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A27514 A threefold treatise of the Sabbath distinctly divided into the patriarchall, mosaicall, Christian Sabbath : for the better clearing and manifestation of the truth ... / by Richard Bernard ... Bernard, Richard, 1568-1641. 1641 (1641) Wing B2037; ESTC R34406 149,622 232

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for in observing the Sabbath day we professe the God of Israel as the first Commandment teacheth Then in assembling together and worshipping God we do what the second Commandment bindeth us to do and when on that day we contemplate upon the creatures take occasion thereby to praise him and shew an outward holy behaviour to advance his glory we do what the third Commandment commandeth us to do so that the holy observation of the day to the Lord keepeth up a publick practice of all our duties to every Commandment of the first Table therefore no marvell it was that God took order so soon for the keeping of the Sabbath day III. Because God intended not untill this time to set out any glorious face of his Church historically unto us but rather other things happening in the course of times from the fall as in the Story doth appear unto this time 1. From the Fall to the Floud the ill fruits of Adams fall and the increase of sin to mans destruction is recorded 2. From the Floud to Abraham the planting of the world by people with their presumptuous sinning causing them to be scattered over the face of the earth according to their distinct languages 3. From Abraham to Israels going into Egypt God moved Moses to record the carriage of Abraham Isaac and Jacob as private families upon which the Church consisted living among idolaters as pilgrims and strangers while they were in Canaan till God brought them into Egypt 4. From the entrance into Egypt to their mighty deliverance God was pleased to instruct Moses to set down how Joseph came into Egypt his troubles and honour how by him Israel came into Egypt by Josephs means the peaceable rest there till another King arose and then of their heavie bondage till God sent Moses to free them But now God intending to make glorious his people and his worship more publickly to be observed of all Israel at one set time weekly Moses relateth the Lords pleasure concerning the Sabbath not to have it neglected but solemnely to be kept as an holy rest unto the Lord according to Gods first institution thereof Gen. 2. 3. And thus much for the patriarchall-Patriarchall-Sabbath before the Law published upon mount Sinai FJNJS A TREATISE OF THE mosaicall-MOSAICALL-SABBATH By Richard Bernard Rector of Batcomb EXOD. 31. 15. Six dayes may work be done but in the Seventh is the Sabbath of rest holy to the Lord whosoever doth any work in the Sabbath day he shall surely be put to death LONDON Printed for Edward Blackmore and are to be sold at the signe of the Angel in Pauls Church-yard 1641. The Contents 1. WHy it is called so 2. Of the Law of the ten Commandments 3. Of the Naturalitie of the Law 4. Of the Externallitie or Positivenesse of the Law 5. Of the Spirituallitie of the Law 6. Of the Moralitie of the Law 7. That there are ten Commandments 8. Of the fourth Commandment in what words contained 9. Of the meaning of the words of the Commandment 10. Of the rest upon the Sabbath 11. Of the day for the rest 12. Of the words annexed to the Commandment 13. Of the scope of the words 14. Of the directorie in the words 15. That one day in seven must be the Sabbath day 16. Of the seventh day Sabbath 17. Of the six dayes work 18. Of the restriction from work on the seventh day Sabbath 19. Of works which might be done on the Sabbath 20. Of the rigorous strictnesse supposed to be put upon the Israelites that day 21. Of the reason added unto the directorie with the conclusion 22. The arguments to prove it ceremoniall answered 23. That the fourth Commandment is no part ceremoniall 24. The fourth Commandment is a perpetuall Precept 25. How much of the Mosaicall Sabbath is in the Commandment to be kept holy 26. How the day was kept 27. Of Judaizing and true understanding thereof OF THE MOSAICALL SABBATH SECTION I. Why it is called so I Call the Sabbath here Mosaicall not as any new Sabbath from the former being the same with the Patriarchall Sabbath farther now ratified and established Nor do I so name it as if Moses were the institutor of it or no publisher of it But because God the Lord of the Sabbath did give this Commandement of the Sabbath with the rest of his divine precepts when he had ordained Moses the Ruler over his people Israel under him and for that he delivered to Moses the two Tables in which the Commandements were written to deliver them unto the people SECTION II. Of the Law of the ten Commandements THe Law of which the precept of the Sabbath is part is said by the Apostle to be holy and spirituall Rom. 7. 12 14. and if that Commandement Thou shalt not lust be boly just and good so is the whole Law and every Commandement thereof His encomiis legem integram or●at Apostolus saith Paroeus This whole Law hath in it Naturalitie Positivenesse Spiritualitie and Moralitie SECTION III. Of the Naturalitie of the Law 1. THe Naturalitie of the Law is so much thereof as by the principles of Divinitie in Nature written in all mens hearts Rom. 2. 14 15. and furthered by the common light of Christ Joh. 1. 9. may be known and assented unto And this knowledge is more or lesse as Naturall men partake of that naturall light for from hence ariseth the difference in naturall men and not from the common principles which be one and the same in all men From this Naturalitie in the Law it may be called the Law of Nature not so as if it were the work of Nature but for that it s in every mans nature God writing it in every mans heart Rom. 2. 15. since the fall at the time of the souls infusion into the body as God did to Adam before his fall This Naturalitie of the Law consists in generalls and cannot reach to true Specialities without some further help and better direction yet by deductions it may go far towards the Specialities This serves to make all men inexcusable Rom. 1. 20. SECTION IV. Of the Externalitie or Positivenesse of the Law THe Externalitie or Positivenesse of this Law is the openly making known of Gods Will in the Commandements given by word of mouth and after written in the two Tables of Stone This Externalitie of precepts the Lord added for his Church unto those generall rules and principles in nature and to that common light in all men For the Lord never suffered his Church to be only directed by that light in nature never since Adams fall who having it in perfection could not guide himself to it And therefore we read before Moses days of Gods Word of his speaking to Adam Noah and to Abraham viva Voce giving his charge Commandements Statutes and Laws of which the Lord maketh mention to Isaac telling him that in keeping these Abraham obeyed his voyce Gen. 26. 5. This Positivenesse or Externalitie is to guide
him of every one privately Psal 55. 17. Dan. 6. 10. 13. and some part of the day to his service publikly if he appoint it as under Moses he did a dayly worship and offering of Sacrifices morning and evening yea he may take a whole day as once in a moneth once in a yeer as he ordained Festivalls in Israel and when he calleth for publike Fasting by his judgements Joel 2. 15. or for publike thanksgiving by some singular mercies we are to set some time apart for the same as the Jews did Ester 9. 19 22. SECTION XVIII Of the Restriction from work on the Seventh day Sabbath IN the six dayes we are to do all that we have to do but on the Sabbath day neither we our selves nor any under our power to restrain them nor our Cattell are to do any manner of work These words being here to be taken as a rule of direction for ever touching the Sabbath They must so be understood as may stand with the perpetuity of the Commandement for holy rest and sanctification of the day in holy duties The words we must know are no Commandement no more then the former words Six dayes shalt thou labour The Lord useth not to adde * It was fit if nor necessary not only to prescribe the portion of time to be set apart for Gods service but also the particularity of the day or not to leav● that to the 〈◊〉 of man precepts to his precepts for observation of them If they were a precept it should be negative and so binde from all works for ever But we finde that albeit some works were forbidden yet God allowed divers works to be done on the Sabbath day The words therefore are only a restriction from some works but not a negative forbidding of every work without exception The works from which we are here restrained this day are such works as upon other dayes we may do and not the work of sin which never ought to be done such are servile mechanick works of our ordinary profession trade occupation and calling lawfully to be done in the other six dayes which thus I prove 1. This restriction is from the liberty of our labour and the doing of all we have to do in the allowed six dayes Six dayes shalt thou labour and do all thy work then presently followeth the restraint But the Seventh day is the Sabbath in it no manner of work to wit of the nature of the former Six dayes work 2. Because here is mention of men and maid-servants and cattell which commonly are set about such works 3. For that God propounds his pattern for resting on his Seventh day from his work of his Creation in the severall Sixe dayes 4. Other Scriptures do strengthen this Exposition as a restriction from such kinde of weeks work on those working dayes In Exod. 34. 21. there Earing time and Harvest is mentioned in which time about such things men are not to labour on the Sabbath day As the work about Husbandry is restrained so buying and selling of Corne yea thoughts and speeches about the same were forbidden Amos 8. 5. buying and selling of wares and of Victuals Neh. 10. 31. 13. 16 17 18. Carrying of burthens and doing any such work on the Sabbath Jer. 17. 21 22 24 27. All which Husbandry buying and selling carrying of burthens Nebemiah sharply reproved and called it the prophaning of the Sabbath Neb. 13. 15 16 18 19. These be the works from which they were restrained on the Sabbath day But the Prophet Esay concerning the Spirituality of the Commandement goeth further and telleth them that they were to call the Sabbath a delight the holy of the Lord honorable and to turn away their feet from the Sabbath this he expoundeth to be the not doing of our own pleasure on the Lords holy day which he sets forth in three things 1. In not doing our own wayes 2. In not finding our own pleasures 3. In not speaking our own words Then the Prophet telleth us that this is to honour God and that herein we shew that we delight our selves in the Lord Esay 58. 13 14. Lastly they were restrained to hold themselves from all that which is 1. Against the Naturality of the Law as not to keep the day to the Lord but to travell the whole day work the whole day or play the whole day 2. Against the Externality which is in outward holy rest and sanctity as to lie lazily at home sleeping to go to Church unprepared Eccl. 5. 1. as men go to any other place 3. Against the Spirituality delighting in vanity and not in the Lord that day 4. Against Morality when men carry not themselves in a decent seemly behaviour becoming holinesse but rudely either in or out of the Assemblies SECTION XIX Of the works which might be done on the Sabbath NOw lest any should gather from all afore delivered that not only servile works are restrained as in Lev. 23. 7 8 21 35 36. Numb 28. 25. 29. 1. but also all other works from Exod. 20. 10. and that upon pain of death Exod. 31. 14 15. 35. 2. Lev. 23. 3. we are to know what works for all this were allowed to be done on the Sabbath day 1. Works of Piety commanded to be done on the Sabbath which be not our works but Divine not humane as reading and preaching the Word Act. 15. 21. 13. the killing of Beasts for Sacrifice and what work soever was in and about Gods worship and service Numb 28. 9 10. 1 Chr. 23. 31. 2 Chron. 8. 13. the ordering the Lamps Lev. 24. 3. and putting new bread before the Lord Lev. 24. 8. 1 Chron. 9. 32. 2 Chron. 2. 4. for as the Jews themselves spake in the Temple there was no Sabbath for that the rest on that day gave place to the labour in and about Gods service there see Fran. Lucas on Matth. 12. 5. So to Circumcise an Infant Joh. 7. 23. when the eighth day fell on the Sabbath 2. Work or labour tending to piety and Gods worship as to blow a Trumpet Num. 10. 2 10. for the assembly as we do ring a Bel. To travell to the Prophet 1 Kin. 4. 23. Psa 84. 6 7. thence was a Sabbath dayes journey Act. 1. 12. about two miles fifteen Furlongs compare these three texts together this in Act. 1. 12. with Luk. 24. 50. and Job 11. 18. To go in and out on the Sabbath about the service of the Temple 2 King 11. 5 7 9. To stand watchmen in time of need by command of authority to prevent in others the prophaning of the Sabbath Neb. 13. 22. III. Works of preservation from Gods own example Exod. 16. who albeit he rested the seventh day from his works of creation yet not from his work of preservation of all that which he had made So although he would not rain Mannah on the Sabbath day yet would he preserve it from worms and from stinking on the
followeth 1 It must be kept according to Gods holy will and pleasure Here the Church telleth us where to begin the principall guide must be Gods holy will and pleasure which is to be searched after in his Word from which if we swarve and have not it for our rule and warrant in doing any thing on this day we break this Canon 2 According to the prescribed orders of the Church of England which is there very piously set down in eight Particulars 1 In hearing the word of God read and taught so it is kept as a day of instruction 2 In private and publick prayer so it is an especiall day of audience and putting up our petitions to God first with our Families before we enter into the holy assembly to prepare us the better for a blessing and then with the whole Congregation 3 In acknowledging their offences to God so it is a day of Humiliation before the Lord and suing out a pardon for the same 4 In an amendement of their offences so it is a day of Reformation of our evil lives and sinfull courses 5 In reconciling themselves charitably to their neighbours where displeasure hath been So it is a day of Reconciliation laying aside displeasure and of charitable seeking peace one with another 6 In receiving the Communion of the body and bloud of Christ So it is a day of Confirmation of our faith in Gods blessed Covenant made with us in Christ and a day of great consolation to behold visibly with the eye the greatest work that ever God wrought and the greatest mercy that ever he did shew to poor sinners 7 In visiting the poor and sick so it is a day of mercifull visitation and beholding of Christ in his poor and sick servants 8 And lastly in using all godly and sober Conversation So it is a day for the expression of a good behaviour towards God and man in all godly Conversation against prophanenesse in all sober Conversation against Intemperance Riot and Revelling Gluttony and Drunkennesse Lightnesse and loose Carriage Thus we see how the Canon directeth us in an excellent manner to keep this day Can there be either required or better meanes used than is here prescribed to keep from sinfull courses on the Lords day The third is the Book of Homilies In the Homily of prayer we are taught First To assemble together solemnely having our hearts sifted and clensed from wordly and carnall affections and desires shaking off all vaine thoughts which may hinder from Gods true service Secondly To be carefull to keep the day holily and to rest from our labours at home riding and journeying abroad Thirdly To give our selves wholly to heavenly exercises of Gods true religion and service Fourthly To have in remembrance Gods wonderfull benefits and to render him thanks for them Fifthly To celebrate and magnifie Gods holy name in quiet holinesse and godly reverence Sixthly And lastly besides laying aside the works of our callings the Homily exhorteth to shun ungodlinesse and filthinesse pride praunceing prancking pricking pointing painting or to be gorgeous and gay Likewise to beware of gluttony drunkenesse and other fruits thereof mentioned to avoide also wantonnes toyish talking and filthy fleshlines Thus we see what a strict observation of the Lords day our Homily prescribeth unto us It hath been the honour of our Church hitherto to outstrip all Christian Churches in the world in the sanctifing of the Lords day Our Common prayer book Canon and Homily would hold us to it if they had any authority over us CHAP. XVIII How Christian Emperours would have it kept by their Imperiall Constitutions WEe have heard how the godly among the ancient people of God kept their rest-day morally How our day was kept in the Primitive Church How our now present Church of England would have it kept holy Now we come to the highest powers of Authoritie abroad and at home to learne how by them it should bee kept 1 Imperiall Constitutions COnstantine the first Christian Emperour who thought the chiefest and most proper day for the devotion of his subjects was the Lords day declared his pleasure that every Eusch de vita Constant l. 4. c. 13. one who lived in the Roman Empire should rest in that day weekly which is instituted to our Saviour and to lay aside all businesses and attend the Lord who therefore forbade keeping of Courts sitting in judgement and Artificers to use their trades In Die Dominico c. say Imperiall Constitutions L. ●mnes ●a de feriis the whole mindes of Christians and Beleevers should be busied in the worship of God The Emperour Leo ordained that the Lords day should be kept holy by all sorts and to be a day of rest It is our will saith he according to the meaning of the Holy Ghost and of the Apostles by him directed that on the sacred day whereon we were restored unto our integrity all men shall rest This Constitution reverend Ho●ker much approveth of Eccl. Pol. Sect. 71. pag. 385. themselves and surcease from labour neither the husbandmen nor others putting their hands that day to prohibited worke for if the Iewes did so much reverence their Sabbath which onely was a shaddow of ours are not we which inhabite light and the truth of grace obliged to honour that day which the Lord hath honoured and hath therein delivered us both from dishonour and from death are not we bound to keep it singularly and inviolably sufficiently contented with a liberail grant of all the rest and not incroaching on that one which God hath chosen for his Service Nay were it not wretchlesse slighting and contempt of all Religion to make that day common and think that we may doe thereon as we doe on others This worthy Emperour would not have the dayes dedicated Cod. l. 3. tit 12. de feriis Iustin li. 3. tit 12. to the supreme Majestie to be taken up with filthy pleasures then much lesse the Lords day for he highly advanced this day and so honoured it that if his birth day or his inauguration fell upon this day the solemnities thereof should be deferred to another day upon danger of losse of dignitie and confiscation of estate to them which should offend his will herein He exempted this day from executions citations entring into bonds apparances pleadings and the like The Emperour Theodosius enacted that faithfull Christian Cod. Theod. peoples mindes might wholly be bent to the Service of God the Cirques and Theators should bee shut up on the Lords day c. and all publick shewes prohibited by Gratian and Valentinian Nullus die solis spectaculum praebeat nec divinam venerationem confecta solemnitate confundat They Anno 384. forbad arbitrating of causes and taking recognizance of any pecuniary businesse on the Sunday and that none should be brought before the Officers of the Exchequer For further honour to the Emperour Leo and Anthemius Insti●ian Cod. l. 3. tit 12.
hee highly pleaseth God who keepeth holy the whole day For by the judgment of the King and the whole State such a one as keepeth it is performing a principall part of the true Service of God Thirdly In prohibiting on this day all meetings assemblies or concourse of people out of their owne Parishes for any sportes or pastimes whatsoever All Beare-baitings Bull-baitings Common Plaies Enterludes or any other unlawfull exercises or pastimes Also that no Carryer Waggoner Waine-man Car-man or Drover travell on the Lords day Or any Butcher by himselfe or by any other with his privitie and consent kill or sell any victuall on this day Hereto may I adde our Common Law by which as the Sages in the Law have resolved it That the day is exempted from Law-dayes publik Sessions in Courts of Justice and that no plea is to be holden no writ of a Scire facias must beare date on a Sunday for if it doe it is an errour so a Fine levied with Proclamations if the Proclamations bee made on this day all of them are held erroneous acts And all this was for the solemnitie of the day as also the intent that the people might apply themselves to prayer and Gods publick Worship and Service Thus we see the honourablenesse of this day and the high esteeme thereof as it hath beene and still ought to bee in our Kingdome amongst all faithfull Christians CHAP. XXI What Councels and Synods have decreed touching the observation of this day IT cannot be but where Emperours and Kings have taken care for keeping holy the Lords day they had the judg●ment of the godly Divines in their times But to cleare more this point let us see what hath by the learned beene decreed concerning this The Councell of Carthage decreed to petition the Emperour then that there might bee no Shewes nor other See Dr. Heylin pag. 101. 111. pag. 112. Playes on the Lords day c. The Councell held at Aragon would have no sentence pronounced in any cause on the Lords day The third Councell at Orleance informeth us that husbandry reaping hedging and such servile works were prohibited The Councell at Mascon decreed that the day should be kept holy calling it the Lords day the day of our new birth the everlasting day of rest insinuated unto us under the shadow of the seventh day or Sabbath in the Law and the Prophets On this day none were to meddle in Litigious Controversies in actions or Law Suits nor prepare his Oxen for daily labour but to goe to the Church and there powre out his soule in teares and prayers celebrate the day with one accord offer unto God their free and voluntary service exercise themselves in Hymnes and singing praises unto God being intent thereon in minde and body c. The Councell at Dingulosinum in Bavaria determined that upon Sunday every one being intent upon Divine rest should abstaine from prophane or common businesses In the Councell of Angiers tradesmen were appointed to lay by their labours and among those the Miller and the Barber The Councell at Coleine decreed that the people should be diligently admonished why other holy dayes but especially the Lords day which hath beene alwayes famous in the Church from the Apostles time were instituted to wit that all might equally come together to heare the Word of the Lord to receive the Sacraments to apply their mindes to God alone to be spent only in Prayers Hymnes Psalmes and spirituall Songs And here were prohibited Playes Dances wicked Discourses filthy Songs all Luxurie and Victualling Houses were commanded to be shut up Concilium Bituriense exhorteth saying Let them practice nothing but that which savours of pietie and there are prohibited prophane Assemblies ryotous Feasts Dances Morices disguises Stage Playes and going to Alehouses Concilium Basiliense forbad Dice and Tables and would that such as did walke with chaste eyes modesty and gravitie should not goe to Dancing In a Synod held at Friuli it was decreed That all Christian men should with all reverence and devotion honour the Lords day and abstaine from all carnall acts Etiam * So S. Augu. in 244. Serm. de tempore à propriis conjugibus and all earthly labours and goe to the Church devoutly A Synode held in Aken or Aqui●granum 800. yeeres agoe held that in reverence to the Lords day it should no more bee lawfull to marry or bee married In a Roman Synod under Leo the fourth it was decreed that no Market no not for meat should be kept and no person should receive judgment on that day And under Alexander the third in a Councell of Compeigne it was ordained that none should bee doomed to death or condemned to bodily punishment In a Synod at Coy it was decreed that men should doe no servile work nor take any journey A Synod at Petricow in Poloniae forbad Taverne-meetings Dice Cards and such like pastimes as also instrumentall musick and Dancing CHAP. XXII What Popes the Canon Law Archbishops Bishops and other learned men have said concerning the hallowing of this day 1 Popes POpe Alexander the third saith that both the old and new Testament depute the seventh day unto rest Pope Gregory the ninth commanded a restraint from labour both of man and beast In Pope Eugenius his time the Princes and Prelates as Doctor Heylin confesseth did agree together to raise the Lords day to as high a pitch as they fairely might and a Canon was made by that Pope in a Synod at Rome 800 yeares agoe to forbid businesses and works of labour criminall causes and vaine sports on the Lords day and other Festivalls Pope Gregory in Epist 3. lib. 11. held it not lawfull for any to See Ios Bentham his society of Sects pag. 154. citing Leo the first and Leo the third their decrees for carefull observation of the Lords day bath themselves out of luxury and pleasure on the Lords day but that wee should rest from our earthly labours and by all meanes abide in prayers c. By the Canon Law grinding hath beene inhibited and by the same Lawes travelling hath beene forbidden and counted a mortall sinne See at large Doctor Heylin out of Tostatus the strictnesse of the observation of the Lords day and holy dayes let me adde one thing out of Summa Angel tit interrogationes in confessione The Priests did ask the confitents as a sinne whether they had used pastimes and dancings on the Lords day Our Linwood the Canonist de Consecr Dist 3. ca. Jemina saith Die Dominico nihil aliud agendum nisi Deo vacandum nulla operatio in illa die sancta agatur nisi tantum Hymnis Psalmis Canticis spiritualibus dies illa transigatur 2 Archbishops and Bishops ARchbishop Islips with the assent and counsell of the Prelates assembled in a Synod 1349 decreed that there should bee a generall restraint from all manner of servile work and that the Sunday should begin at the Saturday at Evening Cuthbert
words historically whereby it might be understood in the history what then God did and what plainely hee appointed men to doe afterwards for so it lost not the nature of an historicall narration both in telling of the thing done and in the appointing of what should be done if it be I say with a cleare expression as is required in the nature of a Story Reason 2. THere is no Destination of that thing for future time only which hath actuall being and aptnesse in it for present imployment For future Destination is only for deficiency in these two respects But the seventh day was from the beginning the day of Gods rest and the ground of mans rest this is granted And that day had its ability and every way was as fit then for an holy Sabbath as ever it was afterwards This is true from the Adversaries grant to wit that from the beginning it might have beene imployed as the Lords Sabbath and perhaps had so it then had an aptnesse to be an holy Sabbath Therefore Destination for only time to come is an idle imagination Reason 3. IF it bee with a doubtlesse that from the beginning some dayes were imployed as the Lords Sabbaths and is granted for a truth Then without doubt was the seventh day from the beginning so imployed as the Lords Sabbaths For what day could they so groundedly take for a Sabbath as Gods onely rest-day or what day could they so properly hold to be the Lords Sabbath as his owne day which himselfe blessed and sanctified as the Text saith and is denied of none Therefore the seventh day from the beginning being bestowed as the Lords Sabbath the observers of the day held it fit for present use and conceived it not in the words of the text a future destination for so long time as is groundlessely imagined Reason 4. THat which belonged alike to all from the worlds beginning to be observed by all the same to bee passed over as not observeable of any but destinated to a peculiar sort which should bee borne after many generations is not reasonably conceived to be true but to bee held as a feigned untruth But such a thing is this imagined future destination For it put off Adam Seth all the holy men of God 1600 yeeres before the Floud Noah and Shem with the other holy Patriarchs till Abraham after the Floud and from Abraham to Moses and to Israels deliverance out of Aegypt from observing the day of Gods rest and therein the remembrance of the worke and Worlds creation alike belonging unto all as if it had only concerned the Israelites and not the holy Fathers from the beginning which none will averre I suppose Therefore this Destination is but a fiction Reason 5. THe ground of the future Destination of the observation of the seventh day being false the Destination it selfe falleth and is false as will be granted But the ground of this their Destination which some lay to build it upon is false viz. the Israelites deliverance out of Egypt for their proofe out of Deut. 5. 15. faileth them as before is made manifest Therefore there is no such Destination as is pretended Reason 6. IF God did on the seventh day actually rest and at the same time actually sanctified it as is confessed to bee for the present the Churches Sabbath Then he put Adam into the right of actuall use of the day and not destinated it only for the time to come But Gods actuall resting was the ground of his actuall sanctifying of the day and his actuall sanctifying of the day made it ready for present use neithe was there any thing that could hinder Adam from observing of it at that present for the Lords owne Sabbath And if it be perhaps said that a Father having many sonnes may determine one to be his heire yet not presently put him into the possession I answer that may be because the Father will not dispossesse himselfe of that himselfe stands in need of And also that sonne may perhaps die before him and before his other brethren Therefore is not this simily fit for this purpose neither doth it any thing weaken the argument Reason 7. THere is not the least intimation in the Text of any decree of a future Destination and deed to be done but a plaine narration of that which then was done For Moses sayth God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it Againe the words before in verse second concerning Gods ending his work and his resting on that seventh day and the reason added to the reason in the words of verse third why he blessed and sanctified it binde the act of God to be understood of the time then and not of a time foure and twenty hundred yeeres after Moreover Moses the Penman wri●eth the Storie of Gods resting as an act done then as all acknowledge so he speaketh of his blessing and sanctifying the first seventh day as then blessed and sanctified For he holdeth in all the same forme of speech He ended he rested he blessed he sanctified when he did the former he did the later as the words shew without any variation at the first reading of them to any indifferent judgement Lastly no instance in holy Writ can be produced to defend such a glosse and to make such a comment upon a Text so cleare as this is Let them bring forth any one Scripture to warrant such an interpretation in an Hystoricall narration Reason 8. GOds work is ever the ground of every Festivall ordained for a remembrance thereof and solemnly to bee kept of those of that time when the work was wrought and not destinated to a day observed for many ages after see for this all the Festivalls in Scripture ordained either by God or man The work of God had its present remembrance upon the institution of the day when it was to be observed for the memoriall thereof It is absurdly unreasonable to think that God working a work never to be forgotten will appoint a day to bee observed for the remembrance thereof to none then living but onely to those who should live 2400 and odde yeers after Reason 9. GOds own words in Exod. 20. 11. make Moses discourse in Gen. 2. 3. to bee understood of the then blessing and sanctifying the day For God sayth not Exod. 20. 11. Wherefore I the Lord now at this present doe blesse and sanctifie the Sabbath day but hee spake as all reasonable apprehensions may easily conceive with relation to his acts past as to his works on the first six dayes so to his rest on the seventh day blessing and sanctifying the Sabbath Reason 10. THe six dayes of Gods work were presently exemplary and all men in the Church from the creation have taken them for present use What reason is there in the Text Gen. 2. 3. to conceit a Destination of the use of the seventh day not examplarie till 2400 yeers after Can it reasonably be imagined 1 That God would informe
to be his God and the God of his seed after him Gen. 17. 7. calling himself The Lord their God in giving his Law and remembring them of that their great deliverance which he had promised also unto Abraham Gen. 15. 13 14. To the second third and fifth Commandements he added reasons all which the learned take to be for the ratification of the Commandements and to urge us to keep them and so do interpret the words accordingly The words of God knit to this Commandement have no doubt been added for the like purpose even to be a Confirmation and an establishment of the Precept and the perpetuity thereof and to move us to keep it Yet neverthelesse of late divers have endeavoured to fish out of the words matter to change the nature of the Commandement from Morall as they speak to Ceremoniall and to take away so the perpetuity of the Commandement and there withall mens hearts and consciences from affecting and obeying it as being no Commandement now obliging any Christian and so do they rob God of one of his Commandements sacrilegiously But the words are so to be interpreted according to Gods intention as may uphold the nature and perpetuity of the Precept as the words annexed to the other Commandements do very forcibly as also to binde us unto a carefull keeping of the Precept as they do very effectually and do meet with all that which our corrupt nature may perversly object against our obedience thereunto In the words we are to note 1. The Scope of all the words 2. The Matter which is 1. A Directory guiding to the observation of the Commandement in Gods allowing of us sixe dayes and the reserving of the Seventh to himself 2. A reason of his thus approportionating time between him and us for labour and rest 3. A Conclusion in the last words upon which this fourth Commandement is raised As if God had said I have from the beginning blessed and hallowed the Sabbath day therefore I do command them to remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy Thus inforcing the Commandement from the prime institution Note it well So as the Commandement is a binding Law from the first institution for the Sabbaths more solemn observation for ever SECTION XIII Of the scope of the words THe scope and use of the words is to take man from his own bottome For after the Lords Memento before the Commandement to forget oblivion and forgetfulnesse of it through worldly distractions He closely answereth and meeteth with mans corruption which might hinder him in submitting to this Commandement If any man should be unwilling to give God a day he sheweth his bounty in giving us fix for fear of repining If any man shall think six dayes not enough for his worldly affairs the Lord prescribeth a means which is labour by which he may finish all that he hath to do if he loyter not nor busie himself in other mens matters If any man should undervalue the seventh day as of mans devising God to prevent this contempt here challengeth it to himself and presenteth himself in his Soveraign authority over us saying it is the * This is remarkably of great force to direct us aright in our Christian Sabbath For the day of the Lords rest must be the day of our rest Now the day of the Lords rest may be either the day of the Lord our Creators rest or the day of the Lord our Redeemers rest Sabbath of the Lord thy God If any man should suppose that he might deferre off to the Sabbath day some of his week dayes works the Lord doth inhibite him from doing any such manner of work for fear of incroaching upon his Sabbath If any man should claim any exemption for himself or any under him God cometh with his charge upon parents and masters upon children and upon strangers for fear of any misapplying it onely to some or a conceit of any dispensation for other some If any man should ask an example of imitation and perhaps presume to neglect it because great men little regard it God hath given us his own example both for labour on Sixe dayes and rest on the Seventh day If any man should doubt of any good hereby and enquire and aske what good and benefit he might reap by the observation of this day more than of any other The Lord telleth him that he hath blessed the day for him And lastly if any man should leave his worldly businesse and might now follow his vain pleasures The Lord telleth him that he hath sanctified it to holy uses Thus God fortifieth his Commandement and wisely meeteth with mans corruptions to keep us in a carefull observation of this Commandement SECTION XIV Of the Directory in the words THe words are to be a perpetual direction in what space of time and what day in that space we are to take for the Sabbath day For the words of the Commandement being generall and not appropriated to any particular day or speciality of time God would not have his people either the Israelites then or the Israel of God in any age to be ignorant of the time or day but to be able certainly to determine and to be resolved of the day without any doubtfull disputation concerning the same as all might and may if we will use this Directory for our guide herein I say it s a Directory for it s not brought as a reason of the Commandement because here is no such connexion of the words to the Commandement with a For as the reasons are in the two other Commandements but here the Lord without any such connexive word presently saith Six dayes shalt thou labour c. as if he had said I will direct thee lest thou mistake the generality of the Precept in application how thou must know in what space of time and on what day in that space thou maist keep my Sabbath SECTION XV. That one day in Seven must be the Sabbath day FOr this number God exceedeth not here first mentioning Sixe and then a Seventh day and no more So as within this time limited is the Sabbath day In the beginning of time God made the mensuration of all time to be onely Seven dayes Gen. 1. 31 2. 2 which was afterwards called a week Gen. 29. 28. The Week then consisting of seven dayes must be the compasse in which to finde the Sabbath The first Sabbath was within a week to which the words of God here hath reference Whether nature doth teach to consecrate one day of seven to God as Z●nch in●●tum praeceptum holdeth is not here to be disputed It s enough that we have Gods example from the beginning and here his Word for a seventh day The practice of Gods Church is grounded hereon which from time to time from age to age thousand of yeers have observed one day in a week for the Sabbath One Master Dowe saith in his discourse of the Sabbath that many grave and
from God against presumptuous transgressions Num. 15. 30 31. He bringeth this for an instance thereof immediately Verse 32. 2. Because he sinned against two accessory precepts concerning the Sabbath The one that none should go out on that day about worldly businesse as to labour for food Exod. 16. 29. The other that none should kindle a fire then Exod. 35. 3. Now Contrary to these this man went out into the Wildernesse to gather sticks no doubt to kindle a fire Therefore he sinned against the first in going forth about such a businesse and in his intention to kindle and make a fire against the second therefore his sin was great while these two accessory precepts stood in force But these being not perpetuall this punishment on him proveth not the point of such a precise strictnesse of the fourth Commandement to be ever observed of the Israelites V. And lastly He bringeth in the holy women followers of Christ who would not annoint Christs body on the Sabbath day but rested from that work as the Text saith according to the Commandement as thinking themselves bound to so precise an observation by the Commandement Answ I These words according to the Commandement may be thus expounded that is as they understood it by the Jewes interpretation superstitiously For these godly women being trained up by the then Doctors of the Church observed the Sabbath as they had learned it from them And albeit the work was to the honour of Christ yet for that it was not of necessity to be done on that day nor at all in respect of Christs body but only a Custome for an honourable buriall therefore they did rest from doing that work on that day II. Take the rest according to the true meaning of the Commandement which imposed rest this their rest was according to the Commandement and in that they did not this work it was according to the Commandement forbidding servile work as the words in the Directory are to be understood For they could not annoint him but they must first buy their spices and oyntments which they might not do buying and selling on the Sabbath being forbidden That they could not buy them on the Fryday as we speak is evident For it was late ere Christs body was taken from the Crosse at even Matth. 27. 57. then they did awaite to see his buriall Luk. 23. 55. in which space the Sabbath was come on for they reckoned from the Evening to the Evening and therefore stayed they till after the Sabbath to buy them Mark 16. 1. Thus we see his proofes no proofes to argue any precise strictnesse in the words Thou shalt do no work more to them then to us by the Law SECTION XXI Of the reason added unto the Directory with the Conclusion THe Lord himself addeth a reason unto his former words why he giveth us Six dayes and reserveth the Seventh to himself for that in six dayes he made all things and rested the Seventh day In which words he layeth down as an unalterable ground of apportionating time between God and us which is his own example of working six dayes and resting the Seventh in the beginning of the world which as they be past and irrevocable so is this portioning of time between him and us to be perpetuall else were his example thus propounded in his Donation and reservation to no purpose He in this dividing of the dayes of the week thus between him and us reflected upon himself looked onely to what himself had done and so gave so many dayes to us and reserved onely one to himself Now what can be more permanent than Gods own self in his own irrevocable Acts from the worlds beginning to be laid for the foundation of this his thus apportioning the week to us The Lord our God having thus laid down before them his unchangeable reservation of the Seventh day for himself after his irrevocable gift of six dayes to us he concludeth with these words Wherefore the Lord blessed the Seventh day and sanctified it It s agreed on all hands that here are the words of the Institution of the Sabbath not one of the late Writers gainsayeth this that I have read or heard of The main of the Controversie is that here is say they the first Institution the ground of the Prolepsis in Gen. 2. 2. and we say they be a repetition of the Institution laid down before in that place of Genesis where no Prolepsis is For as the Lord here in the former words repeateth what he did in six dayes and that he rested the seventh day so he repeateth his Institution of the Sabbath then what he did with the day on which he rested that is because he had finished all his work in six dayes and rested the seventh day he blessed and sanctified it to shew them here by this 1. The Antiquity of the Sabbath day from the beginning 2. The Stability thereof also grounded so upon Gods rest not alterable 3. Why he charged the Commandement of keeping holy the Sabbath day upon them among the other Precepts and that also with a Memento above any of the rest For in the repetition here of the Institution the Lord keepeth the word Sabbath in the Commandement saying He blessed the Sabbath day and not as commonly we read it he blessed the Seventh day lest any should make that individuall Seventh day on which God rested to be of the substance of the Commandement which God in his wisdom let it be well observed left out in the Precept and here again in the repetition of the Institution and onely nameth the Sabbath what Seventh day soever it be either that for the time or another in the room of it which Sabbath is the blessed and hallowed day of the Lord and so to be accounted of for ever as appeareth by all that hath been said if men be not disposed to wrangle against the truth From all which is before delivered it s very apparent that this fourth Commandement is no way Ceremoniall True taking it in an indefinite notion commanding the sanctifying of one day in seven but a permanent Law to the worlds end and not Ceremoniall as in the following Sections I shall make it manifest SECTION XXII The Arguments to prove it Ceremoniall answered MEn disposed to wipe out this Commandement out of the Decalogue fain would make it Ceremoniall but their arguments brought for this purpose are of no validity They say it was Ceremoniall I. For the exact strictnesse of it which they have imagined but I have proved it to be onely an imagination For that strict observation which was kept was but for a time and from accessory Commandements not from the fourth Commandement it self II. In their keeping of that seventh day But the Seventh day is not of the substance of the Commandement and a seventh day is proved to be perpetuall Nor was the seventh in the first Institution Ceremoniall And the Church observeth still a Seventh day III.
Divine of both God is the Author and both binde the Conscience to obedience 2. The independancy of both for neither have any dependancy of mans will either to establish or alter them and both are in dispensable and unalterable by mans authority The Continuance of both are to be judged by Gods only will and intention albeit they be not both alike in their Natures in some things SECTION XXV How much of the Mosaicall Sabbath is in the Commandment to be kept holy THe Sabbath instituted by God and commanded to Israel in this fourth Commandment is to be understood not of some part but of the whole day 1. The time in the precept is a day not a part of a day nor the greater part much lesse some few houres in the day can be counted a day neither was it so with the Jews 2. Gods gift of six dayes we understand for full six dayes and so no doubt is the day of rest the Sabbath day to be taken in the Commandment 3. What God blessed and sanctified he sanctified wholly as holy things vessels Numb 31. 6. holy oyntment Exod. 30. 25. Garments and the like So holy places as the Tabernacle Exod. 29. 44. This nor those were holy only in part but wholly So is Gods holy time holy for the whole time 4. The people of God kept the whole day from the beginning to the end Exod. 16. 30. and this appeareth so in Nehe. 13. 19. and by the holy women followers of Christ Mark 16. 1. Luk. 23. 55 56. and 24. 1. 5. The reproofe of those that went out to seek Mannah in the morning before the Sun rose Exod. 16. 27. and the punishment of him that did gather sticks Num. 15. doth shew it that the whole day is to be set apart for the Lord. And though some works might be done yet the day was the Lords the wholeday 6. If the whole day was not the Lords then it was partly holy and partly unholy sacred and common too but in holy writ we reade not of any such partaking stakes with God Therefore we are to understand the whole day for Sabbath SECTION XXVI How the Day was kept THe people of God having ceased from their labours as the Law commanded Exod. 20. 8. and 31. 14. Luk. 23. 56. and betaking themselves to the holy rest and to make an holy use thereof unto the Lord it being an holy day and the rest of the holy Sabbath unto the Lord Exod. 16. 23 and 35. 2. They thus observed the day and kept it holy I. Before the publike meeting 1. They began with private preparation as they were commanded 1. To look unto their feet before they entred into the house of the Lord Eccles 5. 1. 2. To reconcile themselves one to another Matth. 5. 23 24. 3. To be of a clean Conversation Ps 26. 6. else God regarded not their coming Isai 1. 12. 16 17. and 66. 3. Psal 50. 16 17. 4. To have an high esteem of their Assemblies as holy Convocations Lev. 23. 3. and the house as the house of God 1 Chr. 9. 27. Ps● 27. 4. such were blessed as did abide there Psal 84. 4. II. In going It was 1. With singular affection of love to the place Psal 26. 8. and desire to dwell there Ps● 27. 4. and vehement longing for it Ps● 42. 1 2. and 84. 1 2. 2. With care for others exciting them to go the Pastors the people Jer. 31. 6. and they one another Jer. 50. 4 5 Mich. 4. 2. and the parties excited to be glad thereof Psa 122. 1. 3. It was with the voice of joy and praises Psa 42. 4. 4. Their end in going was to be taught and understand and that they might walk in Gods wayes Isai 2. 2. Nehe. 8. 13. III. At the entring and in the Congregation 1. They worshipped at the Gate and entrance Ezek. 46. 3. 2. They kneeled down before God Ps 95. 6. 2 Chr. 6 13. 1 K. 8. 54. and made their prayers Isa 56. 7. Esr 6. 10. Act. 16. 13. Luk. 1. 10. 1 Chr 16. 4 and 23. 30. 1 Cor. 14. 16. Some appointed for it 1 Chr. 6. 31. 32. and 16. 4. and 3. 1. Num. 6. 23. 3. They gave thanks Psal 26. 12. unto God Psa 35. 18. and 111. 1. standing 1 King 8. 55. to which the people answered Amen Amen and bowed their heads and worshipped Neh. 8. 6. 4. They sung Psalms 2 Chr. 29. 30. Psa 95. 2. and 92. see the Title a Psalm for the Sabbath and it was joy to some to be there Psa 84. 10. 5. The Scriptures were read Act. 15. 21. Deut. 31. 11 12 13. Luk. 4. 16 17. Act. 13. 15. 6. With the reading they had also afterwards the Word preached for the Priests office was to teach Mal. 2. 7. Deut. 33. 10. 2 Chron. 30. 22. and 35. 2. And it was a misery I. to want a teaching Priest 2 Chron. 15. 2. and II. for them to be ignorant of the Law in handling it Jer. 2. 8 or III. to have such as preached the word and yet not to live thereafter Mat. 23. 1. And this preaching was either an exposition of the words as they read them Neh. 8. 3. 8. or to make an exhortation or as we call it a Sermon upon the words as Christ did Luke 4. 16. 31. and 13 10. Mar. 6. 2. as Saint Paul did Act. 13. 15 16. and as it was usuall every Sabbath day Act. 15. 21. The peoples behaviour was they stood up Neh. 8. 5. They had their eyes upon the Teacher Luk. 4. 20. and their ears were attentive Neh. 8. 3. 7. There were Offerings and casting into the Treasury Mar. 12. 41. Luk. 21. 1. 8. In the Conclusion there was a blessing pronounced upon the people 2 Chron. 30. 27. Lev. 9. 22 23. as God commanded Num. 6. 23 27. and then did break up the Congregation Act. 13. Deut. 21. 5. and 10 8. 1 Chr. 23. 13. 43 and the people departed vers 42. IV. After the dismission of the Congregation It was the duty of all and no doubt some did 1. Meditate upon that they had heard for if this was dayly Psal 1. 2. then much more on this day Aben Ezra on Exod. 20 saith behold the Sabbath Datum est ad Consideranda ●pe●a dei meditandum in Lege ejus 2. They searched the Scriptures afterwards touching the things taught Act. 17. 11. 3. They taught their children for this was a charge upon them dayly then much more no doubt now when they rested in their houses Deut. 6. 6 7. and 11. 19. 4. They were to be mindefull this day 1. Of their deliverance out of Egyp● and how to shew mercy to their men and maid-servants to the strangers and to their very cattell Deut. 5. 14 15. 2. Of the Lord their God and how he did sanctifie them Ezech. 20. 20. Exod. 31. 13 14. 3. Of another rest spirituall here and heavenly hereafter Heb. 4. 9 11. 5. They this
day were to shew their delight in the Lord count the day honourable to the Lord and learn to expresse self denyall of their own thoughts delights and work Is 58. 13 14. 6. On this day they did not fast Judith 8. 6. but made merry for it was called the day of their gladnesse Num. 10. 10. wherein they might cheerfully refresh themselves and send relief unto the poor after such former duties done towards the Evening but this mirth was for their understanding of the Word Neh. 8. 9 10 11 12. It is true that this holy day to the Lord was the feast of Tabernacles but why they might not now do so on the Sabbath day I see nothing to the contrary For the strict precepts in the Wildernesse were out of date and the Primitive Church who observed our Christian Sabbath in the roome of the Jewish did make a feast after the end of Divine service See for the observation of that Sabbath Philo Judaeus de vita Mosis de vita Contempla De legatione sua ad Cajum C●sarem cited by Wall●us de Sab. pag. 127. 134. 135. 136. See also Dav. Kimch●on Psa 92. cited by Goniarus in his Book de Sab. pag. 81. SECTION XXVII Of Judaizing and true understanding thereof IT pleased some to taxe others of Judaisme concerning the Sabbath day And why of Judaisme know they why Judaisme was from the Jews but the Sabbath was long before this name became peculiar to a single tribe in Israel Judah so called Seeing they fasten as they must Judaisme upon the Jews let us see after this Tribe was separated from the ten tribes of Israel how they did Sabbatize for so we shall behold their Judaisme that we may judge with righteous judgement For the better understanding hereof let us consider the Jews as before Christs coming when he was come and afterwards in the times following Of these we must have a twofold consideration as faultlesse or faulty 1. As Faultlesse this is no Judaizing for in our discourse its taken in ill part They ever held and do hold the fourth Commandment perpetuall and so ought we as is before proved They held the seventh day Sabbath from the Creat●on which they had a warrant from God to do till the Resurrection of Christ so farre faultlesse without Judaizing in an ill sense As faulty and thus I. Before the coming of Christ we shall read that they were 1. Observers of the Sabbath in a bare rest from servile work but then doing their own waies finding their own pleasures not delighting themselves in the Lord nor labouring for Self-denyall on that day Of this their Sabbatizing the Prophet Isaiah speaketh who herein laboured to reform them Isai 58. 13 14. 2. Great prophaners of the Sabbath as appeareth by the Prophets complaints Jer. 17. 27. Ezech. 20. 13 16 21 24 and 22. 8. By Gods punishing of them driving them out of their Land as Captives for tbe breach of the Sabbath 2 Chron. 36. 21. as God had threatned Levit. 26. 34 35. By the Story in Nebe 13. 15 18. where Nehemiah telleth them that the prophaning of the Sabbath was the sin of their Fathers and the evill of their captivity befell them for it Now who with us do so Judaize and Sabbatize both these wayes let the world judge II. At Christs coming we may read That the Jews ceasing from such former prophanesse now were become grosly superstitious not allowing such things to be done as might be lawfully done without the breach of the fourth Commandement as in former instances are cleared This foolish superstition our Saviour confuted by word and by his works And therefore none of sound judgement with us do so Sabbatize our onely care is to observe the Commandement as the godly Jews did shewed in the former 26 Section and as the holy rest requireth in keeping the day holy as set apart for holy ends without putting any holinesse in the day it self III. After Christs Ascension and his Kingdome erected the Jews did faulty in their Sabbatizing 1. In observing the Seventh day from the Creation which was at that time out of date and now not to be observed of any Christian if any do these be Sabbatarians and do properly Judaize and not others It s a foul sin to belye and slander men and to brand them with names of reproach falsly 2. In carnally keeping the Sabbath as the Imperiall Edict of Charles the Great doth speak for these kept it in idlenesse in dancing and revelling See Ignatius in his Epistle to the Magn. St. Augustine de consensu Evangelist lib. 2. cap. 77. This Jewish Sabbatizing let those be blamed for who are guilty and the fault be where it is Thus much for the Mosaicall Sabbath FINIS A Large TREATISE OF THE CHRISTIAN SABBATH THE LORDS DAY also now commonly called SUNDAY By Richard Bernard Rectour of Batcombe Wee ought to doe all things for the truth but nothing against it for hee that striveth against the truth striveth against God for God is truth Let every friend of Christ observe the Lords day Ignatius in Ep. ad Magnes In the honour of Christ his Resurrection Clem. Rom. Const lib. 7. cap. 24. LONDON Printed by R. Bishop for Edward Blackmore at the signe of the Angel in Pauls Church-yard The Contents of this Treatise Chapter 1. THe Preface shewing wherein wee generally consent and agree in one Chap. 2. Of the title of Lords day and of the name Sunday Chap. 3. Of the name Sabbath given to this our Lords day or Sunday Chap. 4. Of the Reasons why it may be so called without offence Chap. 5. In what circuit of time this day hath beene kept to wit weekly with the Reason thereof Chap. 6. Of the first day of the week that it is the Lords day and also the seventh day Chap. 7. Of the time when this first day began to be the Lords day and upon what ground Chap. 8. Of the divers opinions concerning the beginning and ending of the Lords day and wherein Conscience may rest it selfe Chap. 9. The authority is divine by which it was established Chap. 10. It is of divine authority from Christ himselfe Chap. 11. Of some Objections which may be made against it answered Chap. 12. That this day cannot be changed Chap. 13. Of the honourable esteeme of this our Lords day and that it is to be preferred before all other festivall dayes Chap. 14. This day is to be kept holy and the whole day too Chap. 15. How this day is to bee kept holy morally as the ancient Sabbath was kept Chap. 16. How our Lords day was kept in the Apostles dayes and the Primitive times Chap. 17. How our Church would have our Sunday kept holy Chap. 18. How Christian Emperours would have it kept by their Imperiall Constitutions Chap. 19. How it was to be kept by the Edicts of Christian Kings in this our Kingdome Chap. 20. How our late Soveraigne King James and now our King
doe celebrate it as a memoriall of the beginning of a new Creation Yea ob excellentiam tanti miraculi propriè In Ps 23. dies Dominica appellatur saith another And indeed the work of the day is the ground saith Bishop Lakes of the hallowing In T●esis 46. 43. 45. of the day whether it be weekly monthly or yeerly as particulars evince in Scriptures and Stories now when God doth any rare great and remarkeable workes hee will be honoured with a Commemoration day for that work if the work concerne the whole by the whole Church and by a part if it concerne a part by which practice or work Gods will is understood which guideth the Church where the ☞ precept is wanting This is a sacred rule observeable in the institution of all sacred Feasts both divine and humane saith that Father Now God raising Christ from the dead upon the first day of the week this remarkable work was to have that day a day of Commemoration above and before all other 1 Because it was the first notable work of God immediately following the Jewish Sabbath which being to cease the next glorious work of God following must needs bee the ground of another Festivall and in stead of the other for it is a rule in mortality saith the reverend Father Bishop Lakes that none in reason can deny due respect unto the worke and therefore cannot deny the hallowing of the day to wit on which it was wrought 2 The raising up of Christ from the dead declared him mightily to bee the sonne of God Rom. 1. 4. God fulfilling hereby to the children the promise made to their Fathers hee being manifest thus to be the Sonne of God his begotten Sonne in the day of his resurrection as the Conquerour of hell death the power of the grave and of Satans Dominion Act. 13. 31. 32. 13. and preferred above men and Angels Heb. 1. 5. 3 This is the work above all others which the Scripture so often mentioneth for the Fathers glory in his Son in that he raised him up from the dead Rom. 1. 4. Gal. 1. 5. Act. 2. 24. 32. 3. 26 4. 10. 10. 40. and in many other Scriptures 4 This is it by which Jesus is made both Lord and Christ to sit upon the throne of David Act. 20. 30 31 36. 5 It is the work of our perfect redemption and full justification Rom. 4. 25. 6 This was the act which to beare witnesse of he principally chose his Apostles Act. 10. 41. 1. 22. which work the Apostles first taught to the Jewes Act. 2. and to the Gentiles Act. 10. and for which they first chiefly suffered 7 This is the act on which dependeth all our comfort and without assurance whereof S. Paul telleth us his preaching was in vaine and our faith in vaine 1 Cor. 15. 14. and so our Christianitie nothing worth 8 This his resurection was to his Apostles and Disciples full of comfort and that which is most joyfull to all Christians for our justification Rom. 4. 25. as also for the hope of our eternall salvation 1 Pet. 1. 3. 3. 21. for if Christ had not risen wee had beene all in our sinnes 1 Cor. 15. 17. his birth his life his suffering had done us no good Therefore from the beginning hath the Church held this ever for the most remarkable work of Christ and to keep this day Festivall on which hee arose from the dead For that it being the most remarkable work of God next and immediately after the Jewish Sabbath as I said it required a Festivall and that within the space of a week within which space God from the creation reserved a day to himselfe and it s not fit that under the Gospel so glorious a work of our redemption by Christs resurrection for the restauration of the world should be more seldome remembred upon a set day then was the work of creation of the world before and under the Law CHAP. VIII Of the divers opinions concerning the beginning and ending of the Lords day and wherein conscience may rest it selfe THere are divers opinions about the beginning and ending of this our Christian Sabbath Some hold it from midnight to midnight this is the judgement of very learned Divines some say it beginneth in the Morning and so holdeth on till the next Morning not many of this opinion as being weakest and farthest from the truth Some hold it to begin at the Evening and to end at the Evening and of this judgment are many ancient Fathers and sundry Councels And the ancient observation of the Saturday in the afternoone as a preparative thereto may seeme to confirme as much But I am perswaded if we keep the day from the Morning to the Evening the consciences of men neede not trouble them about any other curious search So that there be a religious preparation to it and a religious care in ending of it not rushing into it with unsanctified hearts nor concluding it with profanesse For the nights are given for bodily rest and the day for labour as the Psalmist speaketh When the Sunne ariseth man goeth forth to his labours and work untill the Evening Psal 104. 22. 23. When the night commeth no man can work saith our Saviour Joh. 9. 4. Now a day for labour amongst the Jewes was twelve houres Joh. 11. 9. from six to six Matt. 20. 1. 2. 8. but otherwise it was from the beginning of the Morning light Gen. 1. 5. to the darke of the Evening Judg. 10. 9. 14. 16. Joh. 8. 29. Prov. 7. 9. And wee see in the fourth Commandement that albeit as it is held a naturall day doth comprehend the night and day yet is that time only mentioned in which men are to labour and to doe all that they have to doe in the six dayes which is on the day time and not in the night And so as they do well who labour painfully and honestly in the day light and take the night for their quiet repose and rest in the six dayes In like manner do they well who religiously serve the Lord Christ in the light of the day though the night before and the night after they thankfully take benefit of the same for corporall rest Neither doe we read that any were complayned of or punished as breakers of the Sabbath but for their transgression and sinne committed in the day time Our Saviour Christ honoured this our Lords day with his visible presence among his Disciples and followers on the day time At the Sun rising early in the morning Mark 16. 2. 9. then after in the afternoone continuing till the day was farre spent towards the Evening Luk. 24. 29. John 20. 19. upon the same day at supper time yea I confesse it is probable to bee somewhat late within the Evening and that space properly called the beginning of the night but not farre within And wee read how the Jewes on the day time kept their Sabbath
for that they prophaned the day At Chidlington in the edge of Hertford-shire not farre from Hitchin upon an holy day a company of fellowes intended a match at foot-ball some of them were come into the Church and to call the rest together one tolled the Bell presently it began to thunder and on a sudden was seene a black ball to come tumbling downe a hill neare by and came directly to the Church and there flew into the Bell-Free and first slew him that tolled the bell then flustred about the Church and hurt divers and at last did buise in sunder leaving behinde it a filthie stinch like to brimstone Now albeit this was not on the Lords day yet were they thus fearefully punished First In plotting an unlawfull sport on that day against the authority of the Magistrate Secondly By making the Church a consecrated place their randevouze Thirdly by prophanely toling a Bell the principall use whereof was to give notice to the people to come and serve God and not to draw youths to vaine and unlawfull sports Fourthly and lastly in purposing to spend the time dedicated to sacred uses in their boisterous rude and harmeful spo●ting Thus we see how we may take notice of the judgments for breach of the Sabbath though punishments of the like nature yea sometimes worse happen upon other daies To Conclude this it is not good to take off our awefull thoughts from Gods hand upon breakers of the Sabbath least we grow presumptuous and fall into sinne and so procure to our selves the deserved judgements which have light upon others And let us consider how God threats to destory such Psa 28. 5. as regard not his workes and the operation of his hand Lastly some are so farre from having any regard at all to this argument drawne from the judgements of God as they hold the allegation of them in this cause to be impious rashnesse impious and rash presumption vaine observations next allied to superstition yea a prophane kinde of observation a strangly presumptuous and dareing manner to perke up into Gods throne and a taking upon men to reade the darke and divine Characters of the causes of his inscrutable judgements and an unsufferable arrogancy in such as produce them making God to beare false witnesse foolishly triumphing before the victory with saying Loe the judgements of God Loe the judgements of the Lord out of Heaven making them speake Gods indignation against the prophanation of the Lords day What should move any thus to condemne and censure such as bring Gods judgements against the prophaners of the Lords day They may perhaps better know with in themselves than they yet have expressed unto others If any have failed in trueth of Story or related examples not to purpose or what if but common and ordinary yet true yet may examples be memorable though common and ordinary for God makes them so common because he would not have them forgotten or that have put Causam pro non Causa they are left to answere for themselves For my part I suppose without feare of mens fore-mentioned heavie doome that we may with lowly reverence and with an holy awefullnesse of divine Majesty soberly observe his judgements and for those Reasons First the Scriptures are full of examples of Gods judgements to teach us to observe them now as then they were For whatsoever is written is written for our learning according to the nature of the things left us to read and understand Secondly Our Saviour Christ minded his Hearers of the destruction of the old world of Sodome and of Lots wife to make use thereof for their instruction Thirdly Saint Paul mentioneth fore-past judgements not 1. Cor. 10. to the Jewes among whom they happened but to converted Gentiles the Corinthians He nameth the sinnes and then the punishments and telleth them that they were written for ensamples and for our admonition that we should not doe as they did If judgements past serve for this use are we not to make the same use of judgements present which dayly happen among us I doubt not but we may and ought so to doe Fourthly The holy Psalmist layeth it down as a sin and threatneth destruction as a punishment because they regarded not they did not consider nor understood as the word Psal 2● 5. signifieth the works of the Lord nor the operation of his hands The like doth the Prophet Esai in his time complain Esay 5. 12. of they were given to fcastings and wine and to the Pipe and other musicall instruments but they regarded not the work of the Lord neither Considered the operation of his hands as many in our times and especially on the solemne We are taught to magnifie his worke which men behold Iob 36. 24. Pro. 21. 11. daies set apart for Gods worship At which times if evills befall any of them are wee slightly to passe them by Should we not learne by other mens harmes to take out a lesson for our selves when the Scorner is punished the Simple is made wise saith Salomon Fifthly It is a duty yea a grace commended in the Godly Esa 26. 9. 10. that they will learne righteousnes when they see the judgements of God in the earth but it is cleane contrary to the wicked they will not behold the Majesty of the Lord when he 〈◊〉 ●hem and when they behold others punished yet they ●ill not learne righteousnesse Marke how the Prophet here ●●dgeth them for wicked who from judgement on others and from his favour towards themselves will not learne righteousnesse Sixthly I have shewed that 800 yeeres ago how the Reverend Prelates at the Synod in Paris laid to heart the fearefull judgements which befell some for the prophanation of the Lords day Gualter as you have heard durst averre boldly confidently saying that it was not to be doubted that the prophanation of the Lords day was not the least cause of the evils and calamities in those times Bellarmine durst say as much In the exhortation added to our Fast-Booke is it not acknowledged that the plague hapned among other sinnes for the polluting and not keeping holy the Lords day Learned men from time to time have made Catalogues of such judgements as have hapned upon this day The Authour of the Practise of Pietie a book thirty five times reprinted allowed by authority and dedicated to our Now Dread Soveraigne when he was Duke of Yorke and after when he was Prince of Wales rehearseth many judgements upon Sabbath-breakers as he calleth them and is bold in the Conclusion to affirme that those judgements which he mentioneth may be sufficient unto them whose hearts are not seared how wrathfully God is displeased with them who are wilfull prophaners of the Lords day What shall we say of all these Reverend Fathers aforetime of our Reverend Prelates in their exhortation of Learned Divines aswell Papists as Protestants in their observation of judgments and applying them for the breach of the
it whilst the sword was in his owne body and then fell down and dyed in the place the other went back into the Town but dyed also that day 6 Rule The conscience of the sinner is many times a good directer to point out to us that cursed thing If so then what shall we say in this case for divers Prophaners of the Lords day have upon their hurts felt withall the accusation of conscience and acknowledged that those harmes befell them for doing such things as they did on the Lords day Some dying bewailed their sinnes others living made good use thereof and herein reformed themselves of which examples may bee brought to make this good From all this which hath been delivered it may appeare I hope that it is not rash presumption nor any vaine and prophane observation to take notice with reverence of the immediate the mediate and casuall judgements which happen upon the Lords day for the better stirring of us up to the sanctification of the whole day with readinesse of will to the honour of our Lord Jesus so it be without superstition and hypocrisie which such as understandingly know to observe the day aright are farre from both in their intention and practice CHAP. XXVIII Of the serious ponderation of these things CHristian Reader that lovest thine owne soule lay aside all prejudice in the cause labour for selfe-deniall and be in love with the truth Behold the Primitive times weigh the records of our Church the care of Emperours and Kings take notice of the Decrees of Councells and Synods the judgement of the learned in the Church both the Ancient and Moderne the many to the few of a contrary minde and lay to heart these severall kinds of Gods judgements by all which we may see what God and all good men would have us to doe and what to avoid on this day without any Judaizing at all For we doe not put as the Jewes did holinesse in the day as holy in it selfe but as a day set apart by divine authority for holy duties Nor doe we make our rest holy but in the use of it requisite to holy performances of the sacred duties of the day for without cessation from our own profits and pleasures we cannot apply our selves to Divine Services and therefore it being both as a meanes to take us off from the hinderances of holy duties as also a furtherance to the exercises of holinesse which on this day are publickly and privately to be performed we presse the keeping of a Rest If we be well understood I suppose none would say wee did Judaize nor call us by the new reproachfull name of Sabbatarians we hold no more for restraint than holy men have done in former ages Doctor Heylin doth tell us that the fifth and sixth Centurie were fully bent to give the Lords day all fit honour not only in prohibiting all unlawfull pleasures but in commanding a forbearance of some lawfull businesses such as they found to be most hinderance to religious duties S. Augustine long before allowed on the Lords day no wandring about woods and In Serm. de tempo 251. fields with noyse and clamours no telling of tales no playing at dice nor dancing on this day yea he findes fault that whilst they rested from a good work the work of their calling they rested not from vaine and trifling works as if saith he one time of the day were set apart to the Service of God and the rest of the day and the night to their owne pleasures Tertullian before him telleth us how holily the Sabbath was kept after the breaking up of the Congregation as before hath beene delivered And it is worthy to be marked out of Doctor Heylin though he make mention of recreations cap. 3. pag. 84. cap. 4. pag. 123. in his Historie of the Sabbath yet hath he not produced any one testimonie of any one Father for the now conceit of Christian libertie concerning recreations of which he saith after dinner until Evening Prayer and after Evening Prayer untill the time of Supper there is no question to be made but all were practised which were not prohibited But had there beene proofes hee surely would have produced one Father or other for them But come we now to our Opposites See before Mr. Brerewood and see what they say for us without Judaizing and insteed of all the rest I take only here the learned Bishop White who saith thus so farreforth as secular labour and Pag. 226. 227. 261. pastime or recreation are impediments to sacred and religious duties publick or private to bee performed upon holy dayes they are to be avoided and abstinence from them must be used according to the equitie of divine law and the precept of the Church otherwise they are sacrilegious citing Cyrill for his purpose because they are meanes to robbe God of his honour and to hinder the spirituall edification of Christian people and because abstinence from labour and from recreation upon the holy day is subservient to the exercise of religious duties and on the contrary secular labour and pastime are impediments thereunto and if they be acted at such times as the precept of God and the Church prohibit they are prophanations of Gods holy day The same learned Father in another place in his book against Braborn saith that because the Lords day and other holy dayes are devoted to the Service of God and appointed to the exercise of religious and spirituall duties Christian people are to perferre their religious offices of those dayes before their wordly pleasures and profit and the more observant they are hereof the more they please God if other actions of their life be sutable to their devotions yea he saith further and so much as we may say and no more that devout Christians who are so piously affected as that upon the Lords day and other holy dayes they doe resolve to sequester and retire themselves from secular businesses and ordinary pleasures and delights to the end they may more freely attend the service of Christ and apply their mindes to spirituall and heavenly meditations are to be commended and encourged For the doing thereof is a work of grace and godlinesse pleasing and acceptable to God for which he quoteth Col. 3. 2. Joh. 6. 27. Object Let none say that flesh and blood cannot apply it selfe so holily an whole day together Answ For first flesh and blood shall not inherit the kingdome of heaven 1 Cor. 15. 50. Secondly we must strive to doe by grace what wee cannot doe by nature else we shall never doe at any time true service to God according to any of his Commandements Thirdly God must not loose his right of service from us because we have procured to our selves wretched natures soone weary of all spirituall duties Fourthly lazie servants can hardly undergoe any labour much lesse to hold out a day yet the awe they beare to their earthly Masters maketh them to doe
learnedst Jewish Rabbies very many judicious Divines among us Protestants and divers learned Papists do hold the affirmative Some few in comparison of the other do hold the negative upon the former suppositions suppositions I call them for that they have no ground of Reason from either the Letter or Circumstance of the Text. SECTION II. Of the conceit of an Anticipation or Prolepsis and what it is TOstatus his conceit of an Anticipation in the words was saith Catherinus ineptum commentum and is indeed contrary to the plaine meaning of Moses his whole narration and the letter of text Here its fit in the first place to shew what is an Anticipation It 's the setting down of a thing in order of story before which cometh to be so in order of time afterwards The Reason of every such Anticipation is from the Penman of the Historie who writeth down things not as they were of old at the first but as they then were when he wrote the story Such an Anticipation here some of them only so say or do rest on others who affirme it without allegation of reasons for this their conception and brain birth But there is one of late who hath produced his grounds for it 1. Because saith he the words may be thus translated And God hath blessed the seventh day and hath sanctified it Ans 1 None so translate the words otherwise than the former in verse 2. Perfecit requievit no advantage to be taken more in the word hath blessed and hath sanctified than in saying He blessed and sanctified Hath is but an English particle and not of force in the Hebrew in the Greek or Latine which yet if we adde to the other verbs as He hath ended and hath rested speaking of that same time would be absurd Ans 2 Thus to devise a Translation from all that have Englished the words as a reason to build thereon a new conceit is no sound dealing but a perverting of the true sense 2. For that diverse places are named elsewhere by an Anticipation saith he Ans This will not conclude therefore here is an Anticipation because there For in those other places there evidently appeareth the grant of the Prolepsis why of necessitie it should be so taken there would else manifestly be an untruth uttered which cannot be here understood when the words are taken as they be in the text as then and at that time so Yet these two reasons for no more I finde are onely the weak under propers of their fancie SECTION III. Arguments against this Anticipation or Prolepsis Argument 1. WHere the words may be taken literally without danger of any untruth contradiction or absurditie there is no figure and anticipation For in a plain narration to take the words figuratively is to abuse the Scripture and to make it as a nose of wax But these words He blessed and sanctified applied to that self-same singular day in which he rested have in them no falshood no contradiction no absurdity Therefore here is no Anticipation Let any shew wherein the falshood the contradiction or obsurditie in so applying and understanding of the words is if they cannot they must give over Abulensis commentum figmentum Argument 2. EVery Prolepsis is onely in places or in the description of things and actions done by men but not of Gods divine institution no instance can be given hereof But these words are not spoken of any place nor act nor thing of men but an act of Gods institution who is said to blesse and sanctifie the day and are words of his divine institution And therefore here is no Anticipation till it can be proved that one may so differ from all other in holy Story Argument 3. In every Anticipation the name act or thing forespoken of in order of Storie hath its dependance and rise from some thing following yet before in order of time For this is an Anticipation as is before shewed and it is most true in every such figure See it in instances In Bethel is a prolepsis Gen. 12. 8. from Gen. 28. 19. In Gilead is a prolepsis Gen. 31. 31. from Gen. 31. 47. In Gilgal is a prolepsis Iosh 4. 19. from Iosh 5. 9. In Bochim is a prolepsis Iudg. 2. 1. from Iudg. 2. 5. In Exo 16. 33 34. which act was when the Tabernacle was built and the Testimony made afterwards Exo. 25. and 26. and 27. on which the truth of this act of Aaron dependeth In 1. Sam. 17. 54. is a prolepsis for the act of David here mentioned could not be true till afterward he won the strong hold of Zion and got Ierusalem 2. Sam. 5. 7. In all these and in every other prolepsis there is such a dependance so clear and evident as none can doubt of the truth of the figure except we would faultie the narration with an untruth But now these words in Gen. 2. 3. have not their truth dependant upon any thing after recorded in Scripture which was before this act of God in time For who can say truely and sollidly prove it that the words in Exo. 20. 11. were the institution of the Sabbath in time before this in Genesis For t is manifest that the Sabbath was kept before the promulgation of the Law Exo. 16. 30. And again the words in Exo. 20. 11. shew us not what new thing God did then but what he had done when he rested the seventh day from his six dayes works in the Creation For as God telleth them what he had done in the very first six dayes in the beginning so he told them what he did that very seventh on which he rested from his work he blessed and hallowed it and made it the Sabbath Therefore it s to be concluded from the nature of a true Prolepsis and the dependance of that which is first spoken upon that which maketh it so in time that here is no Anticipation Argument 4. IN every Anticipation the thing so spoken of is generally known to be come to passe before the Penman wrote it as those former instances do shew If here then were a Prolepsis Gods blessing and sanctifying the seventh day should have been known generally and the institution before Moses tyme who wrote this history of Genesis If they will not acknowledge it was so known before Moses wrote Genesis then is there no Anticipation If they grant it to be generally known then must they yeeld that the Sabbath day was before the giving of the Law and generally so known If they say it was known unto all Israel onely after the giving of the Law then I ask them 1. What Sabbath that was which was knowne to Israel at the raining of Manna 2. How they know that Moses wrote Genesis after the time of the giving of the Law If only it was generally knowne from that time and not before from whence hee must take occasion as they say to insert the words into the second of Genesis and third verse by
Adam of his work of creation and of the space he did take to create all things in to wit in six dayes for Adam could not know that God had made the world in six dayes except God had so informed him and not acquaint him with the use of the seventh day also 2 Can we imagine that God distinguishing the seventh from the other six yet would leave it for use in common with the six for so long a time Can wee think that Gods work in six dayes put men into the present possession and use of the six dayes and his rest on the seventh day not afforded unto them the present use thereof 4 Can we suppose in any reason that the Sabbath day was only needfull to the Israelits in the Wildernesse and of no use to Gods people and Church before the Floud nor after till those dayes There are other reasons which are brought out by some for this Destination but they are without any waight of reason Reason 1. THere is no Historicall narration of the observation of the day Answ Yes the observation of the Sabbath is mentioned and plainly witnessed Exod. 16. 30. Reason 2. THere was no Commandement given to Adam concerning his resting upon the day 1 Answ There was no Commandement for whole six dayes working but only Gods example propounded for imitation 2 This reason concludeth not a Destination of the day till Moses his dayes nor any Destination at all for 3 It was needlesse to give to Adam any Commandement affirmative in his state of innocency because he was filled with great wisdome with holinesse righteousnesse and uprightnesse and it was enough for him to see Gods example of rest as a pattern before him to make him to follow him for he could not but know by his excellent wisdome and knowledge that God was to be imitated and hee bound to take his example for imitation Hee also knew that God blessed and sanctifled the day not for himselfe to keep it holy but for man Reason 3. IT is repugnant to the opinion of the Doctors of the Church that God imposed upon Adam in his innocency any more positive precepts but one which was that of the forbidden fruit 1 Answ This reason concludeth not the Destination It followeth not that in Gen. 2. 3. there is a Destination because Doctors hold only one positive precept given to Adam for the plaine narration hath not its dependance upon either one or more precepts given of God to Adam 2 This argument imployeth that the words in Gen. 2. 3. should be a Commandment or else needs must they afford a Destination but though it should be granted that there is no Commandment yet the simple narration of the truth of Gods resting then and his blessing and sanctifying the seventh day preventeth the Conceit of any future Destination Reason 4. THat the Law of the fourth Commandment was not agreeable to the state of innocency Answ The Circumstances of the fourth Commandment to men as they stood under the fall and as the Law was given to the people to rest their men and maid-servants sons and daughters with cattell and stangers after toylesome labour could not agree with Adams state of innocency but the fourth Commandment to keep holy the Sabbath day might be agreeable to Adam in innocency 1. It would and did well agree with Adam to be an Imitator of God but God rested on that day and was refreshed Exo. 31. 17. Therefore it was no whit disagreable to Adams innocency to rest after the example of the Lord his God and to keep a Sabbath 2. Adam was to work six dayes though his labour was delightsome and not toylesome in imitation of God and therefore to rest the seventh day because God did so This is reason enough if no more can be said for it For albeit Adam toyled not his bodie with payn and sweat yet his mind was attent to his weekly bussinesse while he laboured and six dayes were destinated to his labour but now on the seventh day his bodie was altogether freed from all labour and his minde also from attending to it and the whole man set apart for an holy rest unto the Lord which befitted him well 3. Though on the other dayes he served God yet neither the dayes nor he on those dayes were immediatly consecrated to God as this day was and held also for holy duties and to attend upon God immediatly who in that happy estate did in a visible apparition manifest himself to him And what know we what Adam did and should have heard learned and seen from God on that day I may think it should have been such matter as might be agreeable enough to that his estate of innocency 4. Adams perfection of knowledge in holynesse and righteousnesse with uprightnesse and innocency of life did furnish him with matter of heavenly Contemplation and made him bold to present himself before God in a speciall manner that day and was fitted to spend the rest of that day in heavenly meditations who prepared himself and strengthened his faith in the assurance of eternall life in heaven whither he should have been translated in Gods appointed time for eternall life was promised from the worlds beginning Titus 1. 2. whereof the Tree of life was a Sacrament as the Fathers and other learned men do hold So that in this regard the seventh day a Sabbath to the Lord agreed right well to his estate in innocency 5. If the day was blessed and sanctified of God which must needs be granted if the Anticipation and Destinations bee removed then a blessed and sanctified day agreed well to his holy and blessed state of innocencie not any jarre or unfittingnesse comming betweene 6 The day of Gods resting was not only exemplary to Adam but to all Adams seed had he and they abode in innocencie Now then all men labouring the six dayes had it beene unagreeable to their holinesse and innocencie to have bestowed the seventh day in meditations heavenly contemplations praysing God in the beautie of his creatures and the like This surely would have stood with the very highest degree of their excellencies in their state of perfection 7 And lastly Adam had on him as all men should have a double calling one for his body his particular calling in the duties of righteousnesse for which he was allowed six dayes and another for his soule his generall calling to be performed in duties of holinesse for which the seventh day was ordained So that in this respect a seventh day Sabbath was not disagreeable to the state of innocency Reason 5. THe most ancient primitive Fathers as Iustine Martyr Tertullian Irenaeus affirm that none of the Patriarches living before Moses observed a Sabbath Therefore in Gen. 2. 3. is a Destination for future time 1. Answ There be as many Fathers who affirm the contrary and also Jewish Rabbies 2. Affirmations are not to be rested on but the proofes produced 3. Those Fathers are to be
understood of a ceremonious observation which they deny to be kept before Moses time They do not deny any Sabbath to have been kept at all They d●ny what the Jews did stand for against whom they wrote to wit for Circumcision and a Sabbath ceremonially kept Such a Sabbath to be kept by the Patriarchs the Fathers deny SECTION V. Of the true understanding of the words in Gen. 2. 3. HAving cleared the text Gen. 2. 3. of these two rubs of a Prolepsis and of a future Destination it follows that it must be understood plainely without either of them and the words to be conceived as they be written and delivered which is that at that present time that first seventh day on which God rested was it which he blessed and sanctified How can this be denyed Doth not Moses proceed orderly in his historicall narration First he relates Gods Work every of the six dayes and having ended that he then immediatly following speaketh of the seventh day and what God did on that day to wit that God rested on that same seventh day and sanctified it That this is clearely so to be understood without a figure I thus prove First this third verse is connexed to the second by the copulative conjunction and tying in the continued narration with an and Gods resting to Gods ending of his work on that seventh day in verse 2. Then to his resting w●th another and he adjoyneth his blessing and sanctifying the same seventh day Now as the ending his work of six dayes and and his resting from his work on the immediate seventh day following are coupled together and not in any indifferent mans understanding separable from one the other in the n●●ration so are his resting and his blessing and sanctifying of the same seventh day knit together and so conceiveably to every ones common apprehension tied one to the other as the other be without any difference in Moses relation Therefore if the former verse be cleare so is the later to any not anticipated with a prejudicate opinion destinated to errour Secondly God himselfe publishing the Law of the Sabbath in Exod. 20. 11. doth there as Moses doth here in Genesis 2. 2 3. couple together the same things his finishing of his work in six dayes who made heaven and earth the sea and all that in them is with his resting on the seventh day and then that he blessed the Sabbath day and hallowed it clearely thus verifying the truth of Moses narration by his conjoyning of the things together and then by speaking also of all these his acts as then done in the time perfectly past in the words made rested blessed and sanctified therefore may we see God himselfe if we will see teaching us to understand Moses plainly and that without any Anticipation or Destination Thirdly the seventh day in Gen. 2. 3. is that first seventh day in which God rested and not another seventh day which should be 2450 yeares after when the Law should be given at Mount Sinai For First the conjunction and will not admit of such a distinction or division of the day in the third verse from the seventh day in the second to make them to be put asunder as farre as the creation was from the promulgation of the Law 2450 and odde yeares Secondly the seventh day is three times mentioned twice in the second verse which is not denied to be understood of one and the same seventh day and why not the seventh day in the third verse For there is no difference in the expression of the day it is called alike in all the triple mentioning the seventh day and the later seventh day as I said before is by and conjoyned to the other Thirdly the demonstrative ipsum it referreth us to the same seventh day before spoken of For the word cannot have reference to a seventh day to come two thousand yeares after Fourthly the reason that is annexed in Gen. 2. 3. tieth us to that first seventh day on which God rested and not to another seventh day to come after for if the seventh bee understood of any other seventh day than that on which he rested immediately after the six dayes work the reason should not be good Lastly to this first seventh day God hath reference in Exod. 20. 11. and to no other seventh day Therefore must the words be understood of the first seventh day Fourthly to take the words he blessed and sanctified it to be meant of that seventh day on which God rested hath no absurdity in it neither in respect of the day nor in respect of Adam in innocency as I have proved nor doth it contradict any other place nor any other Scripture can be brought against it nor is there any untruth so to conceive it Therefore are the words without figure plaine and easie and so to be understood as they be historically delivered Obj. The words are to be taken as a Parenthesis so saith Gomarus who desires to have it taken notice of in his reply to Doctor Rivet Answ Why hee should make so much of his conceit I know not For if it should be granted him as it cannot yet a Parenthesis is ever to the purpose and sense of the place it altereth not the meaning thereof it weakeneth not but rather strengtheneth the litterall sense and tendeth greatly to the matter in hand See instances in the New Testament Matth. 1. 18. and 24. 24. and 27. 9. Mark 5. 8. 13. and 7. 2. Luk. 2. 2. 4. 35. Joh. 1. 14. Act. 1. 18. 19. and 5. 12. Likewise in the old Testament Gen. 24. 10. and 35. 18. and 38. 16. and 49. 31. Exod. 14. 9. Ier. 21. 2. and 29. 2. with infinite other places but this conceited Parenthesis is cleane contrary to all the other and overthroweth the naturall and proper sense of the place contrary I say to the nature of any Parenthesis But I deny here a Parenthesis for take away a Parenthesis and yet the sense remayneth and the former following words are knit without any absurditie but take away these words And God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it Gen. 2. 3. First there is no meaning left to expresse what benefit man should have by Gods resting on the Sabbath day as Moses telleth us what benefit accrued to man by Gods working upon every other of the six daies for as God wrought on them and distinguished them for mans use even so must wee conceive of his distinguishing the seventh day and resting on it for mans good as well as the other dayes But if these words be a Parenthesis and taken away then had not Moses told us of any use or benefit of this day Secondly take these words away then the second verse with the later part of the third verse will absurdly bee conjoyned In verse second it is thus And he rested on the seventh day from all his workes which he had made And in verse third it then should follow immediately because that in
it hee had rested from all his work which God made and created So hee rested because he rested But now if the whole third verse be in the Parenthesis then as I said the benefit of the day in which God rested is taken from us that is the blessing and sanctifying of it for our use Therefore for these reasons wee may not admit of a Parenthesis nor is there any such thing in the Hebrew Text nor in the Greek nor in Pagine nor in Vatablus translation nor in the Caldee Paraphrase nor in Montanus nor in Tremelius and Iunius nor in the Vulgar Edition nor in our last learned English translation This new Parenthesis is but an idle conception brought forth to blunder the cleare streame of the Text. SECTION VI. That in Gen. 2. 3. is the Institution of the Sabbath THe words in Gen. 2. 3. are the Institution of the first Sabbath 1 The name Sabbath doth take its originall from Gods resting on this seventh day for so the word signifieth cessavit requievit This also wee learne from the fourth Commandement in Exod. 20. 8. where God nameth the word Sabbath which in the tenth verse is applyed unto this seventh day and in the eleventh verse the reason is rendred why it is called Sabbath because God rested on the seventh day So that Gods owne resting on this day made it a Sabbath 2 It being by Gods resting made a Sabbath day hee did therefore blesse it Now to blesse a day is no where spoken of God in the whole Bible but here and in Exod. 20. 11. And therefore by that in Exod. 20. 11. wee must seek out the meaning of this in Gensis which will appeare to bee this that he blessed it that is by sanctifying it for the later word giveth the sense of the former the conjunction and comming betwixt benedixit and sanctificavit is exegeticall put expositively as is usuall in the Hebrew speech when two verbes come together and very learned men thus expound the place So Calvin Vatablus Paraeus and others but to come to Gods owne exposition in Exod. 20. which is this By his rest he made the seventh day Sabbath and it being a Sabbath by his rest he did blesse it that is sanctified it that is appointed it to be kept holy as it is in the words of the fourth Commandement For the better confirmation of this exposition we must understand that the Commandement given Exod. 20. 8. is deduced from his resting blessing and sanctifying this seventh day spoken of in Gen. 2. 2. 3. and repeated Exod. 20. 11. for the Commandement of God is an inference from it thus Because I rested blessed and sanctified the Sabbath day therefore I command thee to keep it holy Now albeit there be three words in Genes Rest blessed sanctified yet in the Commandement hee mentioneth only the word Sabbath and the keeping of it holy First the word Sabbath day hath relation to his rest then to keep it holy hath relation to sanctified or hallowed it in which is included the word blessed For Gods blessing of it is the sanctifying and consecration of the day to be kept holy to the Lord And indeed this was a great blessing of the Lord for mans heavenly and spirituall good many wayes This exposition is strengthened by Exod. 16. 23. where it is said too morrow is the rest of the holy Sabbath unto the Lord. Here the word blessed is not spoken of as to call it the blessed Sabbath but the word holy is mentioned only having reference to Gods sanctifying of it and including therein his blessing of it Now the words thus cleerely opened they must needs argue the Institution of the Sabbath For first here is a Sabbath made which Christ telleth us was for man Mark 2. 27. Secondly here is Gods owne example for mans imitation as is evident in Exod. 20. by Gods urging his own example for resting on the Sabbath Thirdly here are his words of institution in that it is said He blessed it and sanctified it that is hee ordained it to bee an holy Sabbath unto the Lord to bee dedicated to his own service as Moses informeth us before the Law was promulgated Exod. 16. 23. Fourthly and lastly hee confirmeth it with a reason in the end of the third verse of Gen. 2. Therefore it is the Lords institution for to bee his Sabbath day and to bee kept holy of us as the Commandement also teacheth and appointeth us to doe 3 The Lord in the promulgation of the Law doth fetch from this place of Genesis the originall of the Sabbath laying the ground of his precept to keep it holy upon the institution 〈◊〉 in Exod. 20. 11. 4. In Exod. 31. It is worth our observation that there the keeping of the Sabbath is not urged from the Commandment ☞ lately given in the Decalogue as reason would in mans judgement but from the first seventh dayes rest and refreshment after his six dayes work as we may read in the 15. 16 17. verses of that chapter 5. Moses in Exod. 16. 26. maketh mention of six dayes and of the seventh day Sabbath and telleth them that God had given them the Sabbath verse 29. speaking of it as a time before For as six dayes were before so also was the seventh day the Sabbath for when some did break it ver 27. the Lord faith How long will ye refuse to keep my Commandments and Laws He would not have said How long for the breach only of the first seventh day Sabbath if they had not done so long before Therefore the seventh day was Sabbath long before this time of gathering the Manna 6. S. Paul speaking of a Rest or keeping a Sabbath to the people of God Heb. 4. 9. fetcheth from the originall Gods own rest on the seventh day even from the Creation verse 4. 7. Jewish Doctors have been of this opinion Genebrad in his Chron. citeth foure Broughton in his consent of Scripture noteth two Ramban on Gen. 26. Aben-Ezar on Exod. 20 and Peter Martyr on Genesis alleadgeth Rabbi Agnon Philo Iudaeus demundi opificio is of this judgement For he saith the seventh day God vouchsafed to call it holy And Tertullian cannot deny that the Jews held the day to be sanctified from the worlds beginning Lib. 4. advers Iudaeos 8. Doctor Rivet out of Wallaeus on the fourth Commandment doth reckon up to this purpose the consent of thirty famous Protestant Divines Luther Zuinglius Calvin Peter Martyr Bullinger Zanchius Vrsinus and others to the number of thirty I say yet he mentioneth not learned Paraeus Mercerus Perkins Willet Amesius Selneccerus Aretius and Piscator and very many more which might be named holding the institution of the Sabbath in Gen. 2. 3. 9. Of this opinion are learned Papists whom the same Doctor Rivet quoteth also as August Steuchus Eugubinus Gilbertus Genebrad Iacobus Salianus Cornelius a lapide Catharinus Ribera hereunto adde Thomas Aquinas on Genes 2. 10. Ancient Fathers are
alleadged for this purpose Ciprian Epiphanius Origen Chrysostome Hierome Athanisius S. Augustine Some Fathers produced as of a contrary opinion are not to be understood of a bare naturall Sabbath which we plead for but as the Sabbath ceremonious as the Jews held it and so these Fathers deny the observation of it Lastly our learned Translators of our English Bible are of this judgement or they who have prefixed the Contents to the second chapter of Genesis in which are these words The first Sabbath And this is allowed to be read in our Churches SECTION VII The Institution was binding and required the observation of the Sabbath from the beginning THis Institution was virtually binding as a Law requiring abservation of man even of Adam in his innocency 1. Though in Terminis the words be not * To sanctifie a day is either to keep it holy or to make it holy and seeing God keeps not any day more holy than another the meaning must be that he made it holy which is as much as to command the keeping of it holy And this my Lord of Armach justifieth preceptive yet had they in them virtually a Commandment For God in giving his Law deduceth out of this his institution a Commandment as before is shewed For Gods Commandments do arise and are imposed upon man not from his absolute authority as if he commanded because he would so command this or that but he doth it upon good reason which reason carrieth the force of a Commandment As for instance God brought Israel out of Egypt and great bondage whereupon God frameth to them his first Commandment in the Law and forbiddeth them to have any other God besides him Now what if God had not thus in form of words imposed this precept upon them had not his act of their so great deliverance bound them as a Law to have him only to be their God yes without doubt it carried with it the force and nature of that Commandment Even so here God having rested from his work made the seventh day a Sabbath blessing and sanctifying it for man for it was made for man Mark 2. 27. though the Commandment of keeping holy the Sabbath had not been published yet Gods rest Gods example in resting and his blessing and sanctifying the day for man had been as a precept Paraeus saith the words are preceptive and Marius a learned man saith they were a Commandment For Gods own example propounded to man for imitation is as if he had said Do as you see me do else it is to no purpose to propound himself to us for an example And Gods acts in this nature * This way our Homily takes teaching that as obedient children we should imitate our heavenly Father in this imitable and for mans use binde men to make that same use of his acts for which use and end he did so as his blessing and sanctifying the Sabbath for to keep it holy to him did binde them to keep it holy as Gods Commandment in the promulgation of the Law Exo. 20. 8. grounded upon this his act sufficiently evidenceth 2. The keeping holy the Sabbath day is called Gods Law before the Law at Sinai Exo. 16. 4. For the Law in this place is the keeping of the seventh day holy as a Law for what Law in all the sixteenth chapter was there else by which God would try his people concerning the keeping thereof but the keeping holy the Sabbath as the maine of the chapter touching their Manna in gathering it the sixt day in Gods preserving it from Worms and stinking in Gods not rayning it on the seventh day in Moses commanding to have them keep in on the seventh day tended all to the keeping of the Sabbath to the Lord which is the Law mentioned in verse 4. 3. Some going out to gather Manna on that day the Lord rebuketh the people for refusing of a long time to keep his Commandements and Lawes saying how long will yee refuse to keep my Commandements and Lawes Exod. 16. 28. In which words we may observe these things First that the people had Commandements and Lawes before this time and so before the giving of the Law at Sinai Secondly that the Lawes and Commandements were not mens but Gods for he acknowledgeth them for his owne saying my Commandements and my Lawes Thirdly in these words is comprehended the rest of the holy Sabbath to the Lord of which he maketh mention in the three and twenty five and twenty six and twenty verses before the reproofe of the breach thereof in this twenty eighth verse For some going out to gather Mannah on this day he taxeth them for refusing to keep his Commandements and Lawes which hee would not have done if the seventh day an holy Sabbath had beene none of them Fourthly that these his Commandements and Lawes they had knowne and had refused to keep for a long time before for he saith How long refuse yee to keep them Understanding among these the Commandement of the Sabbath which being reckoned among the Commandements it must needs be of a binding power If any man aske me where doe we before this time finde mention of any such Commandements and Lawes I answer in Gen. 26. 5. which Abraham kept and taught his to keep Gen. 18. 19. and if you would know how they learned them the Text there tells you from Gods voyce which voyce Abraham obeyed for God never suffered his people to live by the unwritten Law in mans nature without his positive Lawes after the fall yea hee gave a positive Law to Adam before in his estate of innocency SECTION VIII The Sabbath was observed of Gods people before the Law given at Mount Sinai THe Sabbath being instituted of God Gen. 2. 3. it was observed of Gods people before the Law at Sinai 1. It must needs bee that Adam observed it else he did neglect the institution and Gods imitable example to stirre him up to the same Now if Adam did neglect it it must needs be First either of ignorance which could not be for as he knew the Lords work of six dayes so could he not be ignorant of Gods rest the seventh day this he saw being created before though he must be taught the six dayes work either by Gods secret inspiration or by instruction of his voyce Therefore Adam was not ignorant of this first institution of the Sabbath Secondly if he neglected it wittingly it was no lesse than contempt which to conceit of Adam could neither stand with his state of innocency before his fall nor with his state of grace after his fall Therefore seeing Adam did neither of ignorance nor knowledge neglect it he then observed it and if he knew it and observed it without all question he would teach others to observe it he being after the fall one of the holy men of God a teacher and instructer of Gods people as hee is reckoned in Gen. 5. amongst the teachers in those dayes
Some perhaps will here say it would easily be granted that the words were binding if it could bee proved that Adam knew of this institution The works of God are wrought for man to know and in knowing them to acknowledge God in them and to observe them and to make that use of them which he intendeth by them This is an universall truth Againe his works wrought are to bee taken notice of of the first to whom they may become observeable and to whom they doe belong This is undeniable All Gods works are documentary and lead men to some use of them as the Scriptures doe teach Adam created in the excellency of perfection according to the image of God saw Gods workmanship of the world and knew God in them and well understood how to make use of them But now that in six dayes God was creating all things Adam could not know but by information from God nor could he know the seventh day to be the seventh day on which God rested but by his knowledge of the six dayes before it Yet after God made him he knowing that God wrought six dayes and hee beholding Gods rest on the seventh day by his excellent understanding he could conceive that God in both to wit in his six dayes working and in his seventh dayes resting made himselfe a patterne for his imitation for else what needed God to take so many dayes for working or the seventh day for resting But concerning the seventh day Gods exemplary rest is not only mentioned by Moses but Gods blessing and sanctifying of the day not for himselfe for so to think were absurd saith learned B. Lakes but for man Mark 2. 27. In his Thes If so then Adam must needs know thus much else Gods blessing and sanctifying of the day for Adam and his posterity had beene of none effect Although there bee a dispute about the time yet on all hands the words are acknowledged to be words of an institution Now every institution of God is made manifest without delay to them whom it concerneth no instance can be given to the contrary but I have proved the institution to have beene upon Gods rest after the six dayes work and therefore was it forthwith knowne unto Adam to bee an institution of the Sabbath for which cause he knew himselfe bound to observe it as no doubt but hee and the Patriarchs did as followeth to bee proved in the next Section 2. The holy men of God before the Law knew the space of times they knew the space of yeares and reckoned by yeares Gen. 5. and 7. 11. and 14. 4. They knew the space of a moneth Gen. 29. 24. and 38. 20. Exod. 2. 2. and could reckon the moneths knowing which was first which the second the third and fourth c. Gen. 8. 13 14. Exod. 12. 2. and 19. 1. They moreover observed weeks Gen. 29. 2● 28. and knew how many dayes made a week else how could Laban say fulfill her week or Jacob understand what he meant by it But it is said he fulfilled her week which was seven dayes which made the week as they had learned from God in working six dayes and resting the seventh day and as the Hebrew name sheweth it for a week was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Shabuah comming of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Septem seven which language the Church of God then spake and the Septuagint translates the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Latines call Septimana and Hebdomada which doth constare septem diebus as a man learned in the Hebrew tongue delivers it All doe reckon seven dayes for a week and so is it taken in the Scriptures where a week or weeks be mentioned Dan. 9. 27. and 10. 3. Levit. 12. 15. Luk. 18. 12. Now they knowing a week and taking to themselves six dayes of the week for work from Gods example and as God allowed them as we see by his words in giving the Law Exod. 20. 9. 11. may it bee in reason thought otherwise but that they gave God the seventh day according to his owne institution 3 The much observing of the number of seven and seventh may somewhat move us hereto else why did God himselfe so observe it First in his resting upon the seventh day at the beginning Gen. 2. 2. 3. Secondly in his distinction of beasts and foules commanding Noah to observe the number of seven in taking in to him the cleane Gen. 7. 2. 3. Thirdly in ordering so the Arke by the hand of his providence that it as the Type of the Church should rest in the seventh Month on the Mountaines of Ararat Gen. 8. 4. and that the earth should be dryed on the seventh day of the second Month falling out upon no other number but upon the number of seven I say by the guidance of Gods providence to teach the godly that as hee rested the seventh day Sabbath so the Arke the Typicall Church should rest on the seventh day and as he ending his work of Creation and blessed the seventh day so h●e ending his work of his judgement upon the sinfull word upon the seventh day on which the earth was dryed which seventh day might very likely be the seventh day Sabbath what may bee said to the contrary I know not For the Sabbath day as now sometimes it doth might fall upon the seventeenth day of one Month and on the twenty seventh day of another Month. Fourthly in ordayning the Passeover to bee kept upon a seventh day Exod. 12. 3 6. for the fourteenth day was the seventh day for if wee reckon from the first day of the Moneth to the tenth and the keeping up of the Lamb till the fourteenth day it must be the second seventh day of the Month which the Jewes began at the evening and continued to the evening Fiftly in the Lords appointing the feast of unleavened bread to consist of the number of seven dayes and the seventh day to be an holy Convocation Exod. 12. 15 16. and a feast unto the Lord Exod. 13. 6. Sixthly in his not rayning of Mannah on the seventh day because he would have no gathering on that day All these put together doe shew that God did much extoll the seventh day before his people and those holy Patriarches to stirre them up to observe the seventh day Sabbath Seventhly to adde to all these the Lords speaking to Noah of the number of seven dayes to bring in the Floud and opening the windowes of Heaven and breaking up the fountaines of the great deep on the seventeenth day of the second Month Gen. 7. 11. and in bringing the Floud upon the old world upon the seventh day Gen. 7. 10. as the learned Translatours have it in the Margin So Tremelius and Innius give us it from the Hebrew Text Fuit ipsorum dierum septimo Vatablus hath it Cum illuxisset dies septimus that hereby among other the wickednesses of the times God might shew his wrath against those evill
plain words that the seventh day Sabbath was kept Exod. 16. 30. and that the people rested on the seventh day which he saith was a Sabbath to the Lord verse 25. the rest of the holy Sabbath unto the Lord verse 23. Now this Text being so cleare that it cannot be denied except one dare say Moses lyed Some have endeavoured to darken the truth and to becloud the antiquitie of the Sabbath in the former institution and use thereof by being pleased to vent their erroneous conception and to say but without any ground of reason that this Chapter Exod. 16. speaketh of the first institution of the Sabbath But for answer hereto I doe deny that any such institution can here be proved and to make this cleare looke into the Text and observe two things first what God spake secondly what God did to finde an institution first God himselfe spake of giving of Manna also of gathering a certaine rate every day and on the sixth day twice as much verse 4. 5. 23. but in all this chapter God speaks not so much as one word of the seventh day Sabbath nor doth he say that hee blessed or sanctified it nor doth Moses write any such thing of God in this chapter as he speaketh of Gods resting blessing and sanctifying it in Gen. 2. 3. as hee should have done if any anticipation were there with relation to this place secondly what God spake in verse 28. is implicitly of the Sabbath first wrapping it up among his Commandements and Lawes given before this time to them and their Fathers so farre is he from instituting a Sabbath in this place Secondly he reproveth them for the breach of it as already commanded before with other his Commandements and precepts there mentioned Now if God spake no words of the Sabbath but what the people were to doe in six dayes and especially on the sixth God passing by the very naming of the seventh day and where he speaketh of it implicitly it is only by way of reproofe to the people for transgressing and breaking of it How can here be the institution of the Sabbath seeing God doth not so much as name it but reproves the breach of it which implyeth it to have beene before this time else should he have reproved them for a transgression and a sin whereof there was no Law Next let us see what Gods acts were whether they will afford an institution First hee gave them the Manna vers 15. but this blessing was only on the six working dayes what is this to the institution of the Sabbath truly no more than his six dayes work in the Creation for the institution of the seventh day for a Sabbath Secondly he preserved the Manna gathered on the sixth day in the morning from breeding of wormes and from stinking being kept over night to bee eaten on the seventh day what is this to the institution of the day The blessing was not the blessing of the day but of the eating of the Manna on the Sabbath day for which cause God did preserve it that they might keep the Sabbath before this time blessed and sanctified Gen. 2. 3. Thus we see that neither by any words of God nor by his deeds can here bee proved the seventh dayes institution for the Sabbath Secondly let us see what may bee gathered from Moses for institution of the Sabbath here in this time True it is that hee nameth the seventh day three or or foure times in this Chapter which he saith was the Sabbath but not as an institution neither could Moses institute the Sabbath for what God here did not he could not doe but he mentioneth here the Sabbath 1 As a reason why hee approved the peoples act in gathering on the sixth day two Omers because the next day the morrow after was the rest of the holy Sabbath unto the Lord Exod. 16. 23. Here is no institution nor reason alleadged for it as in Gen. 2. 3. but it is brought as a reason for a thing of another nature to approve of the collection of a double rate of Manna on the sixth day 2 He nameth it againe in verse 25. but occasioned by the Manna which was that they should eat the reserved Manna for that none was to be found that day in the fields because it was the Sabbath day on which they were to rest So here is a reason why they should not goe and seek Manna but to eat what was gathered before but no institution of the day but an appointment of the meanes used for to rest on the day formerly instituted 3 Hee mentioneth it againe in verse 26. to the same purpose to keep them within on the seventh day Sabbath because six dayes the Lord would give it them to gather but on the seventh day Sabbath there should none be found which words make no institution but are an information for the preventing of the breach of the Sabbath 4 He nameth it in verse 29. upon the Lords reproving them for the breach of the Sabbath by some going forth to seek Manna contrary to so much fore-warning given by Moses whereupon Moses dealeth a little more roundly with them as a man having authority saying See for the Lord hath given you the Sabbath therefore he giveth you on the sixth day the bread of two dayes abide yee every man in his place let no man goe out of his place on the Sabbath day In these words Moses first commands every man to abide within and that none should goe out to seek it on the seventh day These be the only words of any Command about the Sabbath in this chapter which doe not institute the day but serve only to prevent the peoples sinning any more in going out to seek it as they had done Secondly Moses giveth two reasons for his so strict a charge laid upon them which he would have them to see and consider of for the better restraining of themselves from the breach of the Sabbath The first is from Gods grace and favour that he had given them the Sabbath And the other is that he allowed them on the sixth day the bread of two dayes Where out of these words let us observe two things The first is that the mentioning of the Sabbath commeth only in still occasionally concerning the Manna and not of purpose to institute a Sabbath but wholly in all the foure places it is spoken of either of gathering the double rate of Manna or of the eating the Manna reserved or of gathering Manna on every of the six dayes or of tarrying within and not to goe out to seek it when it was not to be found and all this to this end that the Sabbath might be kept more carefully of the people as the event plainly sheweth For upon these considerations about the Manna the people harkened to Moses and did rest on the seventh day verse 30. The second thing wherewith I will and may conclude my answer is that which may satisfie
Sabbath Likewise may we do the works of preservation which are called the works of Necessity on this day But this necessitie must have warrant from the affirmative part of some Commandement of the second Table requiring this of us and not what we think or make a matter of necessity as for instance The fifth Commandement bindeth us to obey authoritie Now if we be commanded by supream power to stand watchman on this day we are to do it Neb. 13. 22. So may we stand armed for the Kings safety 2 Kin. 11. 5 6 7. 2 Chro. 23. 4 5 8. and for our Countrey 1 Kin. 20. 29. Yea upon command we may beseidge and assault the Citie of an enemy John 6. 8 16 20. Also an offender may be attached be brought before authority and the Magistrate on this day may send him to the Goale Num. 15. 34. It s thought that Pharaoh sent the Israelites out of Egypt on the Sabbath day see Ainsw on Deut. 5. 14. The sixt Commandement chargeth me with the keeping of mine own life and the life of mine neighbour By a necessity of this Commandement its lawfull 1. To dresse food for us as our Saviour warranted his Disciples in rubbing ears of Corne to eat them Matth. 12. 1 2 3 4 7. And this is not only in necessitie of meer hunger but for necessity of state and dependance of many to be fed Neh. 5. 18. Here is spoken of daily provision Vnoquoque die per singulos dies 2. To seek the Physitian for help and for the Physitian to prepare his Physick Luk. 13. 14 15. Joh. 9. 6 11 14. Mat. 12. 10. and to cure diseases Joh. 5. 3 5 9. Luk. 13. 12 13. 14. 3 4. 6. 10. 3. To fly for safety of life 1 K. 19. 3. 8. 4. To fight for our lives if need require 1 Macha 2. 41. 5. To save the life of another Luk. 6. 9. These works and the like may we do by warrant of the Sixt Commandement on this day The Seventh Commandement requireth Chastity and comely Decency Therefore upon necessity of this Commandement it is needfull to put on rayment for common honesty to hide our nakednesse and decently to clothe our selves as all ever have done on this day so to wash and be clean to comb the head brush thy garments and the like The Eighth Commandement is in the affirmative part that we preserve our own and our neighbours estate It s hence lawfull to fodder and water Cattell Luk. 13. 15. To pull a Beast out of the pit Luk. 14. 5. To take up that which is our own if it be without and abroad to carry it home Joh. 5. 8 9 11. To quench an house on fire and other things of the like nature for in all these cases and such like the Sabbath was made for man so it giveth place and admits of such works warr●nted by the Commandements of the second Table IV. We may do works of Charity and Mercy and that which is good on the Sabbath day Luk. 6. 9. Such were all the Cures which Christ wrought on the Sabbath day which albeit they might have been done upon another day yet some coming to him to be healed other occasionally be held of him with the eye of pity he healed and cured them V. And lastly besides all these works of Piety and tending to Piety of necessity and charity there be deeds of indifferency lawfull as these To walk in the fields as Christ with his Apostles and others did Mat. 12. 1. To make a Feast and ye invite Guests to go unto it Luk. 14. 1. Thus may we see from authority of holy Scripture and warrant from Christ the Lord of the Sabbath Mat. 12. 8. what was lawfull to be done on the Jewish Sabbath day So that they had as much liberty as we have if the Jews of later times had not mistaken it and from former prophanation of the Sabbath both before the Captivity Eze. 20. 12. 16. 22. 8. 26. 23. 38. and after Neh. 13. 13. had not fallen to their Jewish and foolish superstition condemned by Christ SECTION XX. Of the rigorous strictnesse supposed to be put upon the Israelites that day THat here we may not be deceived 1. We are not to regard the writings of the Jewish Rabbies of later times infected with their own superstition upon mistakes of Scripture 2. We must have recourse to the Originall Sabbath which the fourth Commandement propoundeth and maintaineth as we may observe in the reason of the direction Now in that was no restraint unto Adam but to rest from his week dayes work dressing the Garden So now onely servile work in this directory added to the Commandement is forbidden as before I have proved in Sect. 17. 3. The instances of labour in the Old Testament were not breaches of the Sabbath nor so were judged nor can be proved to be so 4. Our Saviour Christ the wisest Expositor of his Fathers Precepts and the exactest observer of his Fathers Will alwayes in all things both by word and deed telleth us that the Law of the Commandements laid no such yoak upon them in any such rigorous strictnesse 5. We must make a difference between the Commandement it self with the words annexed uttered by God immediately upon Mount Sinai to Israel and some other precepts given concerning the Sabbath by him afterwards but mediately by Moses to the people for the one is permanent and admits of works as I have shewed but the other are transient and for some use only for a space occasionally delivered binding to more strictnesse for the time They that go about to lay upon Israel a rigorous strict rest on the Sabbath from every least work which might be done without travell or distraction do it 1. To difference them from us by our more supposed freedome and liberty as if the Israelits had been tyed by vertue of the fourth Commandement it self to a more precise strictnesse then we now are so as they might do almost nothing no not to go out of their doores on the Sabbath-day 2. Hereupon to make the Commandement Ceremoniall in this imagined strictnesse 3. And so to overthrow the Naturality of the fourth Commandement and perpetuity of it as nothing belonging now unto us And for this purpose one of late in his Treatise of the Sabbath and Lords day in Cbap. 2. of the fourth part goeth about to prove this so great strictnesse for he saith I. That none were to go out of their doores on the Sabbath day not only not to make a journey but not to go out to walk although softly And this he collecteth because that they might not go out to gather Mannah on this day Answ 1. This was not a prohibition simply to go out but only not to go out to gather Mannah for they had not sinned in walking out but they did sinne in going to seek Mannah which the Lord did not rain on that day and had forbidden th●m to
go out to seek for it 2. If it were not lawfull to go out on the Sabbath day how was it that some found in the Wildernesse a man gathering sticks and yet they blamelesse They went out else had they not found him Num. 15. 32 33. Yea if it so fell out upon the Sabbath day there were causes of going out of their houses Deut. 23. 10 12 13. 3. Though this gathering of Mannah seem to this man to be done without paines it s not so for it was not at their doores as he saith but on the outside about the host on the face of the Wildernesse Exod. 16. 13 14. so as they must go abroad for it neither was it without paines to gather an Omer for every one of such a small thing as it was like to Coriander seed Vers 31. 4. But grant it had been so yet know that to labour for food was in the nature of a weekly servile work so that here is prohibited the six dayes labour for bodily necessaries which they had then no need to do II. He saith that the Israelites were to prepare their Mannah to bake and seeth what they would on the sixt day that so they might prevent that labour on the Sabbath day Exod. 16. 23. So they might not belike dresse and make ready any food on the rest day Answ 1. The words in Vers 23. do not undeniably imply that that which remained over and above their baking and seething was baken and sodden with the rest but rather the contrary as thus bake what you will bake and seeth what you will to day and that which remaineth over to wit not baken nor sodden lay it up for you to be kept untill the morrow for Moses said nor seeth and bake all and so reserve some for to morrow but bake and seeth what you will of it which implyeth that some was not baked and sod●en 2. Albeit he seemeth necessarily to inferre because Moses said next day eate that to day to wit which was reserved and had no wormes in it nor stanke Verse 24 25. that it was baken or sodden over night But if it had been so the miracle had not been so great for that which the people did reserve without warrant and had wormes and stank was as they gathered it and not either baken or sodden for any thing that can be gathered out of the text Again the only bare mentioning of eating doth not inferre their not baking or seething more then the bare naming of the peoples baking and seething will inferre their not before grinding of it of which not a word there in the text It s most like that which remained over was ground with the rest either in Mills or beaten in Mortars as they used to do Num. 11. 8. and so the Meal thereof was reserved to be baken or sodden the next day which if so they abstained from no other work then servile as we do from carrying our Corn to the Mill to be ground of the Millerd which is his weeks dayes labour 3. But grant all this to be so yet this was but for the time of the Mannab let him prove that it was so in Canaan my instances before do shew the contrary Nor was this preparation but about the Mannab because it required such labour in the Mill and Mortar to make it ready a servile work not fit for the Sabbath being so much for so many Thousands III. He alleadgeth Exod. 35. 3. That they were prohibited to kindle a fire throughout all their habitations on their Sabbath day Exod. 35. 3. Answ 1. Consider that this Commandement was given some space of time after the giving of the Law in which space they making a fire they offended not and therefore this strictnesse was not from the nature of the fourth Commandement it self 2. This inhibition must be understood of kindling a fire for work forbidden to be done on the Sabbath day for else there is no Coherence of this Verse with the former in which Moses doth tell them that God would have no six dayes work done on the Sabbath to wit servile Therefore for this end not to kindle a fire 3. Some hold this Commandement to concern only making of fire for the furtherance of the Work of the Tabernacle For therefore is here the Sabbath mentioned to shew that the Work of the Tabernacle should give place to the S●bbath 4. Learned men both Protestants and Papists hold that to kindle a fire was not simply forbidden for being a negative precept it should not have admitted at any time the making of a fire in any of their habitations Is it like that in Winter they never made fire on their Sabbath The season was sometime cold in that Countrey as we may reade John 18. 18. And what a Feast was that to which Christ went on the Sabbath day Luk. 14. 1. may it be supposed there was no fire Lastly note that had this been a durable precept these words had been added to it a Statute for ever throughout your generations as we may see of forbidding work in Levit. 23. 31 and it was usuall in a durable Law to adde the word Exod 12. 14. 17. 24. for ever for which many other texts may be produced which is wanting here as but temporary IV. He bringeth forth the punishment of him that gathered sticks on the Sabbath day Num. 15. 32 36. Answ 1. That here one was found gathering of sticks upon the Sabbath day and brought before authority for it and his sentence was to dye and he was stoned to death cannot be denied But that it hence is to be collected that therefore it was an exact strictnesse imposed upon Israel by the fourth Commandement not so much as to g●ther sticks upon the Sabbath day rest to be proved For 1. The fourth Commandement it self is affirmative and not negative and therefore necessarily inferreth not the forbidding of such an act for ever to the Israelites 2. The words in the directory Thou shalt do no work are with a restriction as I have proved 3. It is manifest that the most zealous for the Sabbath have had meate dressed then flesh-meate and whither that Nehe. 5. 58. could be without fire and fire without wood stickes or bones or some other fewell let any judge 4. There was no prohibition for such a work before set down expressely and therefore they knew not what to do till they asked Councell of the Lord concerning him 5. This mans sin was great before God it appeareth by the greatest punishment inflicted upon him as was stoneing to death in Israel but how came it to be so not simply in breach of the fourth Commandement but it was as learned men hold a presumptuous sin a great sin for such a one despiseth the Word and reproacheth God Num. 15. 30 31. Now that he sinned presumptuously it is so to be judged 1. By the Connexion of the Story for Moses having set down a Law
all confesse But this precept is not abrogated by Christ but rather established Matth. 5. 17 18. who hath ordained us another rest day in stead of the former seventh day to uphold the Commandement SECTION XXIV The fourth Commandement is a perpetuall Precept THis Commandement to be one of Gods precepts is undenyable but some hold it not durable To leave the ambiguity of the tearm Morall nor yet wholly to tye my self to the word Naturall I will hold my self to the word Durable or Perpetuall That this precept is a perpetuall precept I thus prove I. The Lawes only for a time in Israel were either the Ceremoniall till Christ or the Politicall till the dissolution of the Common-weal of Israel But this precept and Law is neither of these And therefore a perpetuall Law II. Ten is the perpetuall number of Gods Commandements so delivered by God Deut. 4. 13. and 10. 4. So preserved by Moses so reckoned in all the Church of God to this day and by our Church as before I shewed But this is one of the Ten Therefore a perpetuall precept to uphold the number else should there not be Ten except with the Papists we could finde some other precept to cleave it in two to make up the number And the Ten Commandements being Gods Covenant Deut. 4. 13. we may not adde thereto nor take from it For mans Covenant being once confirmed no man disannulleth or addeth thereto Gal. 3. 15. may any then take from Gods Covenant if not then as this Covenant is perpetuall consisting of the number of Ten Commandements no fewer in the first Tables Deut. 4. 13. nor in the second Tables Exod. 34. 1. 28. nor more added Deut. 5. 22. Therefore this fourth Commandement one of them is perpetuall as is the Covenant it self III. That which God did make of equall dignity to all the other perpetuall precepts is perpetuall But God did every way make this Commandement equall in dignity with the rest for as the other were so was this 1. Commanded immediately at the same time with the same Majesty with the same terrour Exod. 20. 18 19. 2. With the same preface uttered under this title The Lord their God and with the same motive of their deliverance from Egypt Exod. 20. 1 2. 3 Written with the same finger of God at the same time in the same Tables of Stone twice over Exod. 31. 18. and 32. 16. and 34. 1. Deut. 10. 1. and 5. 22. 4. It s matter of one and the same Covenant of God Deut. 4. 13. and 9. 15. 5. It was ordained by Angells in the hand of a Mediator Gal. 3. 19. 6. It was put into the same Ark and preserved ever there with the rest Deut. 10. 5. 1 Kin. 8. 9. IV. That which Jesus Christ as God man or man God as Mediator is Lord of is perpetuall for what authoritie he so hath from his Father he never layeth it down unto the end of all things 1 Cor. 15. 24 28. But thus is Christ Lord of the Sabbath Matth. 12. 8. Therefore is it durable to the worlds end V. Its Gods Commandement made upon his own institution from the worlds beginning as I before have proved which institution of blessing and sanctifying the Sabbath day is upon Gods own work in six dayes and his resting on the seventh day giving to us the six and reserving unto himself the seventh unchangeably as appeareth by our taking possession of the six dayes for thousands of yeers Therefore the Commandement made upon the institution and the institution settled upon unchangeable grounds the Commandement must needs be perpetuall VI. That Commandement is perpetuall the breach whereof maketh us guilty of all the other perpetuall precepts and of the whole Law for this it could not do if it and they were not in an untyable link together But the breaking of this fourth Commandement in not keeping the Sabbath makes men guilty of the breach of the whole Law and of all the rest of the Commandements 1. Before the Law given at Mount Sinai Exod. 16. 27 28. where God doth charge them with the breach of his Commandements and Laws becaue they had broken the Sabbath 2. After the Law given for all the breach of the Lords Satutes and despising of his judgements are concluded with this They polluted my Sabbaths This doth the Prophet Ezechiel very often Ezech. 20. 12 13 21 24. and 22. 8. 26. As if the carefull observing of the Sabbath might have prevented all And no marvell for the hallowing of the Sabbath was a signe that they knew the Lord to be their Sanctifier Exod. 20. 12. 10. that they delighted in the Lord and honoured him Isai 58. 13 14. and that they took hold of the Covenant Isai 56. 6. 3. Vnder the Gospel Jam. 2. 10. where the Apostle maketh him that offendeth in one point guilty of all the whole Law Now if we not only break but take away this fourth Commandement we are guilty of the whole Law unlesse we can shew that God hath blotted out and repealed this Commandement out of his Law since he put it in if he have shew where if not then the Commandement remaineth and so in breaking it we offend against the whole Law VII This Commandement is perpetuall for that the observation of the things therein commanded are by Gods appointment in their use the publike practise and profession of the most necessary duties of the three former precepts and the publike upholding of the same For the and holy rest sanctification of the day being rightly imployed is in the publike profession of the true God the God of Israel as the first Commandement teacheth In our worshipping of this God as the second Commandement teacheth In the glorifying of his holy Name in the use of all his ordinances in Psalms of praises in meditation of all his works to take occasion of thanksgiving as the third Commandement doth teach So that in truth the keeping of this fourth Commandement is the publike upholding weekly of those Commandements the practice and profession of the principall duties thereof which be perpetuall as the Commandements themselves be If any say the Churches observation of this day from her own ordinance and other dayes by her appointment may supply the want of this Commandement though it be taken away But here being an immediate Commandement of God for this purpose once given with so great authority what reason is there to let this go and to rest upon an ordinance of lesse force to binde VIII That which the light of nature can finde out of it self for substance and easily will assent unto for the circumstance when it s holpen by due and right means that precept is naturall and then say I perpetuall I read not of any which deny this see Thomas Aquinas 1oe 2oe q. 110. Artic. 1. in the Conclusion whose words are summed in Master Dow his Discourse pag. 8. who doth approve of the proposition But this precept may be found out
Charles would have it observed Chap. 21. What Councells and Synods have decreed touching the observation of this day Chap. 22. What Popes the Canon Law Archibishops Bishops and other learned men have said concerning the hallowing of this day Chap. 23. God would have our Lords day religiously observed and not to be prophaned Chap. 24. Of exemplary judgements immediate from God against the prophaners of the Lords day Chap. 25. Of exemplary judgements mediate from God against the prophaners of the Lords day Chap. 26. Of examples of casuall judgements against the prophaners of the Lords day Chap. 27. Of objections which may be or are made against the producing of judgements in this case with answers thereto Chap. 28. Of the serious ponderation of these things Chap. 29. Concerning sports unlawfull at all times much more on the Lords day and why sports lawfull at other times are on this day to be forborne with some objections made and answers to the same It is the saying of S. Augustine Bonum est homini ut eum veritas vineat volentem Epist 174. To this agreeth a learned mans sentence Satius foret à veritate vinci nos quàm contra veritatem vincere posse alium Bucerus Author igitur hujus Tractatus quodcunque in co scripsit ut veritatis sincerè studiosus pro veritate non ut contentiosus quicquam contra veritatem scripsit A TREATISE OF THE CHRISTIAN SABBATH CHAP. I. The Preface shewing wherein wee generally consent and agree in one IT will not be amisse ere I enter upon the Treatise which for the honour of Jesus God blessed for ever I here undertake briefly to lay before the judicious a few things for feare of mistake while wee maintaine the observation of a set solemn day weekly for the worship of Christ and a Christian-like strickt keeping of it holy 1 Wee hereby reject the loose opinions of the Familists Anabaptists and wicked Libertines who would be free from any time of set solemn dayes for Gods publick service and worship contrary to the command of God under the Law and the constant custome of the Church under the Gospel among all Orthodox Christians in all places throughout the whole Christian world in all ages for these 1600 yeers so that saith Chemnitius it is barbarica petulantia In exam Trident Concil most rude impudencie barbarous folly as one translateth it not to observe that day with all due solemnity which hath so long time beene kept by the Church of God This witnesseth Ignatius Iohn the Apostles Disciple Iustine Martyr S. Augustine Tertullian Athanasius Maximus Tauronensis Dionysius Bishop of Corinth in an Epistle of his to Soter Bishop of Rome Against these Familists Anabaptists and Libertines hath written Vrsin in his Chatechisme Zanchie in his Oper. sex dierum and Master Rogers in his Display of the Family of Love 2 Wee renounce all Traskits and Brabornian errours in their points of Judaisme Against the Author of the first sort learned Bishop Andrews hath fully shewed himselfe by his speech in the Starre Chamber Against the later the late learned Bishop of Ely Doctor White hath written at large purposely to confute Brabornes Judaizing in standing for the Jewish Sabbath Against which tenent Musculus Vrsin and Bellarmine hath also written yea Hereticks as Irenaeus lib. 1. cap. 26. Ephan de Haeres cap. 30. the Ebionits and Cerinthians holding this have been condemned as the Fathers witnesse The seventh day Sabbath from the Creation now called Saturday is changed and not under the Gospel to be observed of us as an holy day to the Lord. 3 Albeit we doe hold the fourth Commandement to be perpetuall yet we conceive it to be so without any of those See the former Treatise accessorie percepts delivered by Moses whereby though it was in it selfe originally not ceremoniall yet was it by the keeping of those precepts ceremoniously observed 4 As that Law required rest and the holy use of that rest to be imployed on that Sabbath day for the keeping of it holy so doth it now by analogie and proportion for the holy observation of our weekly Sabbath Rest wee doe hold necessary for the day yet not like the foolish superstitious rest of the later Jewes grounded on vaine Traditions confuted by Christ Nor doe we require it otherwise than a necessary meanes to further us to holy duties not as a worship of God in it selfe nor doe wee deny works to be done works of pietie and for pietie works of charity and those that be works of necessitie for all were allowed under the Law as in the other Treatise is proved Moreover wee account the day holy yet not for any inherent holinesse therein but for that it is set apart for holy uses And the difference betweene this and other solemn holy dayes dedicated to the honour of Christ we take to be that this is grounded on authoritie divine and unchangeable and so not the other yet to be observed with rest to religious duties as is ordeyned by the authority of the Church which is not at any time to be despised These things premised I suppose wee that desire for the honour of Jesus Christ that his day be solemnly kept none of ripe judgement will condemne us of Judaisme if they well understand either us or themselves hereafter A charitable interpretation would amend all which were to bee wished to quench the heat of contention by either ignorantly or wilfully misconceiving of us For we hold nothing but what hath beene held by Orthodox Divines the best and most in all ages as in the ensuing chapters of this Treatise framed to the capacitie of the common sort will clearly be made manifest CHAP. II. Of the title of Lords day and of the name Sunday THis terme of Lords day though none can deny it to belong to the day yet some few and but very few to shew perhaps more wit as they think to be able to say something to any thing than worth of matter do make it as it were doubtfull to understand what day should be meant by the Lords day in Revel 1. 10. But this place of Iohn hath generally beene expounded and taken for the day which wee now call Sunday the first day of the weeke by Aretas Andreas Caesariensis by Beda by out later Divines and by the suffrage of the De rat tempo cap. 6. Church the best Expositor of the word which day hath constantly since the time of the Apostle S. John been honoured with this name above all others under this it hath passed along in the writings of all the ancient Fathers in Councels in Histories Ecclesiasticall in Emperiall Constitutions and Edicts of Emperours and Kings Beda on S. Luke saith It is a Christian custome to call it the Lords day which custome hath continued hitherto in all reformed Churches And this name our King and State giveth it in Statute Lawes and Acts of Parliament and our Church in her Ecclesiasticall
saith it is the day in which wee should rejoyce and bee glad above all other dayes because of his resurrection by which saith S. Augustine Dies Dominicus Christianis declaratus est ex illo habere caepit festivitatem suam Argument 2. WHatsoever in holy writ is said to be the Lords denominatively The altering of the name of the day argueth the Sabbath was altered D. Prideaux pag. 29. that is he the Author and Institutor of As for instance the Lords Supper and the Lords Table because he ordeined it 1 Cor. 11. 20. 10. 21. The Sabbath of the Lord because he commanded it the Tem●le of the Lord because he appointed it the people of the Lord because he chose them the Lords messengers because he sends them Apostles of Christ because he put them into that office No instance can bee given to shew the contrary But this day is denominatively called the Lords Rev. 1. 10. and so in the first of Cor. 16. 2. as Beza noteth on the same place affirming as I have before delivered it that to explaine the first day he had read in uno vetusto codice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which title is very frequent in the Fathers calling it usually Diem Dominicum the Lords day not by Creation for so every day is his from the beginning nor is it so called by Destination as is the last day 1 Thes 5. 2. as then and yet now a day to come hereafter when our Lords day was then so called by an excellency as also famously at that time knowne in the Church for the Lords day as the day of their solemne assemblies Therefore it is so called by divine institution for divine worship and as it hath Jesus Christ for the Authour and Institutor of it Argument 3. IF God by resting from his work of Creation and his blessing of that seventh day made it an holy day for his solemne set worship and service Then Jesus Christ his resting from the work of redemption and his blessing of this day made it an holy day for his solemne set worship and service For there is the like excellency in the resting of God the Son and the blessing of his day as there was in the resting of God the Father and his blessing of that seventh day Christ his work of the worlds redemption and the renovation thereof the making of all things new a new heaven and a new 2 Cor. 5. 13. earth as was foretold Esa 65. 17. is equall with the Fathers work of Creation and in the rest of the one and of the other can there be no inequallity nor disproportion The Sonnes blessing likewise of this day is of no lesse excellency than the Fathers blessing of that day which blessing of his is not in the particulars expressed but the Sonnes blessing of this day is and that at large in many particulars First by his glorious resurrection by which the Lords day So S. Aug. de Civit. Dei lib. 22. cap. 30. Lt Scr. 15. de verb. Apost became sacred and consecrated to us Secondly by his severall apparitions for confirmation thereof Thirdly by his heavenly instructions Luk. 24. 25. Fourthly by the illumination of their mindes opening their understandings Luk. 24. 45. Fifthly by the inspiration of the holy Ghost Iohn 20. 22. Sixthly by the installation of the Apostles giving them power to binde and loose in heaven and in earth Iohn 20. 28. Seventhly by his mission in great dignity sending them even as his Father had sent him Iohn 20. 21. All which blessings Christ bestowed on them this day before his ascension and afterwards on this day he sent down Act. 2. his holy spirit extraordinarily after a visible manner upon his Apostles made them speak miraculously with new tongues to the amazement of the hearers and on this selfe same day he blessedly converted 3000 soules Act. 2. 41. and so began on this day his Church to be a separated visible Congregation from among both lews and Gentiles Lastly on this day he gave his heavenly Revelation to his beloved Apostle who was in the spirit upon this day to receive the vision Reve. 1. 10. Thus we see how Christ did blesse this day But God the Father by his resting from the work of creation and his blessing of that seventh day made it an holy day for his solemn set worship and service as the Scripture teacheth Gen. 2. 2. and very learned Divines do maintaine for truth Doctor Rivet cyteth 36 by name and their own words In disser de orig Sab. for it to this purpose Therefore Iesus Christ his resting from the work of redemption and his so blessing of this our day hath made it an holy day for his solemn set time of worship and service Argument 4. THat which Christ through the holy Ghost spake by way of Command to be observed that he is the Institutor of this I hope will not be denyed But Iesus Christ by the holy Ghost spake by way of Command that this day should be observed For the things appertayning to the kingdome of God he gave Commandments to his Apostles to be taught and observed Act. 1. 2 3. But the day of Christs resurrection and the worship therein performed as it was in the Apostles dayes and after as may be collected out of the Scripture and out of the writings of Justine Martyr and Tertullian is of those things which do appertaine to the kingdome of God Therefore he commanded it to be observed and so was the Institutor of it Obj. If any object and say that this day was not expressed by Commandment Ans I answer no more are any other of those Commandments which in Act. 1. 2. he is said to give nor any particulars of the things he spake which appertained to the kingdome of God And therefore we cannot seclude this day out of the Commandements given by Christ because not expressed no more than we can deny other things appertaining to the kingdome of God to be commanded because they are not expressely mentioned till it can be proved that the keeping of this day to the honour of Christ in his publicke worship is none of the things which pertaine to the kingdome of God I answer againe that albeit it is not expressed yet must it be comprehended within these Commandements For these Commandements here given Act. 1. 2. are of those which Christ would have his Disciples to teach his people that enter into the Church by Baptisme to observe Matt. 28. 18. 20. Now we finde the Church to observe this day Act. 20. 7. 1. Cor. 16. 2. The Apostle also to be an observer of it with them Act. 20. 7. prescribing duties to them on this day 1. Cor. 16. 1. 2. when they did meet together 1. Cor. 5. 4. and 11. 20. which was on the Lords day as the Syriack hath it as is before noted And the Apostle telleth the Corinthians that the things he wrote unto them were
other dayes to be esteemed saith Bellarmine and Tom. 1. de cult san●t cap. 10. 11. lib. 3. On Luke 14. fol. 11. cap. 6. Stella The Councell at Matiscon held it the day of our new Birth Durand saith Dominica dies primatum obtinet major est inter alios dies Rational lib. 7. de festivit Thus we see it honourably graced with very high titles which no other Festivall reached unto 3. The observation of this day is not only of Protestants but also of Papists held to be de jure divino and give reason for it as is before manifested But no other holy day so held by any learned Protestant in any reformed Church 4. Easter day that so esteemed high day about the observation whereof in former times there was such contention when the consent for the Lords day was universally agreed upon unanimously ever yet for the more honour to it it was ordeined to be celebrated on the Lords day only as we finde it to be observed to this day 5. Though the often returne of this our Lords day weekly maketh vaine people lesse to esteem it than other dayes which fall more seldome yet the truth is in the judgement of the wise thi● day receiveth the more glory and honour For by being our weekly holy day it commeth in stead of the Jewish Sabbath by the equity of the fourth Commandement and it is for the great honour of our Lord Jesus by the upholding of his Lordship still over the Sabbath betweene which and our weekly Sunday there is an analogy and proportion as Doctor Heylin acknowledgeth at large Page 11. which is not so in any other Festivall among Christians 6 It hath had the start before all other holy dayes to be first honoured with Christian publick meetings holy Convocations and Assemblies Act. 20. 7. 1. Cor. 16. 2. and 11. 20. 7 It was the first for the better observation whereof that had Imperiall Edicts to grace it and in those Edicts for restraint of work upon other holy daies yet the cheifest care was for the Honour of this day as doth appeare by this In Serm. de tempore 251. Page 98. 102. Clause Maxime in dominicis diebus on the Lords dayes most specially For saith Doctor Heylin the Emperours and Prelates had the same affections both sorts earnest to advance this day above all others The Emperour Leo saith he also by two severall Edicts made it singular above other Festifalls Lastly our Church in Canon 45 preferreth it above all other holy dayes in this that licensed Preachers are inioyned to Preach either in their own or in some other Church every Sunday which order is not taken for other holy dayes Thus wee see this day to have the preheminence above any other and indeed it hath before others antiquity the authority establishing it is divine the certainty of the day is without alteration and the unity of judgement with so full a Consent of all sorts in all ages as may well perswade us to give it the glory before any of the rest of the Festivalls which to equall with it is void both of reason and religion as all that which hath been said sufficiently proveth CHAP. XIV This day is to be kept holy and the whole day too AN holy day is to be kept holy none will deny it Our Lords day is an holy day and an high holy day too before all other as in the former chapter is proved and therfore to be kept holy which very tearm of holy challengeth a separation of the day unto holy uses as Gods holy daies all of them in the old Testament were observed and imployed in holy duties as the Scriptures tell us the end of the weekly Sabbath was to keep it holy as the very Commandment sheweth from the mouth of God himselfe Exo. 20. 8. Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy and Moses the Interpreter of the Law in Deut. 5. 12. saith the same And our Lords day being our Christian Sabbath in stead thereof should be kept holy We keep holy the Lords day saith Dionysius who lived in Anno. 175. Our King and whole In an Epist to Soter Bishop of Rome State in a Statute hath delivered this as is before noted That it is a principall part of true service unto God to keep holy the Lords day Our Church in the Homily teacheth us That Gods obedient people should use the Sunday holily and carefully keep the day in holy rest and quietnesse both men women children servants and strangers as they have ever done from the Apostles dayes That the Primitive Churches Fathers and Christian Princes did in their severall times alwayes observe and cause to be observed the Lords day with all holy solemnity and godly reverence read the many learned Authours avouching the same quoted for this by Master Sprint in his book of the Christian Sabbath pag. 18. To this effect speaketh Bishop White cited before in chapter 9. affirming that the Primitive Fathers and their Successours did universally maintaine the religious observation of the day That it is to bee kept holy there bee none of sound judgement will deny it But the question is how much of the day is to be set apart unto God The wisdome of God which in mans best reason is most worthy to be our direction appointed a day for Exod. ●0 the celebration of the Sabbath we ought to rest the whole day say the Fathers in a Councell at Nice S. Chrysostome in 3. Hom. on John exhorts to destinate the day wholly to divine imployments The Divines in Ireland have held the Lords day to be wholly dedicated to the service of God And was there ever any thing counted holy as set apart for holy uses which was not wholly sacred The Temple was holy was it so in part or in the whole Set-Festivalls were holy the whole day King Edgar and Canutus enacted by Fox Acts and Mon. fol. 644. Edit 1610. fol. 715. ●echel de Dec●et Ecclesiae Gal. their Lawes that the Sunday should bee kept holy from Saturday at noon till Munday morning Charles the great ordained to have it kept from evening to evening so zealous were those Princes in those times for the observation of this day to the honour of Jesus they held not the whole day too much S. Augustine in his Sermon de tempore 251. and one Leo the Bishop of Rome who was made Bishop there in Anno 440. almost full 1200 yeares since See Doctor Heylin Hist 119. reckon the Saturday Eye a part of the Lords day And Doctor Heylin citeth also a Synod held at Friuli in An. 791. In 2 part ca. 5. that all Christians should with all reverence and devotion honour the Lords day beginning on the Evening of the day before at the first ringing of the bell Hee telleth us also how S. Jerome relateth that the Monkes in Egypt designed the Lords day wholly unto prayers and reading of holy
Scriptures Master Brerwood confesseth That it is meet that Christians dedicate the day wholly to the honour of God that we should not bee lesse devout in celebrating the Lords day than the Jewes in celebrating their Sabbath Because saith hee the obligation of our thankfulnesse is more than theirs Therefore hee wisheth that it were most religiously performed with attendance to holy devotion This day faith Calvin is wholly to bee dedicated to him Calv. on Deut. cap. 5. vers 12. 13. 14. and it is necessarie that so we may intend wholly to the minding of Gods works and bestow the day in praysing and magnifying Gods name wee have no cause saith hee to grudge the giving of one day to him seeing hee leaveth us six for one Let any man give a reason if they give any part of the day to Christ why they should not think him worthy of all the day Is it too much for him and whole six little enough for our selves If wee will take a part from him for the whole none will except they be worse than Jewes and Pagans in observing their dayes which part is it not the morning for when shall we begin then to serve him Not the ending of the day for why are we weary of well doing Gal. 6. Gal. 3. 3. shall wee begin in the spirit and end in the flesh A liberall friend that hath seven pounds in his hands and giveth me six of them freely owing me nothing to imploy the seventh for him If I should grudge to bestow it wholly and take without leave any part of it to my selfe were I not most ungratefull Againe every holy thing is holy unto the Lord and is it not sacriledge to robbe God either of the whole or of part Lastly let us consider this that hee which willingly gives not God all would give him none at all if it were not for by-respects more than conscience of duty For conscience will binde to give the whole where all is due as well as a part of the due Therefore God commanding a day and an whole day as he giveth us six whole dayes so let us afford him his owne day and that wholly CHAP. XV. How this day is to be kept holy morally as the an●ient Sabbath was kept FOr the better satisfaction of moderate minds and to cleare this point let us consider how the ancient Sabbath was kept morally how our Lords day was kept in the time of the holy Apostles how to be kept by the stablished authoritie of our Church and how Emperours Kings Councels Synods Fathers and others would have it kept yea God himselfe from profane pollutions Concerning the first the ancient Sabbath was kept in rest and in the employing of that rest unto religious duties which what they were see at large in the other Treatise Section 25. For the Ceremoniall and Leviticall Services on that seventh day they are abrogated so all the Jewish superstitition brought in by mens vaine Traditions are condemned likewise those accessorie precepts for the more strict rest on that day belonging only to the Israelites for a time are taken away and doe nothing concerne us and are not to be imitated of us But the ancient people of God are to be followed of us as farre as the fourth Commandement bindeth us in the naturalitie thereof in the spiritualitie and in its morallitie as the holy people of God then kept it in such common duties as wee are as well as they were bound to performe for Gods service and for the benefiting of their owne soules in the use and exercises of his heavenly ordinances on his holy day This is farre from any Judaizing at all so much laid in the dish and reproachfully cast upon many in these times but without cause at all if the matter be well weighed and they rightly understood as it were to bee wished Their Service was both in the forenoone and in the afternoone every day Num. 28. 3. Exod. 29. 38. then much more on the Sabbath day For in the morning of their Sabbath they had the Service in the Tabernacle and Temple and their Sacrifices doubled Num. 28. 9. and also burning of incense in the morning Exod. 30. 7. So in the afternoone both Sacrifices and burning of incense and thus every day continually Exod. 29. 38. 30. 7. 8. To this David alluded in Psal 141. 2. This afternoone Service was about three aclock and called the ninth houre of Prayer Acts 3. 1. what time the godly used to pray Dan. 9. 21. and which Eliah observed in the offering of Sacrifice 1 King 18. 29. and we read while the incense was offered the people were devout in their prayers Luk. 1. 10. Preaching was also in the Temple for there Christ preached Matth. 26. 55. Mark 12. 25. Luk. 19. 47. John 7. 28. of which as of any strange thing the chiefe Priests and the Elders did not aske him but of his authoritie so to doe Matth. 21. 23. Luk. 20. 1. 2. And into the Temple earely in the morning came hee to teach John 8. 2. and the people to heare Luk. 21. 38. whither the Jewes alwayes resorted John 18. 20. Here also the Apostles preached Acts 3. 1. 12. 5. 21. 23. 42. And in this place no doubt was it in which the Scribes and Pharises sate to teach the people Matth. 23. 2. It is most certaine that on the Sabbath day in the Synagogues there was constant reading and preaching Acts 15. 21. 13. 27. In the morning Christ went in to preach Mark 6. 2. in other places it is not so evident what time it was whether in the forenoone or afternoone when hee came into their Synagogues Mark 1. 21. Luk. 4. 16. 13. 10. nor what time of the day the Apostles went into the Synagogues Acts 13. 14. 14. 1. 17. 2. 10. 18. 4. 19. nor is it certain whether they did depart home a while and came againe It may be they held out from the beginning to the ending and to the breaking up of the Congregation as it seemeth probable in Acts 13. 43. so Nehe. 8. but it is certaine that upon their dayes of fasting they did hold out and continued together from the beginning to the end Nehem. 9. 3. Whatsoever they did for the time they holily begun their Divine exercises with a blessing Nehe. 8. 6. and ended with a blessing Num. 6. 23. 26. Lev. 9. 22. 2● CHAP. XVI How our Lords day was kept in the Apostles dayes and the Primitive times THe Lords day being know● to bee an holy day and to be kept holy the Church rested on this Histo pag. 95. part 2. day for performance of religious and Christian duties as Doctor Heylin acknowledgeth There was an assembly of Christians they came together saith the Text Acts 20. 7. who came together the whole Church 1 Cor. 14. 23. whither into some one place 1 Cor. 11. 20. 14. 23. for then they had no Temples but met
lex de ferr●●s who called the Lords day the religious day and held it to be so honourable and venerable that they forbad all arrests Law-sutes and commanded all Advocates and C●yers to be silent also Apparitours of every Judge were inhibited nor had allowed them any pretext private or publick for doing their office on this day The Esterne Emperour Emanuel Comnenus decreed that Anno 1174. all accesse to the Tribunal should be shut up and that no Judge should sit on any cause this day Charles the Great in Anno 789. published his royall Edict saying we doe ordaine according as it is commanded in the Law of God that no man doe servile work on the Lords day in works of Husbandrie in dressing of their Vines Plowing making Hay fencing Grounds grubbing and felling Trees working in Mynes Building planting Gardens Pleading Hunting Weaving dressing Cloth making Garments needle work carding Wooll beating Hemp washing Clothes shearing Sheep but that they come to the Church to Divine Service and magnifie the Lord their God for those good things which on that day he hath done for them This Great Charles forbad also Markers and Law dayes on this day which was confirmed by five Councels which he caused to be gathered Thus we see the care of Emperours CHAP. XIX How it was to be kept by the Edicts of Christian Kings in this our Kingdome THe Kings in this Island of Great Brittaine have from time to time shewed a religious care concerning the observation of our Sunday In King Ina's raigne Anno 688 900 yeers since a Master might not force his bond servant to work if he did the servant was freed and the Master was punished and was to pay thirty shillings but if the servant wrought without his Masters commandement hee should bee whipt or redeeme his whipping with a price and if a Freeman to loose his freedome or pay three pounds King Alured and Edward his sonne in a league between Cited by Bishop White pag. 222. him and Gunthran King of the Danes in this land did prohibite all Markets and other kinds of works whatsoever on the Sunday The thing bought was forfeited and to pay money too and the servant working being a Freeman was to bee made a slave or to redeeme himselfe if a slave then to be beaten and his Master to answer for causing him to work None guiltie was to die on this day for his offence but to be imprisoned till the day was past King Athelstan forbad buying and selling on this day under a penaltie King Edgar commanded every Sunday to be celebrated of every one from Saturday at three aclock in the afternoone till Munday morning at break of the day King Canutus ordained the observation of the Lords day as King Edgar had done from three a clock in the afternoon on Saturday till Munday Hee also inhibited Markets Courts and publick meetings for civill businesse hunting and that every one should rest from worldly works King Edward the Confessor would have none molested either going to the Church to serve God or comming from it King Edward the Third in his time the shewing of Woolls should not be made at the Staple on Sundayes and on the solemne Feasts King Henry the Sixth in his dayes Fayres and Markets were forbidden as an abominable injury and offence to Almightie God Yea it was held then by John de Burge Chancelour of the Universitie of Cambridge that the Sunday might be called the Sabbath as before I noted for that we were then to rest from all servile work arts mechanick husbandry law-dayes markets and to bee busied at our prayers publick service of the Church in Hymnes and spirituall Songs and hearing of Sermons King Edward the Fourth in his raigne were forbidden as unlawfull games Dice quoits tennis bowling as also the felling of shooes bootes nor was it lawfull for Shoomakers to put upon the feet or pull on the legges any shooes or boots on Sundayes In whose time it was judged That sale made on a Sunday of any thing was not good nor altered the propertie of it King Edward the Sixth it was in his dayes manifested by Act of Parliament that the Sundayes were holy dayes and other dayes there expressed wherein Christians should cease from all kinde of labour and apply themselves only and wholly unto holy works properly belonging to true religion which holy works were to be called Gods Service whereunto such times and dayes were sanctified and hallowed that is to say separated marke it well from all profane uses In Queen Elizabeth her reigne this Statute of King Edward the Sixth was in use and practice and the observation of the holy day was enjoyned by the twentieth of her Majesties Injunctions in the same words with our now thirteenth Canon which was taken out of that Injunction Thus farre for this Kingdome before the happy uniting of the two Kingdomes in one CHAP. XX. How our late Soveraigne King James and now our King Charles would have it observed KIng James the learnedst King that ever this Nation Anno 1603. May 7. had at his entrance of his reigne sent out his royall pleasure by Proclamation in which we may observe First that hee calleth the day againe and againe the Sabbath day Secondly the drift of the Proclamation was both for the better observing of the day and for the avoiding of all impious profanation of it Thirdly that he forbad Beare-baitings Bull-baitings Enterludes Common Plaies and other like disordered or unlawfull exercises or pastimes After this in the Conference at Hampton Court when that great Scholer Doctor Rainold desired a straighter course for the Reformation of the abuse of the Sabbath there was found a generall unanimous consent thereto of the King of the Prelates and of that honourable Assembly met then in that place Furthermore when the Parliament was held and a Convocation of the reverend Clergie the same yeere the pious Canon before mentioned agreeing almost verbatim with the Queenes Injunction was then framed for the keeping holy the Lords day with other holy dayes Also in the selfe same yeere at the Commencement in Cambridge as before hath been noted a Doctor held this Thesis Dies Dominicus nititur verbo Dei and so determined by the Vice-Chancelour Lastly as before in the raigne of Queene Elizabeth so in King James his time large Treatises of Celebrating the Lords day were published under Authority licensing the same among which was the Practice of Piety by a Bishop and Bishop Downhams exposition upon the Command●ments to mention no other of lower rank though some of them learned and reverend Divines King Charles our now gracious Soveraigne hath with the flower of this whole Land by Act of Parliament declared himselfe with them concerning the holy observation of this day First In giving it the title of the Lords day Secondly In affirming that in the keeping of the day holy it is a principall part of the true Service of God Then undoubtedly
Archbishop Daroberniae in a Synod Anno 747 with the rest decreed that the Lords day should bee celebrated with the reverence most meet and to be dedicated only to the service of God Our last Archbishop Doctor Abbot so honoured the Lords day as he by his Chaplains licensed divers Treatises for observation of the Lords day and when a Minister presented him with a book to bee licensed which was made for liberty on that day he took it of him and before his face burnt it in the fire For Bishops S. Ambrose telleth us it is well knowne saith he how carefully the Bishops doe restraine all toying light and filthy Dances if at other times then on the Lords day Bishop Babington on Exod. 16. saith that Drinkings Dances Wakes Wantonnesse Beare-baiting and Bull-baiting were wicked prophanation of the Lords day Bishop Downham on the Commandements saith They that keep the day for idle rest make it Sabbatum Boum or Asinorum They that defile it with drunkennesse and the like make it Sabbatum Diaboli and they that prophane it with sports make it Sabbatum aurei vituli Bishop Hooper that Godly Martyr On the ten Commandements saith The Lord sanctified the Sabbath day not that wee should give our selves to illnesse or to such Ethnicall pastimes as is now used amongst Ethnicall people c. Bishop Bayly in his Practice of Piety saith We are this day to abstaine from the works of our callings carrying burdens Faires and Markets studying any Book but Scripture and Divinity all recreations and sports grosse feeding liberall drinking and talking about worldly things Bishop White hath uttered an Against Brab holy speech who saith that all kinde of recreations which are of evill quality in respect of their object or are attended with evill and vicious circumstances are unlawfull and if used on the Lords day are sacrilegious for they rob God of his honour to whose worship and service the holy day is devoted and they defile the soules of men for the clensing and edifying whereof the holy day is appointed 3. Learned Divines NIcho de Clemangiis de novis celebritatibus non instituendis tells us that especially the Lords day and solemne Festivalls should be wholy and onely consecrated to more speciall worship and spent in duties of Devotion in lauding and blessing him for his more speciall favours Doctor Pocklington In his Serm pag. 13. hath a right speech howsoever it be that a little after he varieth saying If the first day of the week be the Lords day as he in another place yeelds it we must look to do the Lords work on it and not trench upon him by doing our own worke thereon yea he cyteth Saint Augustine for this Page 5. that men should leave all worldly businesses on Saints dayes Et maximè Diebus Dominicis especially on the Lords dayes that they betake themselves wholly to the Lords service Reverend Hooker saith that the voluntary scandalous contempt In Eccl. Pol. ca. 5. pag. 385. of the rest from labour wherewith God is publickly served wee cannot too severely correct and bridle Master Dow teacheth a cessation from ordinary labours and holds them In his d●scourse of the Sab. pag. 28. unlawfull on this day as they hinder a man from applying himselfe to divine duties and therein are contrary to the divine precept and the morality thereof He requireth first A morning preparation in private Secondly Warneth men that they doe not by improvidence or negligence or forgetfulnesse draw upon themselves a necessity to omit or hinder the dutyes to which this day is consecrated Thirdly that the hindrances and our defects bee supplied by private Devotions and Meditations Fourthly that it is good and commendable to spend the rest of the day in holy meditations private prayer reading and calling to minde what we have read or heard Vincentius Bellovecensis and Bellarmine have condemned Specul morale lib. 3. Concio 6. de Dominic 3. advent Stage-playes Enterludes Masques mixt-Dancing which they call lascivious to be especially on the Lords day most execrable Alex. Fabricius in his destructorium vitiorum pars 4 saith That the Sabbath by dancing is prophaned So did the godly Albigenses and Waldenses who also in a short In the History of the Walden part 3. b. 2. Catechisme upon the Commandments would have the Christians keep the Sabbath in ceasing from worldly labours from sinne and idlenesse and to doe things as might be for the good and benefit of their soules It were tedious to recite the learned in the later times teaching the holy observation of this our Lords day I will Sect. 16. cap. 24. end only with the harmonie of Confessions where it is said that the Lords day ever since the Apostles time was consecrated to religious exercises and unto holy rest CHAP. XXIII God would have our Lords day religiously observed and not to be prophaned GOd doth informe us by his word by which wee finde his institution of one day in a week from the creation as in the first Treatife have beene proved to bee sanctified to holy uses wee finde also the same established by his Law given on Mount Sinai as is manifested in the former Treatise And from the word in the New Testament we finde one day the first day of the week to have been observed and the observation continued now this 1600 yeeres So that one day in a week hath beene given to God as sacred and holy for holy rest in his worship and for holy duties to be performed publickly privately now above five thousand five hundred fourescore yeers some count 6000 a time long enough to settle this truth to observe such a day and as the holy people in the former times before Christ kept their day holily morally so should wee our day too But as God inctrusteth by his word so doth hee also by his works he is said to speak by the work of his providence Geness 24. 50. 51. And when his judgements are in the Esai 26. 10. earth the inhabitants of the world are to learne righteousnesse thereby and even in this for not observing his holy day for as before he punished his people for the prophanation of their Sabbath as the Scripture witnesseth in many places So hath the Lord punished the prophanation of our Christian Sabbath dedicated to his honour and service and hath pleaded by his punishments for the sanctification thereof and to deterre men from the prophaning of it This we must know that there is no evill in a City but the Lord doth it to wit the evill of punishment and the same commeth for sin of what nature or kinde soever the judgements be which are three fold 1 Immediate judgements wherein Gods hand is clearely seene which all will easily acknowledge with feare Such a judgement was the drowning of the old world the burning of Sodome and Gomorrah with fire from heaven So that of Nadab and Abihu with