nature For the Synagogues in cities what are they but schools of wisdome and in his book de Decalogo he deriveth the imployment of the Sabbath in considering the works of God and calling their own works to account from that which God did in the beginning when he saw all that he had made and behold it was good Abenezra upon the fourth Commandment Exod. xx 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We see that the yeare of Remission is correspondent to the Sabbath for it is likewise the seventh of years And the Lord commanded that they should reade the Law in the beginning of it before men women and children expressing the reason Deut. xxxi 12. THAT THEY MAY HEARE AND LEARN AND OBSERVE And behold the Sabbath was given to consider the works of God and to meditate upon his Law as it is written Psal xcii 4. FOR THOU LORD HAST MADE ME GLAD THROUGH THY VVORK I VVILL TRIUMPH IN THE VVORKS OF THY HANDS R. Isaac Abarbinel upon Deut. v. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Besides part of the benefit of this allowed day is to give to the blessed God the seventh of the week to learn the Divine law and the Tradition of the words thereof the expositions of it and to mark well the NICETIES of it As they say that is their ancient Talmud Doctours in the Gemara of the Jerusalem Talmud SABBATHS AND FEASTS VVERE NOT GIVEN BUT TO LEARN THE LAVV UPON THEM And therefore they say in the great Midras or allegoricall exposition of Exodus Sect. 26. and of Deuteronomy That the Sabbath weigheth against all the Commandments as procuring them to be known and observed A man may justly marvell seeing the Morall intent and purpose of this Commandment was so well known among the learned of this people how it cometh to passe that the Fathers of the Church charge the Jews so deep for observing the Sabbath with bodily ease and luxurious pastimes Ignatius Epist ad Magnes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I understand that there is cause to think these words to be none of Ignatius his own which notwithstanding they are Ancient enough for this purpose and in themselves remarkable if first we observe That the Eastern Christians of Ancient time observed the Sabbath in some measure for Divine Service as well as the Lords day from whence came afterwards the difference about fasting on the Saturday For immediately upon these words it followeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and after he hath kept the Sabbath let every lover of Christ keep the Lords day festivall Thus then saith the supposed Ignatius Let every one of you keep the Sabbath spiritually taking pleasure in meditation of the Law not in bodily rest admiring the workmanship of God not eating meat dressed the day afore nor drinking luke-warm drinks and walking by measure and taking pleasure in dansing and senselesse noises S. Augustine in Joan. Tract iv Observa diem Sabbati magis nobis praecipitur quia spiritualiter observandum praecipitur Judaei enim serviliter observant diem Sabbati ad luxuriam ad ebrietatem Quantò meliùs foeminae eorum lanam facerent quàm illo die in Menianis saltarent KEEP THE SABBATH is commanded us more because it is commanded us spiritually to be observed For the Jews keep the Sabbath day slavishly for luxury for drunkennesse How much better had their women spin wooll on that day then danse in the porticoes and in Psal xcii Ecce hodiernus dies Sabbati est Hunc in praesenti tempore otio quodam corporaliter languido fluxo luxurioso observant Judaei vacant enim ad nugas cùm Deus praeceperit observari Sabbatum illi in his quae Deus prohibet exercent Sabbatum Vacatio nostra à malis operibus vacatio illorum à bonis operibus est meliùs est enim arare quàm saltare Illi à bono opere vacant ab opere nugatorio non vacant Behold this is also a day of Sabbath which the Jews at this present keep with a kind of bodily languishing dissolute and luxurious ease For they are at leisure for toyes And whereas God commandeth to keep the Sabbath they spend the Sabbath in that which God forbiddeth Our being at
Law which they begin to reade over again the next Sabbath pointed at Nehem. viii 9. ix 1. as Scaliger De Emend Temp. vii Not. in Comp. Jud. hath excellently observed It is first to be known that the Festivals of the Law were appointed to be solemnized with mirth and gladnesse of heart wherefore they are called Num. x. 10. The dayes of your gladnesse And in the Psalme for the Sabbath xcii 4. the Psalmist in this respect For thou Lord hast made me glad through thy works saith he I will triumph in the works of thy hands expressing the subject of that gladnesse the remembrance of the Creation upon that day celebrated Though the observance of rest upon the Sabbath was strict yet when our Saviour went into the house of one of the chief Pharisees to eat bread on the Sabbath Luke xiv 1. this invitation and entertainment is argument enough that it was Festivall for the manner of observance Hereupon it is that the people falling to weep upon hearing the Law read the first day of the Feast of Tabernacles Nehem. viii 9. are forbidden to violate the Law of the Feast and commanded to observe the day in the right nature of it Whereas the people then being forbidden to mourn on the Festivall are said ix 1. to have fasted on the xxiiii of that moneth we have cause to presume with him that the Fast whereof they acknowledged the cause upon the first day of that Feast was deferred till the usuall Solemnities of it were past which by the Law ending upon the xxii and the Fast not kept till the xxiiii it is plain that the reason was the Festivall of the Law falling then and observed upon the xxiii as now not by the Law but by the Constitution of their Elders The third is the Feast of the wood-offering of which Nehem. x. 34. And we cast lots among the Priests the Levites and the People for the wood-offering to bring it into the house of our God after the houses of our fathers at times appointed yeare by yeare to burn upon the Altar of the Lord our God as it is written in the Law And xiii 31. And for the wood-offering at times appointed The same Scaliger conceiveth out of Josephus that this Festivall fell upon the xxii of the moneth Ab to which sense he referreth the words of Orach Hajim AB est rex quòd in eo caederent ligna in Sacrificium AB is a King among Moneths because upon it they cut wood for the Sacrifice But the truth is that which the Misna relateth Mass Taanith C. iv n. 5. that it was held for nine dayes of severall moneths whereof a great part fell in that moneth For this is that which the Scripture saith At times appointed yeare by yeare The last is the Dedication of the Temple by Judas Maccabeus which our Lord observed John x. 22. neither is it within the compasse of common sense to imagine that he did otherwise in the rest of the Solemnities which were then for certain in the Jews Calendar As for their times of Fasting the day of Atonement stood by the Law of Moses and the rest appointed for it as strict as that of the Sabbath but the nature of the observance quite otherwise with humiliation and afflicting the Soul There were divers other Fasts which that people took upon them to observe not upon the Law but upon publick Order and Custome upon set dayes of severall moneths as in their Calender is yet to be seen whereof some are remembred in the Scriptures Zach. vii 5. and viii 19. we reade of the Fasts of the fourth and fifth and seventh and tenth moneths in remembrance of those calamities which God had punished the sinnes of that people with upon those dayes most of them still remembred in their writings Besides that which is read in the Law of Moses Num. x. 9. And if you go to warre in your land with your enemies that distresse you then you shall blow an alarm with the Trumpets hath been from old time understood in the practice of that people of all distresses that came upon them for their sinnes and of Proclaiming Fasts for strict repentance and diverting Gods wrath Maimoni Taanioth C. i. num 1. The Order of which Fasts was grounded upon that which the words of the Pharisee point at Luke xviii 12. I fast twice in the week For without doubt the second and fifth day of the week Mundayes and Thursdayes were observed many ages afore that for the purposes which the same Rabbi specifieth Tephillah Ubircath Cohenim C. xii n. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Our Lord Moses appointed Israel to reade the Law at morning Prayer upon the Sabbath and the second and the fifth that they might not rest three dayes from hearing the Law and Esra appointed to reade it at evening Prayer upon the Sabbath because of idle persons And he ordered that three men should reade upon the second and fifth and not lesse then ten verses And in Megillah C. i. num 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those that dwell in villages that Assemble not in the Synagogues but upon the second and the fifth These are his words by which it appeareth that these dayes were more solemn for Assemblies then the rest of the week seeing that in villages they Assembled upon them in the Synagogues which upon every day they did not The words of the Pharisee bear further that they were observed with fasting and besides Epiphanius their own writers have delivered no lesse But the observance without doubt was not so strict upon them else could not the Pharisee have alledged it for his own praise And the Order of proclaimed Fasts whereof I began to speak argueth no lesse It was at the least for three dayes beginning at the Munday and so on the Thursday and Munday next Maimoni Taanioth C. i. n. 5. But if seven dayes of fasting were appointed then they went on interchangeably from the first Munday C. iii. n. 5. So the Congregation fasted not on Sabbaths or Festivals neither did they begin fasting on New-moons or the Dedication or Purim or the working day of a Feast that is the dayes that come between the first and last of the Passeover and Tabernacles but if they had begun afore they went on upon these dayes C. i. n. 6 7. If these dayes then had been fasted ordinarily with such strict observance then could not the extraordinary Fasts which were purposely cast upon the same dayes have been perceived The institution and observation of these Solemnities in the Synagogue as it regarded no Ceremoniall Service which figured things to come but the Service of God by publick Prayers and the Praises of God with hearing his Word upon the remembrance of his blessings or of our misdeeds was a due President for the Church to follow according to the chief occasions ministred by the Principles of our Faith The Resurrection of our Lord in the first place Who can
men and women vailing or uncovering their heads in those Assemblies and concerning celebrating the Eucharist with the Feasts of Love used then at common meetings with the grounds whereupon they proceed adding to both such passages of Scripture as fall in with the meaning of these speaking home to what was done or prescribed to be done at their religious Assemblies perhaps by this means we shall be furnished of such principles and such rules derived thence as the Scriptures afford the Church to proceed upon as well in the substance of that which is to be done in the Publick Service of God as in the form and course and circumstances of it And this upon the by will minister just occasion to inquire further into the condition of those Graces and Ministeries by which the severall parts of this work were exercised at that time according to the Apostle or intended to be exercised in after ages To which point having said something of late in a little tract of the Primitive government of Churches and finding it too much slighted there because the particular discourse of it suted not with the modell of that Treatise my desire is to take it in hand upon this occasion once more and inquire what further satisfaction the consideration of Publick Service at their religious Assemblies will yield them that desire the truth as concerning the nature and condition of ministeries first instituted for that purpose CHAP. II. Dayes of Assemblies appointed by the Law The Morall Service of God not specified in it but collected from it How the Jews are taxed for spending the Sabbath in pastime Places of such Assemblies not provided in it The Priests charged to teach the Law by deciding controversies of it The Chair of Moses the Chair of Prophets High places to what purpose Beginning of Synagogues Disciples of Prophets studied to be Prophets They ministred the Morall Service of God in High places and Synagogues OF the Figurative Service proper to the Law of Moses and that people which received it of the kinds and times and place for offering sacrifices there is particular appointment in it but of serving God by Prayer or hearing his Word you have there so much the lesse remembrance In Leviticus xxiii we find the particular of all their Solemnities that are called holy Assemblies For thus the generall is propounded vers 2. The Assemblies of the Lord which ye shall proclaim for holy Convocations these are my Assemblies The first of these is the Sabbath then the Passeover Pentecost the beginning of the New year the day of Atonement and the Feast of Tabernacles And with leave I rather use the word Assemblies then Feasts in this place because the name of Feasts is proper to those Solemnities which are to be celebrated with joy and chearfulnesse whereas in this number the day of Atonement was to be observed with the greatest humiliation that could be expressed The Originall word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 conteining all Assemblies such as all these are commanded to be and as I take it none else For that which is read Psal lxxxi 3. Blow up the Trumpet in the new Moon in the time appointed against the day of our Feasts dependeth upon the Law Numb x. 10. Also in the day of your gladnesse and in your solemn Feast dayes or rather dayes of Assemblies for the word is the same that I translated so afore and in the beginning of your Moneths you shall blow with your Trumpets over the burnt-offerings and over the sacrifice of your peace-offerings that they may be to you for a memoriall before your God Where we see three sorts of Solemnities distinguished First the day of your gladnesse conteining Solemnities to be celebrated with chearfulnesse of heart that is Feasts Then the solemn dayes of Assemblies as the word signifieth conteining besides those Assemblies for humiliation as the day of Atonement And last the beginnings of your Moneths wherein peculiar sacrifices are injoyned Numb xxviii 11. And here it is provided that Trumpets should be sounded over those sacrifices by the Priests in the Tabernacle but that no Assembly is appointed to be upon them the difference here made between them and their dayes of Assemblies is presumption enough But in particular the first and last dayes of the Passeover and Feast of Tabernacles the one whereof was kept for seven dayes the other for eight were to be solemn Assemblies which the rest were not and therefore in the Greek of the Septuagint are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or great dayes to wit of those Feasts in comparison of the lesse Esay i. 13. The New Moons and Sabbaths the calling of Assemblies I cannot away with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The calling of Assemblies is here translated Great dayes as in the Gospel John vii 37. In the last day the GREAT DAY of that Feast By which Translation that which is generall in the Originall is restrained to the first and last dayes of those two Festivals Now the Sabbath was the greatest of all Solemnities appointed for Assemblies For they were commanded so to rest from bodily labour as not to kindle fire to dresse the meat they eat upon it For as in Exod. xvi 5 16 29. God contesteth that he gave them a double measure of Manna the day before that they might dresse it against the Sabbath So we have again Exod. xxx 3. You shall kindle no fire throughout your habitations upon the Sabbath The same Levit. xxiii 3. where Abenezra IN ALL YOUR HABITATIONS that is in your land and out of your land at home and upon the way To teach us that it was not for the time that they lived upon Manna in the wildernesse that they were forbidden to kindle fire upon the Sabbath but through ALL THEIR HABITATIONS wheresoever they dwelt afterwards And many have observed that in Levit. xxiii it is not said of any other day but of the Sabbath and the day of Atonement Thou shalt do no work upon it but of the other dayes of Assemblies Thou shalt do no Servile work upon them to shew us the difference between them that upon the Sabbath and day of Atonement it was prohibited to dresse the meat of the day but upon other Solemnities that was permitted but to do any work that men were wont to put their slaves to was prohibited which is the received practice of the Jews and hath a just ground in the Scripture Exod. xii 16. where of the first and last day of the Passeover is said No manner of work shall be done in them save that which every man must eat that onely may be done or dressed of you Abenezra upon that place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of none of the solemn Assemblies beside the Sabbath and day of Atonement it is said NOMANNER OF VVORK Onely of the Passeover he saith it and addeth an exception of the meat of the soul that is requisite for the sustenance of nature Here is a strict command of bodily
leisure is from bad works theirs from good works for it is better to plough then to danse They are at leisure from doing good from trifling businesse they are not at leisure He that readeth this and the like that might be produced hath cause to marvel that the practice of that people should be so wide of the profession of their Doctours but that there is great cause to think whereas bodily rest is expresly commanded the spirituall and morall imployment of it but intimated in the Commandment and by the learned collected from thence and from other Scriptures by consequence of discourse that the people apprehended that more which was open as being for their ease neglecting that which was collected as not so pleasant And therefore unlesse we be wilfull in refusing the Truth it cannot be denied that the DISPENSATION of that time prevaileth in this as well as in other particulars For though no man doubteth that the Ancient people of God were led by the promises of the kingdome of heaven and life everlasting yet are those promises in the law of Moses conveyed and recommended to them under the Figure of Paradise of the land of Promise and the fruits of it Mihi in Evangelio promittuntur regna coelorum quae Instrumentum vetus omnino non nominat saith S. Jerome Epist 129. To me is the kingdome of heaven promised in the Gospel which the old Testament doth not so much as name S. Augustine cont Faustum xix 31. Testimoniis vitae aeternae resurrectionis mortuorum abundat vetus Scriptura sed hoc nomen REGNUM COELORUM de nullo indè loco mihi occurrit hoc enim propriè pertinet ad REVELATIONEM Novi Testamenti The old Scriptures are full of Testimonies of life everlasting and the resurrection of the dead but the name of the KINGDOME OF HEAVEN I meet with in no place of it for it properly belongeth to the REVEALING of the New Testament Again Mortem innuit secundam cùm diceret ADAM UBIES sed de ea nihil dixisse credendum est propter DISPENSATIONEM Novi Testamenti ubi mors secunda apertissimè declaratur God intimateth the second death saith he when he saith ADAM VVHERE ART THOU but it is to be thought that he expressed nothing of it because of the DISPENSATION of the New Testament where the second death is most manifestly declared Others might be produced to the same purpose The reason is the same in the matter of Sacrifices for which we know what particular order is taken in the Law of Moses and yet are not the Prophets afraid to say that God gave no command for them Psalm xl 6. Sacrifice and offering thou didst not desire Jerem. viii 21. I spake not to your Fathers nor commanded them in the day when I brought them out of the land of Egypt concerning burnt-offerings and sacrifices And all this according to the tenour of the Law which commanded a Ceremoniall Service as the figure of that worship which God requireth in Spirit and Truth Thus standeth the matter in our present businesse For if the Sabbath be a figure as the Scripture declareth and the Jews themselves acknowledge then the observation of it commanded must needs be Figurative Which is no more then the Apostle proveth in the fourth to the Hebrews that the Rest which they observed the Sabbath with was the Figure of that rest which remaineth to the people of God Therefore it pleased God in this point also to observe that dispensation of the Old Testament which he had set on foot in other particulars taking order at large that the Sabbath should be celebrated with bodily rest but that Service of God in Spirit and Truth which is proper to the DISPENSATION of the New Testament as it is greatest in esteem so is it least in appearance of the Commandment which God gave for the purpose To the same purpose as hitherto it hath been observed that the Law hath specified no particular work of the Morall Service of God with which it commandeth the Sabbath to be SANCTIFIED or for which it appointeth ASSEMBLIES So must we further observe in this place that it neither provideth for PLACES wherein it might be exercised by the body of that People nor taketh order by whom it should be Ministred in such Places but hath left us to collect by circumstance and the traces of their Ancient practice remembred in the Scriptures that it was Ministred by the Prophets as Prophets rather then by the Priests and Levites as Priests and Levites as well in Synagogues as in the Temple or at the Tabernacle The command of Assemblies Levit xxiii might well be prescribed in the law of Moses with a particular effect in respect of that time that the whole Congregation of that people lived together in the wildernesse of Arabia Then and there it is easie to conceive how they were assembled to celebrate those solemnities that is at the Tabernacle or round about it which the Jews call The Camp of Levi. But when they were settled in the land of Promise we see what the Law requireth Deut. xvi 16. Three times in a year shall all thy males appear before the Lord thy God in the place which he shall chuse This is the extent of the Law thrice a year to resort to the Tabernacle and that none but Males and therefore the question will remain How the body of that people assembled themselves through the year it being a thing manifest that the greatest part could not resort to the Tabernacle and those Houses of Prayer which afterwards were called Synagogues whereof Philo speaketh in the words alledged not yet erected through the Countrey as shall appear by the dark traces of the beginning of them which we shall find by and by in the Scriptures during the time of Solomons Temple So that the words of Philo and Josephus alledged before wherein they tell us That Moses commanded that people to Assemble every seventh day to learn the Law that it was their custome so to do and that the Chief taught at those Assemblies and the rest learned to live according to that which was taught must be understood with these limitations That it was collected from the letter of the Law of Moses and preserved in the practice of that people at such times and places as afforded means of Religious Assemblies for such purpose In fine it will appear that the Law of Moses according to the dispensation of that time intended to be most expresse in the Figurative Ceremoniall Service peculiar to that people by the Ministeries of Priests and Levites so particularly appointed in it for that kind of Service And yet so little provision as we find in the Law for the office of Prophets and children of the Prophets that is their disciples these were the men neverthelesse that Ministred the Morall Service of God of Prayers and the Praises of God and the exposition of the Law at their Religious Assemblies A
ii Numb 5 6. and the annotations upon it To this must be added that memorable passage of the Samaritane Chronicle published not long since the tenour whereof is this The High-Priest living at that time that is the yeare of the world 4713. by their account took away that most excellent book that was in their hands ever since the calme and peaceable time of the Israelites which contained those Songs and Prayers which were ever used before their Sacrifices For before every of their severall Sacrifices they had their severall Songs still used in those times of peace all which accurately written were transmitted to the subsequent generations from the time of the Legate Moses unto this day by the Ministery of the Holy Priest For this whole passage speaketh clearly of the Service of God in the Temple shewing us that besides the book of Psalmes there were other Songs used at the Sacrifices of their severall Solemnities which were according to the course of their Service put together in one book for the purpose There was besides another part of the Service done in the Temple which men of learning have hit upon by conjecture out of Apoc. viii 3. And another Angel came and stood at the Altar having a golden Censer and there was given unto him much incense that he should offer it with the prayers of all Saints upon the golden Altar which was before the Throne joyned with Luk. i. 10. And the whole multitude of the people were praying without at the time of incense From which Text Lud. Capellus collected That while the Priest offered his incense in the Tabernacle the people were at their prayers abroad and that S. Johns Vision alludeth to nothing else Whereupon our Mead of Christs Colledge very ingeniously conceived that where it is said there vers i. When he had opened the seventh Seal there was silence in heaven about the space of half an houre all this was represented in resemblance of the Service of the Temple where first the Praises of God are sung as it is before vi 9. then there is silence for half an houre while the Priest within offereth the incense and the people without pray for remission of sinnes every one by themselves For so I find this conjecture verified in Prike Aboth v. 5. where one of the ten miracles which the Jews relate fell out continually in the Service of God in the Temple is this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is They stood crowded but they worshipped at large which R. Obadiah Bartenora proceedeth thus to expound upon the meaning of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It hath the sense saith he from swimming upon the face of the waters For because of the crowd every one pressed his fellow so that they stood swimming as it were with their feet lifted up from the ground in the aire At the time of worshipping the miracle happened to them that they worshipped at large every man foure cubits from the next that he might not heare him when he confessed and remembred his sinnes Wherefore they stood while the Levites sung at pouring the wine upon the burnt-offering but when the Priest went to offer the incense then fell every man down to make confession of his sinnes in private Which being done the Holy Priest coming out into the Court pronounced the Benediction appointed in the Law over the people which was the end of Service Of this Maimoni of Prayer and the Priests blessing xiiii 9. In the Temple after the morning Service was done the Priests went up into the Pulpit to blesse which maketh me presume that the Order of Service in the Temple was no otherwise then hath been declared Which Ecclesiasticus seemeth punctually to describe in Onias cap. l. 15 16 17. He stretched out his hand to the cup and poured of the bloud of the grape he poured out at the foot of the Altar a sweet smelling savour unto the most high King of all Then shouted the sonnes of Aaron and sounded the silver trumpets and made a great noise to be heard for a remembrance before the most High Then all the people together hasted and fell down to the earth upon their faces to worship their Lord God Almighty the most High When the wine was poured forth and the Priests blew the trumpets within at Festivals it is to be understood that the Levites sung the praises of God without at the same time as we saw afore and so it followeth in the next words wherein this description is repeated vers 18 19. The singers also sang praises with their voices with great variety of sounds was there made sweet melody And the people besought the Lord the most High by prayer before him that is mercifull till the solemnity of the Lord was ended and they had finished his Service After all followeth the Priests blessing as Maimoni said vers 20 21. Then he went down and lifted up his hands over the whole Congregation of the children of Israel to give the blessing of the Lord with his lips and to rejoyce in his Name And they bowed themselves down to worship the second time that they might receive a blessing from the most High I make no doubt but there was time for reading and expounding the Law in the Temple as it hath been touched but because I find no remembrance of it in this Service and because it concerneth not the point in hand I let it alone In this course of Service then the prayer wherewith each of them confessed their sinnes was private and at pleasure the rest was all by prescript form The Priests blessing expressed in Scripture the praises of God out of the book of Psalmes and others for the purpose And this is the strength of that Argument that is drawn from the Titles of the Psalmes shewing that they were indited for the purpose of praising God and praying to him as the tenour of them is Two or three of these Titles it shall not be amisse to produce here Psalm iiii and all the rest where the title is To the chief Musician the Chaldee translateth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to sing or to praise to tell us that they were Psalmes composed for the Master of Musick to be used in the Service of the Temple xcii A Psalme a Song for the Sabbath day It is a pleasant thing to reade the vagaries of the Jews upon this Title from whence they conceive this Psalme to be made by Adam after his fall on the Friday to serve God with on the Sabbath whereas the meaning in our observation is plain that it was composed to be sung in the Service of the Temple on the Sabbath which the very tenour of the Psalme inforceth when it saith vers 4. For thou Lord hast made me glad through thy works I will triumph in the works of thy hands pointing at the meditation of the Creation upon the Sabbath as the Jews expound it Last the Title of those fifteen Psalmes after the
other according to Calvine so farre as my lot hath been to know the preacher of it I confesse it is a thing which hath made me much marvel to see them so punctuall in practising their form prescribed that scarce any thing came from the Ministers themselves but that very short prayer afore the Sermon wherein they recommend themselves and their performance to the blessing of God as you saw the fashion was in the Ancient Church Because it is found that the opinions which this Church hath been disquieted with were taken up upon unreasonable affectation to be conformable with them those that pretend their example are bound to show us among them the Principle whereupon this point is condemned that a prescript Form is that which the Apostle forbiddeth in Quenching the Spirit Therefore it will not be enough to say That divers Churches of that Reformation use to neglect the Order appointed them and use the voluntary conceptions of their Ministers in publick Prayers For that may be thought of all and of us for the reasons premised must be thought an example of ill consequence not for this Church to imitate But it is requisite to alledge the same reason from their Doctours and to show that they disallow set Prayers as Quenching the Spirit To which purpose I have not yet heard any thing produced either from the Fathers of the Church or from the Reformed Doctours And therefore till that be done I am bold to send home that Principle to them that have most right to own in that is to those of the separation from this Church of England or rather to those Germane Sectaries that dreamed of Enthusiasmes and immediate inspirations CHAP. VIII Of times of Assemblies Daily Morning and Evening Service is for the edification of the Church Humane Institution of Festivals lawfull Publick Service upon them and upon weekly and yearly times of Fasting is for increase of godlinesse Of frequent celebration of the Eucharist Houres of Prayer among the Apostles and Primitive Christians from the Synagogue Festivals of the Law for gladnesse and those of humane institution in the Synagogue Of Fasting-dayes in the Synagogue and Primitive Church How the Eucharist was frequented in the Primitive Church The Order of this Church agreeable with the judgement of chief Reformers THe next point concerning in generall the Order of Publick Service is the difference of times and dayes and houres in respect of frequenting our Assemblies for the purpose of it And first the Order of daily Morning and Evening Service how much it concerneth the edification of the Church that is the training of it in the exercise of Godlinesse A point otherwise to be pleaded then the rest For in other matters we have reason or at least the shadow of reason to deal with In this it is not for Christians to alledge That it is not for the honour and glory of God to be served in publick or that it is not for the benefit of his people to joyn together in addressing their petitions in procuring their daily wants at his hands Neverthelesse as if these considerations were to give way to the occasions of the world those that deny them not to be valuable are content to let them and the Order of daily Service grounded upon them be uneffectuall and to no purpose This is not the place to dispute how much the consideration of Gods Service is to out-weigh the world and the occasions of it Onely because it may be said How many idle bellies are maintained in the Church of Rome to Pater over their Mattens and Evensongs in a manner not regarded by themselves and a language not understood by the people let it be considered what greater advantage the devil could wish to make of this abuse among them then upon occasion of it to bring the Service of God into disuse among us or how he could have improved this scandall to more purpose for the hindering of Goodnesse then rooting out the substance of Gods Service rather then reforming the abuses of the manner of it In the next place the difference of Festivall and Fasting-dayes from the ordinary in respect to the Service of God upon them is an Order much concerning the edification of the Church in the exercise of Godlinesse Here indeed some pretense of reason hath been made to shew that it is not in the power of the Church to appoint Festivall dayes as a thing contrary to the tenour of the Law which saith Six dayes thou shalt labour and do all that thou hast to do I know not whether men by this time be ware of the mistakes which this reason involveth because it maketh not so much noise in these dayes but without doubt it was alwayes a grosse inconsequence to imagine an office of the second Table of labouring in ordinary work to be commanded by a law of the first Table but without doubt it was alwayes a grosse inconvenience to imagine God to give a command here which we must suppose him to crosse afterwards in the law of Moses when he cometh to appoint New-moons and other Solemnities to be observed on these six dayes Therefore when the Commandment saith Six dayes thou SHALT labour the meaning is Six dayes thou MAYEST labour thou art licensed and not forbidden to do thy daily work on them by this Commandment So it is translated in our last English Exod. xxxi 15. Six dayes may work be done And in the Ebrew the same word standeth for both senses Last of all whereas it is known that there were in the Jews Calendar at the time when our Lord Christ lived upon earth divers Solemnities besides those that were appointed by the law of Moses of which something must be said afterwards and we know by the Gospel that our Lord himself kept the Feast of the Dedication instituted by Judas Macchabeus by that particular we are assured both that he observed the rest and that by observing he allowed and commended the Institution in generall for the purpose whereof we speak For the blessings of God whereof these Solemnities renew the remembrance are of that esteem to the Church that we are not able to expresse too much thankfulnesse in taking that occasion of solemnizing his Service And the greatest part of Christians are such as will receive much improvement in the principall Mysteries of our Faith by the sensible instruction which the observation of such Solemnities yieldeth The remembrance of the Birth the Sufferings the Resurrection and Ascension of Christ the Coming of the Holy Ghost the Conversion of the Gentiles by sending the Apostles the way made before his coming by the Annunciation of the Angel and the coming of the Baptist as it is a powerfull mean to train the more ignorant sort in the understanding of such great Mysteries so it is a just occasion for all sorts to make that a particular time of serving God upon which we solemnize those great works of his For the purpose is not
to hinder the occasions of the world by setting aside mens ordinary work but to preferre the Service of God before it If the Publick Service of God be of better esteem then the businesse of this world well may the Church own all the means by which she laboureth to procure the exercise of it but if the businesse of this world so far as it hindereth not the Service of God be good commendable she shall not need to own the restraint of it further then it tendeth to that purpose Therefore provided as it is among us that the wholesome effect of this Ordinance vanish not in the excessive multitude of Festivals ordinary occasions crowding out the remembrance of those that deserve it it will not serve the turn to say That the Papists have made these Solemnities the occasion of worshipping the Saints that own the dayes To that must the same be answered as afore That it is the use and improvement that the devil would chuse to make of such scandals to prevent the abuse of Gods Service by rooting out the exercise of it As for particular Solemnities of Fasting by the week or by the yeare we are to consider that abstinence is not onely the cure of that sensuality which surfet breedeth but the most powerfull means to represent unto a man the whole condition of his soul towards God Would a man desire to humble himself in the consideration of his offenses Let common sense be judge whether he shall do it full or fasting to better purpose Wherefore being subject to runne into offense from time to time what more wholesome Ordinance can the Church have then to Assemble from week to week to humble our selves in the presence of God and to labour to divert his due wrath that it light not upon us in generall or in particular And being subject neverthelesse to heap wrath against our selves by slighting our continuall humiliation and repentance what more Solemn Ordinance could reason devise then Fasting before Festivals then before the most Solemn yearly Festivall the most Solemn yearly Fast by humiliation going before to estate us in the right of those blessings which then we celebrate Our Lord in the Gospel hath said of his Disciples When the Bridegroom shall be taken from among them then shall they Fast in those dayes Should Christians never Fast but when publick calamities or extraordinary occasions of the Common-wealth call for it well may it be asked Where is the effect of these words I speak not now of any difference of meats for conscience sake in that abstinence is not seen in the consideration now in hand But I speak of the Service of God upon these occasions which being appointed for humbling of our souls in consideration of our offenses common sense will not refuse that abstinence is necessary for the purpose If it be said in this point as afore That the Papists have abused this Ordinance to a sacrilegious opinion of Satisfaction and Merit and the worship of God having declared a just and true reason and ground of the Ordinance according to which it is no worship of God but the opportunity and means of his due and requisite Service the answer must be as afore That it is the advantage which the devil would wish to make of such abuses to make them the pretense to root out the Service of God and so to save the pains of reforming it The last consideration which I referre to this head concerneth the frequent Celebration and Communion of the Eucharist which is indeed the crown of Publick Service and the most solemne and chief work of Christian Assemblies And though for the particular time of Communicating it is rather commended then injoyned yet the remembrance it importeth is so proper so particular to the Profession we make that our Assemblies are never so like the Assemblies of Christians as when it is celebrated And though it is not in men so to command the occasions of the world as to be alwayes disposed to communicate yet that in the generall of the Church there should not alwayes be persons disposed to communicate that it should not be celebrated for those which are disposed to communicate is an inconvenience for which nothing but too much love of the world too much backwardnesse from spirituall duties can be alledged For if it be said That the Church of Rome by retaining the Custome of celebrating day by day hath turned the Communion into a Sacrifice for the quick and dead the answer must be as afore That it is the use which the enemy of mankind would chuse to make of their abuses to perswade men that so long as private Masses are abolished they are at freedome to be secure of the frequent Celebration and Communion of the Eucharist If any man think that under this which hath been said there is an intent to shoulder out Preaching by commending other causes of Religious Assemblies he shall both wrong my meaning and mistake the truth of the cause He that will have men to Preach more then they learn and to void those crudities in the Church which were never digested in their studies perhaps may have reason to think that where the stuff is slight there the larger measure is due but besides the scandals such raw doctrine must needs breed he shall be sure to bring a slight esteem upon that Profession wherein God is served no otherwise But he that will provide abilities of men for so great a work shall find that these Assemblies on Festivall and fasting-Fasting-dayes the occasions whereof are here commended shall minister opportunities of continuall Preaching even beyond those of hearing alwayes for the edification of the Church where men are able to support the respect and esteem of so great a work It is now time to put together the Primitive practice of the Church in the particulars here touched deriving it as near as can be from the time of the Apostles It is thus written of the first Disciples Acts ii 42. And they continued stedfastly in the Apostles Doctrine and Communion and in breaking bread and Prayers And vers 46. And day by day continuing with one mind in the Temple and breaking bread from house to house did eat their meat with gladnesse and singlenesse of heart Again iii. 1. Now Peter and John went up together into the Temple at the houre of prayer being the ninth houre that is three after noon The Synagogues were instituted for the morall and perpetuall Service of God by prayer and praising him and expounding his word leaving the figurative worship of Sacrifices to the Temple upon which neverthelesse the circumstances of that morall Service depended as hath been observed out of R. Moses Maimoni Tephillah Ubircath Cohenim C. l. n. 7. and must be repeated here Thus he delivereth That correspondent to the daily Sacrifice Morning and Evening there was ordered among them and practised one Service for the Morning another for the Evening that therefore called
temporibus causis uniuscujusque Sic Apostolos observasse nullum aliud imponentes jugum certorum ab omnibus obeundorum jejuniorum proinde nec stationum quae ipsae suos dies habeant quartae feriae sextae passivè tamen currant neque sub lege praecepti Therefore otherwise beside the dayes on which the Bridegroom was taken away they say we are to fast indifferently arbitrarily not upon command of the new discipline according to each mans times and occasions And that so the Apostles observed imposing no other yoke of certain Fasts to be performed of all neither by the same reason of Stations which they say have also their dayes of Wednesday and Friday but of ordinary course under the law of no precept For which cause he calleth these Stations semijejunia or half Fasts c. 13. of that book The Wednesday and Friday Assemblies of the Primitive Christians with Fasting were not of such strict and solemn observance No more were those of Mundayes and Thursdayes in the Synagogue and therefore taken up in imitation of the Synagogue and upon the like reasons The generall whereof is well laid down by S. Hierome upon Gal. iiii 10. His question is how the Church appointing Festivals and set times of Fastings is clear of the Apostles charge upon the Galatians there Ye observe dayes and moneths and years I fear lest I have laboured upon you in vain His answer is first Et nè inordinata congregatio populi fidem imminueret in Christum propterea dies aliqui statuti sunt ut in unum omnes pariter veniremus non quòd celebrior sit dies illa quâ convenimus sed quòd quacunque die conveniendum sit ex mutuo conspectu laetitia major oriatur And lest the disorderly assembling of the people should ●ate faith in Christ therefore certain dayes are appointed for all to assemble at once not because the day on which we assemble is more not able then others but because on what day soever we assemble by seeing one another more gladnesse ariseth Meaning that gladnesse wherewith they celebrated their Festivals So his mind is that all difference of dayes among Christians is in respect to the Order of their Assemblies and that in respect to the work of those Assemblies Again Qui subtiliùs respondere conatur dies omnes aequales esse ait Jejunia autem Congregationes inter dies propter eos à viris prudentibus constitutos qui magis saeculo vacant quàm Deo nec possunt imò nolunt toto in Ecclesia vitae suae tempore congregari ante humanos actus Deo orationum suarum offerre Sacrificium One that indeavoureth to make a more subtle answer saith that all dayes are equall but that Fasts and Assemblies are appointed among other dayes by discreet men for those that spend more time in the world then on God and can not nay will not assemble all dayes of their life in the Church to offer unto God the Sacrifice of their Prayers before humane actions Adding that whereas the Jews Service was confined to certain times that of Christians is alwayes seasonable The Primitive Christians were alwayes assembled alwayes in posture for the Service of God as we reade in the Acts when the number increased there was no expectation of humane reason that they could continue so unanimous in frequenting their Assemblies for that purpose The neglect of them must needs prove an abatement the disorder of them a scandall to the Faith Here the wisdome and the authority of the Church-guides behoved to take place by customing certain times whereof the occasion was justest to confine men from Secular imployments to better purposes And how this course prevailed in matter of Festivals I referre to those well known words of S. Augustine Ep. cxviii where being to instance in some universall custome of the whole Church Sicuti saith he quòd Domini Passio Resurrectio Asscensio in Coelum Adventus de Coelo Spiritûs sancti anniversariâ solennitate celebrantur siquid aliud tale occurrit quod servatur ab universa quacunque se diffundit Ecclesia As that the Passion the Resurrection and Ascension of our Lord into Heaven and the Coming of the Holy Ghost from Heaven is celebrated with yearly solemnity and if there be any thing else which all the Church wheresoever dispersed observeth As for times of Fasting the answer of our Lord importeth two things First that his purpose was that the outward freedome which he allowed his Disciples for the time should symbolize with the inward comfort which the Gospel professeth and conduct and train them as trained they were by his Doctrine in divers particulars by corporall to spirituall things to understand it The second the reason of this purpose because they were old vessels for the present which a strict discipline for the present might cause to flie in pieces but when the new wine of the Holy Ghost should make the vessels new into which it was put on the day of Pentecost then should they Fast then should they be willing to undertake the discipline which their Profession suited with Accordingly we may find them serving God with Prayer and Fasting Acts xiii 3 4. xiiii 23. But because disorder or coldnesse in this voluntary performance might disadvantage the Faith it soon proved time to bring those voluntary observances to set rules of practice These causes thus disposing the Church and the President of the Synagogue directing not to do lesse what course should it observe but in stead of Mundayes and Thursdayes used in the Synagogue to practice Wednesdayes and Fridayes for this purpose holding in them a convenient distance from the Lords day as those other did from the Sabbath Their Writers tell us besides the reason specified out of Maimoni afore that they might not rest three dayes from hearing the Law that they made choice of Mundayes and Thursdayes in regard of some great calamities that befell their nation upon those dayes What marvell is it if the Church had regard to those which befell our Lord on the Wednesday and Friday the other Morall reason of assembling once in three dayes for Gods Service concurring Those ancient Christians of Tertullians time conceived that the Fast afore Easter is appointed in the Scripture which saith The dayes will come that the Bridegroom shall be taken from among you and then shall ye Fast in those dayes and Tertullian is content to have it believed because Montanus required that and more But S. Augustine found that there is a command in Scripture to Fast but no time commanded when it shall be done Ep. lxxxvi So he would have accepted their reason as an allusion handsomely symbolizing with the nature of Fasting but the appointment he must needs referre to the Custome of the Church and the Ordinance of the Guides of it It is not much otherwise with those other dayes wherewith some inlarged the Fast afore Easter even afore Ireneus his
practising the Service of God in an orderly and reverent form make in the minds of men that cannot receive it from their reason but from their senses This effect in things of slight consequence in particular which neverthelesse altogether amount to a considerable summe is better seen by the grosse in practice then convinced by retail in dispute yet since the importunities of men have caused false reasons to prevail with weak people it is requisite the true reasons be pleaded lest it be thought there are none such because not so fit to be pleaded The Circumstances and Ceremonies of Publick Service is indeed a kind of Discipline and Paedagogie whereby men subject to sense are guided in the exercise of godlinesse It is as it were the apparell of Religion at the heart which some think like the Sunne most beautifull when it is most naked and so it were indeed did men consist of minds alone without bodies but as long as our bodily senses are manageable to our souls advantage the heat within will starve without this apparell without And therefore under better judgement I hold it requisite that the observance of Rites and Ceremonies in the Publick Service of God should increase and become more solemn after the world was come into the Church then under the persecuting times of it Persecution was like Antiperistasis in nature in preserving Order and reverence in the Publick Offices of the Church with the respect of those Guides that ruled it But since the Net of the Gospel hath been cast in the Ocean and caught good and bad it is more requisite that all should passe as under rule and observance so in the most reverent form that the coldnesse and indifference of the worser part appear not to debauch the good disposition of others Though from the beginning as early as the records of the Church are able to inform us we are sure it was never without such outward observances as according to the state of the time tended to maintain to witnesse the disposition of the heart answerable The Apostles ordinance of Praying and Singing Psalmes men with heads bare women with heads covered the Salutation of Peace so long practised in the Primitive Church from the time of the Apostles Imposition of hands in divers Acts of Publick Service signifying the overshadowing of the Holy Ghost and Gods hand stretched out to give the blessing for which Prayer was made and without question derived from the times of the Apostles are of this nature And it is thought that when the Apostles speak of putting off the old man and putting on the new Col. iii. 9 10. ii 11. of burying in Baptisme Col. ii 12. Rom. vi 4. of the unction of grace 1. John ii 20 27. 1. Cor. ii 21. allusion is made to some Rites of Ecclesiasticall Offices used even at that time As for Ecclesiasticall Writers it will be hard to name any of them so Ancient in whom are not to be found divers particulars of this nature But the generall reason hitherto declared hath been better sifted by the chief Reformers Philip. loco de Caerem in Eccl. p. 651. Paulus gravissimè dicit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Non ordinem tantùm sed etiam singularem curam ornandi ordinis requirit quare addit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut videamus quid personas loca tempora deceat Paul saith with much gravity LET ALL THINGS BE DONE VVITH DECENCIE AND IN ORDER He requireth not Order alone but a singular care of setting that Order forth therefore he addeth DECENTLY that we consider what becometh persons times and places This is it that I am now about That the Order of things done at Publick Service be such as may set forth and insinuate the respect which those times those places those persons require Which Calvine still setteth down in fuller terms 4. Instit x. 28. Vt in sacro fidelium caetu decor è peragantur omnia quâ convenit dignitate That in the holy Assembly of the faithfull all things be done decently and in that worth and respect as befitteth Afterwards he setteth down as much as I have done when he saith Ac decori quidem finis est partim ut dum adhibentur ritus qui venerationem rebus sacris conciliant talibus adminiculis ad pietatem excitemur partim etiam ut modestia gravitas quae in omnibus honestis actionibus spectari debet illic maximè eluceat And indeed the end of comelinesse is partly that using such rites as procure reverence to sacred things we may be by such helps excited to godlinesse partly that the modesty and gravity which in all actions of respect ought to be attended may there especially appear Again n. 29. Sed illud nobis decorum erit quod ità sit ad sacrorum Mysteriorum reverentiam aptum ut sit idoneum ad pietatem exercitium vel saltem quod ad ornatum faciat actioni congruentem neque idipsum sine fructu sed ut fideles admoneat quantâ modestiâ religione observantiâ sacra tractare debeant But that shall be counted decent with us that shall so fit the reverence of holy Mysteries as may be a competent exercise unto godlinesse or which at least may conduce to ornament suitable to the action and that not without benefit but to put the faithfull in mind with how much modesty and religious observance they ought to be conversant in sacred actions What this in generall importeth is that which I desire in the particular heads Times and Places are no way sanctified otherwise then as they are deputed to the Service of God The words of our Lord in the Gospel Matth. xxiii 18. Which is the greater the Sacrifice or the Altar that sanctifieth it point out to us a difference betwixt the Law and the Gospel in this particular For as S. Hierome said afore That the Service of God in Spirit and Truth proper to the DISPENSATION of the Gospel is acceptable to God at all times that all dayes are equall of themselves no difference between them but in respect to the Assemblies of Christians upon them and the work of those Assemblies so is it to be said with truth concerning Places to make it a generall observation and a true one That under the Law the Time and the Place sanctified the Service confined to it but under the Gospel the Service required sanctifieth the Time and Place of it For example The Passeover on the due time was holy on another time had been abominable Dwelling in Tabernacles commanded on such a day of such a moneth used otherwise no part of Gods Service but sacriledge in usurping it The Sacrifices whereof our Lord speaketh holy upon the Altar otherwhere abominable On the other side the Service of Christians being good by nature and acceptable to God at all Times and in all Places hath a speciall promise of God from the unity of the Church and the Assemblies in it Which because they cannot
be held without publick Order confining them to Times and Places thereupon those Times and Places which are capable of no Holinesse in themselves are neverthelesse truly qualified HOLY as an attribute derived from the holinesse of those actions to which they are designed Which may well be called a relative or metonymicall Holinesse Thus are Times and Places consecrated by being appointed to the Service of God Places as more subject to sense by the execution of that appointment that is by the Prayers of the Church ministred by the Guides of it But in as much as it behoveth that the Service which shall be acceptable to God be done in the unity of his Church and that which is so done must be according to publick Order confining the Times and Places of Assemblies hereupon those Times and Places which are capable of no Holinesse but that which is ascribed to them in relation to that work whereunto they are assigned give Holinesse to that work again in as much as if it be done in opposition to that publick Order in which the unity of the Church consisteth it is abominable afore God He that hath promised to be present where we are Assembled by the same reason hath promised to be absent where we are divided let them look to themselves that cause it those that do not have no cause to doubt of Gods presence This is the ground of that respect which is due to the Times and Places of Gods Service and which if it go not beyond the consideration here expressed cannot prove superstitious The Holinesse of that work which differenceth them requireth they be so used as may conduce most to stirre and maintain the right apprehension of that work in our own minds and to convay it to others If the dayes of our Assemblies be imployed upon ordinary businesse no marvel if the mind prove not at leisure to attend the work for which they are designed Churches are still more subject to sense then dayes are and the common use of them common reason and experience will prove to breed a common esteem of the work of Gods Service and in consequence of the Majesty that owneth it If we remember that God is there present to accept the Service of our Assemblies we cannot refuse to acknowledge respect due there in generall though we referre our selves to Law or commendable Custome for the particular of it That which is to be said for the difference of Vesture in solemnizing the Service of God is much to this purpose The meaning of it is to procure inward reverence to that work which it maketh outwardly solemn to represent to our own apprehensions and to convay to other mens the due respect and esteem which it ought to bear in our hearts And common reason and all experience justifieth this intent For all the actions of esteem in the world are set forth with the like solemnities to no other purpose but to convay by the senses to the mind that respect which they ought to bear And the world hath tried enough that those which have made it part of their Religion to stick scorn upon such slight Circumstances have made it no lesse to deface and disgrace the substance of Gods Publick Service As for the difference of bodily Gestures at the Service of God that is still a more considerable mean to procure and preserve that esteem and respect of it for which I plead The words of S. Augustine of the Gestures of Prayer are remarkable De Cura pro Mort. C. v. which he saith are not used so much to lay the mind open to God to whom the most invisible inclinations of the heart are best known as to stirre up a mans own mind to pray with more humble and fervent grones And then it followeth Et nescio quomodo cùm hi motus corporis fieri nisi animi motu praecedente non possint eisdem rursus exteriùs visibiliter factis ille interior invisibilis qui eos fecit augetur ac per hoc cordis affectus qui ut fierent ista praecessit quia facta sunt crescit And I know not how though these bodily motions are not done without the motion of the mind going afore yet again by the outward visible doing of them that inward and invisible one which causeth them increaseth and so the affection of the heart antecedent to the doing of these by the doing of them gathereth strength Christians have bodies as other men have and though the Service of God consist in the inward intention of the mind and the devotion of spirit which performeth it yet this bruit part of us is able to contribute so farre towards it as it refresheth in our selves and expresseth to others the inward motions wherein it consisteth It is an impression of Nature that teacheth all people thus to actuate thus to animate the Service they tender to God and experience shall tell them that observe it That where it is passed over with indifference there men behave themselves more as hearers then actours in it there as the naturall heat at the heart so the inward heat of devotion which ought to dwell there stifleth and choketh for want of this airing and exercise Thus that which maintaineth the intention of the mind in private multiplieth it in publick and propagateth in others that which it cherisheth in our selves Besides that it contributeth towards the comelinesse of such Assemblies if it be uniform To good purpose it was a Deacons office in the Primitive Church to put the people in mind of these observances at least in great congregations But in this whole matter of Rites and Ceremonies in Common Service there is Caution to be used with which though in the latitude of their nature indifferent they will prove an advantage to it and without which they may prove an offense in it For the nature and kind of that which is done respect is to be had to the end proposed If the particular observed be not according to reason a circumstance apt to procure to maintain in our selves to expresse and convay to others that intention and reverence which the Service of God requireth for what cause shall we say it is observed Shall it be thought acceptable to God alone of it self without reference to the due end and purpose Then must it needs turn to a voluntary observance wherein we discharge our selves to God in stead of the Service he requireth Besides those that are not offensive for their kind for their number may prove no lesse For as the suckers that grow under great stocks where there are too many intercept that sap that should nourish the trees to bear fruit so where the Circumstances and Ceremonies of Publick Service are multiplied beyond measure there the mind distracted into a number of outward observations cannot allow that intention to the Substance which it spendeth upon the Circumstance And so it falleth out as afore they are intended for their own sake as acceptable to