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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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which many took upon the Lords day was strucken with a dead palsey all over one side and with blindnesse and dumbnesse so as he could neither goe see nor speak and lying thus in miserable paine died within a short time after the stroke of God upon him These few instances may serve for the immediate hand of God upon prophaners of the Lords day I passe by how filthy drunkards have felt the Lords hand against them on this day CHAP. XXV Of exemplary judgements mediate from God against the prophaners of the Lords day CHristians in name should be Christians indeed and one further another unto goodnesse especially on the Lords day which should bee provocative to good duties and to the stirring of us up to shew the vertue of Christ his resurrection in us and our Christian love one to another as at all times so chiefly on this day but where lusts rule and persons are prophane the Lord leaveth them to themselves to become his instruments to punish their prophanation of this day as appeareth by these examples Some on the Lords day would goe to Bowles a forbidden game to the common sort at which play two falling out the one threw a bowle at the other and struck him so on the head as the bloud issued out of which blow hee dyed shortly after Certaine youthes contrary to the order in the declaration would goe out of their owne Parish on the Lords day into another to play at Fives the Mother of one of these earnestly diswaded him but goe he would and returning homewards at night with his companions they fell first to justling after to boxing so as their bloud being moved one of his fellowes stabbed him in the left side and so wounded him as he dyed the next day at night At a Wake on the Lords day among others two sitting and drinking till late at night fell out but at first they were parted a while after commeth one of them in againe and seeing the other sitting by the fire with his back towards him commeth behind him and with an hatchet chineth him downe the back so as his bowels fell out the cruell murtherer flying and being hotly pursued leaped into a river and drowned himselfe A wanton Maide hyred on the Lords day a fellow to go to the next Parish to fetch thence a Ministrell not warranted by the Declaration that shee and others might Dance but that night was shee gotten with child which at the time of its birth she murthered and was put to death for the same confessing the occasion of her ill hap to be her prophanation of the Lords day Upon a Whitsunday in the afternoone two fellowes meeting at the Ball again not allowed by the Declaration the one killed the other Also upon a Lords day in the afternoone one with much contempt against his Minister as appeared by his words would take up Cudgells to play with another a sport not allowed them but at the second or third bout one of his eyes was struck out of his head A fellow drunk at the Church-house where he dwelt on the the Lords day a foule sin both for the time and place was the next day so given over of God as hee became his owne executioner and hanged himselfe One d●●posed to revell-rout without due bounds of prescribed order would in the Church-house keep an Ale on the ●ords-day and other dayes both night and day without controule But see the Lords hand on the Sunday night his youngest sonne was taken for stealing of a purse out of anothers pocket while he lay drunk in the Church-house on the board and that week his eldest son was by one stabd to death A poore man after hee had heard a good Sermon as hee said when he came from the barre unto a Minister would go to a Revell an ill name for Christians meeting together into another Parish where occasionally falling out with one he killed him running out of the Church-yard to doe the bloody fact for which at the next Assisses he was excuted lamenting his ill hap that he could not tarry at home More instances of quarrelling fighting and killing of one another might bee given to terrifie men from such sinfull wayes and from such prophanesse of the Lords day especially consecrated to the laud and honour of Jesus Christ our blessed Lord and Saviour CHAP. XXVI Of examples of casuall judgements against the Prophaners of the Lords day OF such like judgements as happen as it were at unawares unexpectedly I have given instances in holy writ And therefore by the recording of them God would have us not only to take notice of such but also to make good use of them as the Lord shall direct us in wisedome in charity and well-mindednesse so to doe For it must indeed bee acknowledged that in this sort of judgements the particular application to particular persons for this and that act is not easie but requireth prudency of circumspection and carefull observation of all circumstances concurring to make a true use of them in the application to others though not the like difficult in all nor yet so hard for the parties upon whom such casuall judgements doe fall to apply them home to themselves for instruction And therefore have they beene observed and recorded Among very many take these few examples Famous and memorable is the fall of the Scaffold in Paris garden where many were gathered together on the Stowes Chron. Lords day to see the rude sport of Bear-baiting the fall whereof flew eight persons and many others were hurt and sore bruised A great number gathered on this day to see a Play acted Doctor Beard in his Theatre in a chamber the floore fell downe by meanes whereof many were hurt and some kild Stratford upon Avon was twice on fire and both times on the Lords day whereby it was almost consumed chiefly for prophaning the Lords day and for contemning the word of God out of the mouth of his faithfull Ministers These two instances are cited by Bishop Bayly Teverton whose remembrance saith mine Authour made his heart to bleed was twice also almost utterly consumed with fire 400 houses at once in a flame and in the first fire were about fifty persons consumed which was for the horrible prophanation of the Lords day occasioned chiefly by their Munday-market Of the first judgement they were fore-warned by their Preacher telling them that some heavy judgement God would bring upon the Towne as it hapned not long after his death Two brethren on the Lords day in the forenoone came from a Market-towne to an Uncle they had there to dine after dinner they took horse againe but had not gone farre but one of the horses fell downe dead who going back againe to their Uncles house the other horse being put up into the Stable within an houre or two after died in the place One would ride after dinner on the Lords day about a worldly businesse which he needed
judicious Divines both ancient and modern judge the institution of one day in seven to be perpetuall For this he insteed of all citeth Chrysostome on Gen. 2. 3. and Master Hooker in his Eccl. Pol. pag. 379. Who saith Gods immutable Law exacteth this of us as a duty for ever Reason may leade to think that God would not here mention only so many dayes and no more upon the giving of the Commandement if it were not for this end Gods will and Commandement saith our Homily of prayer was to have a standing day in the week for people to come together It s very reasonable to give God one day of seven 1. Because God in his wisedome chose his day within that compasse 2. That this his choice is most fit to be imitated He knew that a day in this space was most necessary for us to observe 3. For that a week is the first and principall space of time and all times of moneths and yeers are but the revolution of a week from the worlds beginning For this see Doctor Rivet in his dissertation De origine Sabbati which being so what reasonable man will deny to give God his day within this space the first the chief and the shortest space of all other times and that which is the fittest For that the space of a week between Sabbath and Sabbath is not too farre a sunder to make us forget our dutie nor yet the return too quick to hinder man in his labour for the necessaries of his life and state saith Master Dow. SECTION XVI Of the seventh day Sabbath AS we see it must be one day in the week so we by the Lord are directed to the seventh day in the week 1. By God his free donation of six dayes to us for to labour in and to do all that we have to do our common and ordinary businesses must be all done and ended in this space which space he presently after the Commandement allotteth unto us He first telleth us what and how many dayes in the week are ours before he tels us which is the day that is his 1. That so we might learn where to begin to finde out the Sabbath 2. By appropriating unto himself the seventh day for Sabbath The seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God This seventh day here spoken of is not that one individuall singular seventh day of the Creation on which God rested but a seventh day after the six dayes given to us For. 2. As the six dayes allowed us are not the very six dayes in which God created the world which were gone and past but only six dayes in likenesse and revolution no more is this the self same seventh day but another in likenesse by revolution So it is as if he had said I allow the six dayes together for your labour in the week be those six dayes what dayes soever begon and reckoned together But the seventh day following those six dayes is mine It is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God 2. That first seventh day and the first six dayes mentioned in the first and second chapters of Genesis are understood by God in the words following as a reason added to this direction of God why he giveth us for ever six dayes and reserveth the seventh day alwayes for himself because he wrought those six dayes and rested that seventh day which words of God are not the reason of the Commandement but of his giving us six dayes and his reserving to himself the seventh day 3. Gods conclusion concerning the fourth Commandement helpeth us in this For in the end he turneth his speech unto the very words of the Commandement saying Wherefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day and hallowed it He saith not that seventh day but the Sabbath day that is the rest of that first Seventh as a Sabbath for ever fall it upon another seventh day whatsoever it be The seventh day therefore is ever the Sabbath day 1. By Gods irrevocable donation of six dayes unto us 2. By our acceptation of so many dayes in the week to our selves from all times unto this day If from Gods words in this direction here we dare without doubt or scruple take our six dayes are we not then tyed to give him the seventh day by the like authority who reserved to himself at the same time when he gave us our six that we should afford him the seventh 3. By Gods proposing his own example as a perpetuall pattern to be followed of us in his six dayes labour and in his seventh dayes rest For saith that ever honoured Bishop Lakes what time God himself took for his work and for his rest the same did he assign to men and made his pattern a perpetuall Law In his Thesis the 8. 4. For that the seventh part of time God did chuse to himself before before fall and so Gods ordinance is everlasting as the world a portion of time eternall as the same reverend Father affirmeth in his 25 Thesis and 32. See also for this very fully Master Hooker in his fifth Book of Eccles Pol. Sect. 70. 5. Because if a man had stood in his full perfection not only our first parents but all his posterity had observed the first seventh day But sin not any Ceremony made that day alterable saith the same Father as it now is altered upon the recreation of all things by Christ But yet is still the same portion of time kept a seventh day in the week This alterablenesse of that seventh day through sin is a reason why God in giving the fourth Commandement delivered as I have said the same in such a generall manner SECTION XVII Of the fix dayes work THese six dayes are called working dayes Ezek 46. 1. in them men are to labour which labour is to be imployed in doing work and it must be all and it must be thy work so labouring to do all that thou hast to do that is which by thy profession Art trade and calling belongeth unto thee to labour in and to do The words are a permission put only by a concession in six dayes may work be done Exod. 31. 15. and not preceptive but as they have respect to the Sabbath day for the better observing of it when we neglect not our businesse on the six dayes nor deferre any thing thereof unto the seventh day For the Lord in the first Table commandeth mans duty to himself and how to expresse his love to him which is the sum of the first Table Matth. 22 37. and not what man should do for his corporall and outward estate for that belongeth to the second Table Therefore in these words is a preparation for the Sabbath and a prevention for hindering our spirituall rest and also our bodily toyle for our selves in and about our ordinary calling when the day of rest is come Yet here we are not so tyed to labour in these dayes but that God must have herein religious duties performed to
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
For that the Seventh day is abrogated but this is not so it s changed but not abrogated as meer Ceremonies be IV. It was a signe say they between God and the Israelites Exod. 31. 13 17. Ezek. 20. 12. God in giving his Law saith no such thing and still we must make a difference between the Law it self and what after were added for instruction as the then state of the people required Again every signe is not a Ceremony for the Rain-bow was a signe Gen. 9. yet no Ceremony Moreover the reason added why it was a signe belongeth to us For in six dayes the Lord made beaven and earth and on the Seventh day he rested Exod. 31. 17. The end why he made it a signe doth a like appertain to us to wit That they might know him to be the Lord that Sanctified them Exod. 31. 13. Ezek. 20. 12. And are not we to learn and know as much in keeping our rest-day in holy duties yea blessed are they that do learn this lesson to know the Lord that he doth sanctifie them in the use of his Ordinances upon the day of our rest V. It was a memoriall say they of their deliverance out of Egypt Deut. 5. 15. This reason was Moses addition to move the people to pity their servants and cattell Must Moses his charitable use made of the Sabbath and his argument to perswade them to mercy from Gods mercy to them alter the nature of the Precept and disannull it The words in the beginning of the verse may be conceived in a Parenthesis and are brought in onely as a memoriall of that great deliverance as God remembred it in the preface to all the Commandements to move them to observe the whole Law and the word Therefore is to be annexed to the end of the 14 verse as indeed it ought in sense and reason which being so the words prove not the Sabbath to be instituted for a memoriall of their deliverance from Aegypt though they had good cause to remember it on this day and in keeping the fourth Commandement imposing rest as also in observing the first and all the other for as I said it s in the Preface to the whole Law as never to be forgotten of them but to be remembred as a strong motive to stirre them up to obedience VI. Say they it s ranked by the Apostle Col. 2. 16 17. among shadows But the place is not meant of the weekly Sabbaths I. The weekly Sabbath is the substance of the fourth Commandement and therefore durable not abolished as the Apostle speaketh of these Sabbaths II. The Apostle speaketh here of such things as cannot agree with the weekly Sabbaths 1. The Tearm Ordinances vers 14. shew where the Sabbath of the week is called an Ordinance 2. The word Ordinances are expounded to be the Commandements contained in Ordinances and these were the middle partition-wall between the Jew and Gentile taken away on the Crosse Eph. 2. 15. But the Sabbath day was no part of the partition-wall between the Jews and the Gentiles for we keep still a Sabbath unto the Lord. 3. They are the hand writings against us and contrary to us blotted out and abolished Col. 2. 14. Eph. 2. 15. but not so the weekly Sabbath 4. These were a shadow of things to come whereof the body was Christ vers 17. but the * Generally the Fathers take it to prefigure Christs rest that day onely full and wholly in his praise as D. Andr in his Star-Chamber speech acknowledgeth Sabbath of the week was no such thing if we consider it in it originall and not of the declaratory cloathed with it accessories as BP Lake speaketh for saith he before the fall the Sabbath was a kinde of rest shadowing out our eternall rest but not of that whereof Christ is the Body To us the Lords day is a foretaste of that eternall rest and I hold the shadow to be as lasting as the world Thus this lea●ned Father and Doctor in our Church who saith further that they who alleadge the Col. 2. 16. are out of the argument because le speaks of shadows whereof Christ is the body which he denieth of the weekly Sabbath considering it in the originall institution and not after the fall made a shadow by accessories III. Here the Sabbaths are equalized with meat drink holy-day new Moon which were the shadow of things to come Therefore hereby must be understood other Sabbaths Such were these Sabbaths the first day of the seventh moneth Lev. 23. 24 32. the seventh yeer Lev. 25. 4. the yeer of Jubilee Lev. 25. 8 11. So the holy Convocation of the Festivall times the first day Lev. 23. 7. the seventh day vers 8. the eighth and the tenth vers 27 32. all which were called Sabbaths 39. the same mentioned with the new Moons Esa 1. 13. called appointed Feasts verse 14. Those kinde of Sabbaths must be here meant 1. These were called Ordinances as the Apostle calleth them here 2. These were of the partition-wall and abolished and taken out of the way 3. A shadow of things to come 4. Thus the word Sabbaths taken agree well with meat drink new Moon and holy day 5. The Apostle varying the number from new Moon and holy day singularly to Sabbaths plurally would have us to understand the annexed Convocations called Sabbaths Lev. 23. 39. before mentioned Thus we see their arguments what little strength they have to prove the fourth Commandement Ceremoniall SECTION XXIII That the fourth Commandement is in no part Ceremoniall IT is clear enough that the fourth Commandement is not Ceremoniall not in part as some do grant it much lesse the whole as some of late boldly affirm it to be 1. The institution of the Sabbath on which the Commandement is grounded commanding no more then at the first institution was before the fall when there was no need of any Ceremony 2. God never made himself an example of any Ceremoniall precept as he doth in this 3 A Ceremoniall precept consists wholly or in part of some Ceremoniall service prescribed by it but no such service neither in whole nor in part in this neither in the day nor in the strict observation of it as before is proved 4. All and every Ceremoniall precepts and politicall were given mediately only by Moses Levit. 27. 34. Deut. 4. 14. But this was given immediately by God himself 5. That which was Ceremoniall was properly and directly the School-master to Christ For the Ceremoniall Law was that proper and direct School-Master Gal. 4. 24. But this precept is not any part of that School-master to Christ properly and directly 6. Whatsoever was Ceremoniall was Carnall Heb. 7. 16. and a beggerly rudiment Gal. 4. But Saint Paul speaking of the Morall Law calleth it holy just good and spirituall Rom. 7. 12 14. of which Morall Law this is an undelible precept and not a Carnall and beggerly rudiment 7. All Ceremoniall precepts are abrogated by Christ as
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
bounds and limits of truth out of inconsiderate zeal are all others to be censured to be men of the same mould Brotherly love and Charitie cannot but be better Judges 2 We see it carrieth antiquity with it and hath had allowance for a long time in the Churches of Christ 3 It is our rest day and so indeed a Sabbath for the word Sabbath is nothing else but rest so the name well agreeth with the nature of the thing 4 This name best leadeth us to the duty of the day which is to cease from weekely works which are not works of piety works of charity nor works of necessity and to imploy our holy rest on this holy day in the publike worship and service of Christ and in other Christian duties as is very excellently set forth in our thirteenth Canon 5 Learned and holy Bishop Lakes saith in his Thesis that eternali rest was shadowed out in the first Sabbath which our Lords day continueth and is a fore-taste of our eternall rest and a shadow thereof as lasting as the world This being so it may well be called the Sabbath day 6 If the fourth Commandment hath any perpetuity in it for a weekly day to be kept and ours being a weekly resting day then it may be called a Sabbath the Commandment propounding such a day under the name of Sabbath 7 All holy dayes appointed by God besides the weekly Sabbath were called Sabbaths and that upon these reasons because on them they rested to perform holy duties and had a holy Convocation Now why may not our Lords day because of our rest to holy duties and for the publick assemblies on that day be so called Our Linwood out of Aquinas saith Dies Dominicus dici potest dies Sabbati quia est requies vacatio ad Deum 8 The very Gentiles gave the name of Sabbath to their Festivalls as the Learned have observed 9 Christ lesus is the Lord of the Sabbath not only as God but as he is God-man or Mediatour for so himselfe saith the sonne of man is Lord also of the Sabbath Mark 2. 28. Now this Lordship as he is Mediatour he never layeth down 1. Cor. 15. 24. 23 whilest the world doth last and therefore he claimeth and holdeth the Sabbath for his honour that all may with a Sabbath honour the sonne as they have honoured the Iohn 5. 27. Father 10 If our rest into which Christ hath brought us which is a ceasing from sinne be called the keeping of a Sabbath as it is Heb. 4. 9 10 11. Then may a certain set day be so called for that therein we do not only hear and learn how to attain to the spirituall rest but do especially on this day labour through Gods grace to expresse the performance of it in holy and spirituall exercises CHAP. V. In what circuit of time this day hath been kept to weet weekly with the Reason thereof THere is a time for all things saith Salomon and nothing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 can be done but in time therefore must we needs have a time for the service of Christ which time is to be within the circuit of a week Saint Chrysostome telleth us from Gen. 2. 3. that God hath instructed us to set apart one day within the compasse of every week for spirituall exercises whereto agreeth our Reverend Hooker saying In his Eccl. Pol. pag. ●79 that we are bound to account the sanctification of one day in seven a duty which Gods immutable Law doth exact for ever Of this judgement saith Bishop White are divers Divines Cyted by Mr. sprim on the Sab. pag. 17. and 34. many of good note in the Church of God as Junius on Gen. 2. with others whereto may be added Learned Zanchius on the fourth Commandment who saith that one day of seven all men are to consecrate to the externall worship of God Pope Alexander said that both the old and new Testament Cyted by D. He●●inca 5. p. 2 depute the seventh day to rest Our Church in the Homily of Prayer teacheth us that Gods will and Commandment was to have a solemn and standing day in the week wherein the people should come together But what need I seek herein for consent when the whole Christian Church hath this 1600 yeers kept within this proportion of time which Custome is a Law for saith Saint Augustine Mos populi Dei instituta S. Aug ep c. 86. Majorum pro legetenenda sunt Now this observation of a day within a week is from Gods institution before the Law from the Creation who Gen. 2. having set down the dayes of a week took one within the Exo. 20. circuit of the week for his publick worship which he also commanded his people to observe under the Law both which hath been proved in the two former Treatises Now for the finding of proportion of time who can better proportion it for himself than God himself That is the fittest that can be imagined Nature cannot but acknowledge his wisdom and goodnesse in his choyce saith Master Dow. Hence is it no doub● that Peter Martyr said that one day of a week be consecrated pag. 24. 25. In loc Com. ca 7 to Gods worship is an ordinance of perpetuall force and Reverend Bishop Lakes confidently averreth that the seventh In his Th●sis part of time is Gods ordinance as everlasting as the world for saith the same Father of our Church the Lords day onely changeth but altereth not the portion of time prescribed Luther Dieterius on Dom. post Trin. Among the Scholemen Iacebus de Valen. and others St●ll● on Luke 14. Against Brab pag. 151. by the fourth Commandment by which we are guided to it Yea some have held that one day in seven is the morall part of the Commandment Sure I am there is acknowledged an equity in that Law durable for ever both for a time as also for the conveniency and sufficiency of time to which equity it is consonant saith Learned Bishop White that one day in seven be an holy day wherein Christian people ought to rest and give themselves to religious exercises who saith further that the common and naturall equity of that Commandement is morall to wit that Gods people are pag. 90 obliged to observe a convenient and sufficient time for publick and solemne divine worship and for religious and Ecclesiasticall duties And abstinence from secular labour and negotiation and keeping holy one day of every week both for mans temporall and naturall refreshing and for the spirituall good of his soul is very agreeable both to naturall and religious equity and it is grounded upon the ancient custom and practise of gods people in time of the Law And we Christians having obtained a larger measure of divine grace and our obligation to serve God and Christ upon his heavenly promises being greater than in the time of the Iews If in those former times of greater
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
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
1 Pet. 4. 17. it is used for any kinde of punishment which God infflicts upon men for sin In this later sense the evill befalling the Sabbath-breakers is a judgement and a due deserved punishment as the word is expounded by the learned in Gal. 5. 10. Shall not fire from heaven thundering and lightning by which some have been killed be held a judgement was not the fall of Paris-gardens Scaffold which hurt and kild so many a judgement These and other evils hapning such as be before mentioned have been held to be judgements and why any should deny them to be so now they give no reason nor indeed can they if they take the word judgement aright as in this case some Opposites doe who affirme that irreligious contempt of Gods ordinances appointed on this day by the Church and law of the Land may pull down Gods judgements yea that if this day were changed into another there would be as exemplarie judgments of God from heaven against this kinde of ungodlinesse of men as ever were in any ages upon the Lords day It is no shame we see to call them judgements And we may without shame say that these evils befell them for prophaning the Lords day and not keeping it holy Our Church in the Homily and in the fore-mentioned exhortation the Fathers in that Synod and learned men have averred as much whose affirmation may be opposed to any private mans negation if we had no reason to strengthen the assertion But is it not granted that the prophanation of the day is a grievous sin And doth not the fourth Commandement impose a morall dutie which is to keep holy the day of rest The sanctification of the day is imposed upon us and this are we pressed to remember Let the day be what it will appointed by divine authoritie as our Lords day is acknowledged to be wee are to keep it holy To keep the day set apart by a divine institution holy is the maine substance of the fourth Commandement and a morall dutie And therefore the not keeping holy the Lords day but polluting it is a sinne against the fourth Commandement and the breach of a morall dutie and therefore for this did the evills befall those that prophaned the day But some will peradventure say that it was the prophanation and irreligious contempt of Gods ordinances appointed upon this day by our Church and the lawes of ●he land sinnes highly provoking Gods wrath 〈◊〉 brought such evils upon them It may be so for vaine and prophane enough are 〈◊〉 persons with whom the Lord is displeased who may adde one sinne to another to the prophaning of the day an irreligious dis-regard of holy duties with dis●bedience to Authoritie but this sinne maketh not the other to ●● no cause of the evills hapning to them but serveth rather the more to aggravate the other sinne and so more speedi●y to hasten their judgement And to this some it may be will adde an other cause to wit the licentiousnesse of such as have bin punished swarving from those dirrections limitation prescribed to them I will not deny this neither for certaine it is that almost all the instances which lately have beene given are of those which have runne out beyond their bounds in the Declaration and no marvell for such as care not for Gods Commandements will easily transgresse the limits prescribed by man But yet here is no discord in the assignment of the cause of their punishment the prophanation of the day for in one and the same action where God is dis-obeyed the Church dis-regared and authority neglected and for all this together the parties punished yet the principall cause is the sinne against God as in this cause it is cleare enough Neverthelesse some cannot peradventure be satisfied with all this that it is lawfull to apply these judgements to particular persons except certaine rules be observed herein such as themselves lay downe for guidance in the same These rules I will write downe and then give answer to them as I may The rules which I finde laid downe for this purpose are these following 1 Rule We must have either extraordinary revelation of the punishments for the sinne of which now there is no expectation in the wise or immediately by the word wee must find those particular sins threatned with those particular judgements which we see to be executed upon them Sometime we finde in Scripture particular judgements threatned for some particular sinnes which some have committed and beene punished for But there be above a thousand sinnes mentioned in Scripture and five hundred of them without any particular threatning added This rule is not alwayes observable Wee see severall kindes of punishments inflicted for some particular sinnes which were not threatned before to light upon the offenders Uzziah for attempting to offer incense was smitten with an incuble Leprosie Nadab and Abihu were burnt with fire from heaven for their sinne Ananias and Saphira for their lying to the Holy Ghost kild immediately in the place Jeroboams arme withered for stretching it out against the Prophet Amaziah for silencing a Prophet given over to seck his owne overthrow Judas for betraying Christ left to be his owne executioner Herod eaten with wormes for his finne yet none of these particular judgements were threatned for these particular sinnes What therefore though we have no threatning that God would punish prophanesse on this day with such particular judgements as have befallen them must we not think those evills to have happened to them for that sinne A sinne deserves punishment but what way and how God will punish that hee reserves to himselfe and seldome hath revealed it though sometimes as we see by Nathan to David 2 Sam. 12. 11 12. and by Moses to the Israelites against Korah and his company Numb 16. 30. 2 Rule That which we suppose to be punished must bee truly and indeed a sinne and not a point disputable but recreations on the Lords day whether lawfull or unlawfull are disputable and therefore without unsufferable arrogancy we cannot apply the evils happening as judgements for sin No truth is so cleare but by agitation siding and exercise of wit may become disputable This might bee shewed in many things evident enough till they come into question The morality of the fourth Commandement was heretofore very manifest and the keeping holy the Sabbath day was of the morality and the not-keeping holy the Sabbath day but polluting it was a sinne The Lord in the old Testament threatned to punish and did severely punish the breach of that Law and the same sinne hee yet punisheth in some though not in all that prophane the Lords day observed of us Christians as our Christian Sabbath as hath been proved If these judgements come not for the prophanation of the day as before I shewed it hath been acknowledged wherefore hath God so long and so often laid his hand on many If God be not provoked to anger hee
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
men for profanation of the Sabbath and the contempt of that his holy institution Here I might annex the Patriarch Noah his observation of the number of seven againe and againe in sending out the Dove Gen. 8. 10. 12. and likewise being come out of the Arke in his sacrificing an acceptable offering to God on the seven and twentieth day of the Month in which hee came forth Gen. 8. 14. 20. 25. like enough to bee the observation of the first Sabbath in the new world so let me conceive it till any can shew me plainely the contrarie Howsoever it was we see the number of seven was observed herein by him as being mindfull of the seventh day of Gods resting and sanctifying it for a Sabbath For I would faine know why the number of seven should bee so observed of God and holy men not only by Noah but by Abraham in some cases except it were to minde them of Gods seventh day the first time of the mention of seventh which God so blessed and sanctified in making the seventh day his resting day As for the conceit of perfection in the number of seven I conceive it to bee without ground of Scripture except with relation to Gods seventh day blessed and sanctified 4 Saint Paul in Heb. 4. speaketh of Gods rest on the seventh day when God finished his work and of the participation of that rest as Bishop Lakes saith two wayes Typically and Spiritually the first by Ioshua giving the Israelites rest in Canaan and the second by Christ a rest from sinne here and a spirituall blessednesse hereafter The Apostle telleth us that an entrance was made into the seventh daies rest instituted by God when hee had finished his work and rested thereon into which man entred and rested as also did the Israelites into the Typicall rest by Ioshua and so doe the Israelites of God into the spirituall rest by Jesus Christ Now as wee Christian beleevers doe partake of our rest and as the Israelite beleevers enjoyed the Typicall rest so did the holy Patriarches and Fathers enjoy the seventh day Sabbaths rest and kept that rest for to what purpose else is that first rest mentioned 5 Genebrad in his Chron. saith that the Hebrewes held that Noah and the rest of the Fathers did keep the Sabbath once sanctified by God and citeth Rabbi Iohai Pater Rabbi Simeonis Rabbi Moses Hadarsan and Rabbi Salomò Aben Esra on Exod. 20. is also of this judgement 6 It is most cleare that God gave to the holy men of God his Lawes to live by his Charge his Commandements his Statutes and his Lawes and they observed them so it is said of Abraham the prime Patriarch who also was acquainted therewith Gen. 26. 5. The godly were followers of good things walking with God Gen. 5. 22. and 6. 9. They vexed at the sinfull courses of men 2 Pet. 2. 8. 9. They preached against their impieties Iude 14. 15. 1 Pet. 3. 20. and God threatned destruction to the world therefore Gen. 6. 3 7. and accordingly did destroy them Gen. 7. 19. Now if God gave his Lawes and reproved sinne and punished sinne would hee amongst these his Lawes the particulars whereof are not mentioned suffer his first institution his blessed and sanctified seventh day Sabbath to bee unthought of and to bee neglected May wee reasonably think that the godly having received other Lawes and observed and kept them as the Text sayth they did that they would carelessely omit to observe this institution of the Sabbath amongst those his Lawes Statutes and Commandements 7 Before any feast mentioned by Gods appointment Moses and Aaron and the Elders of the people Exod. 3. 18. could speak of a feast to be kept unto the Lord before Pharaoh Exod. 5 1. on which they were to offer sacrifices unto the Lord verse 3. Now what Festivall day could this bee but the seventh day Sabbath for as yet no other Festivalls were instituted Therefore how ever it was that in Egypt perhaps in time of their cruell bondage and only towards the end of it they could not observe the Sabbath this hinders not to apply it to the Sabbath because Moses spake to Pharaoh in the terme of a Feast and Sacrifice because it was better understood of Pharaoh than if peradventure hee had mentioned the name Sabbath which they might keep in Egypt in the dayes of those Kings which knew Ioseph before the extremity of their bondage 8 The fourth Commandement and all words thereto added telleth us that the Sabbath day was kept holy before the time that it was written in the Tables of Stone First the prefixed Memento telleth us so much that it was before observed and God would still have it carefully kept for the Memento hath respect unto the time past Secondly the manner of this delivery of this Commandement may perswade us to this for the other Commandements are uttered imperatively so as they inforce the dutie as in the fifth Commandement Honour thy Father and Mother the duty charged is Honour and in the other Commandements the sin is forbidden as Thou shalt not take my name in vaine Thou shalt doe no murther and so of the rest But now in the fourth Commandement the Lord falleth not upon the maine of the precept as to say keep holy the Sabbath day but the imperative speech is laid upon the word Remember saying Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy cleane otherwise than in any other of the rest of the precepts and the reason hereof is for that hee had before instituted it and it had been before observed of the Israelites as in the next reason is clearely proved Therefore hee sayth not keep holy the Sabbath as now instituted but thus Remember to keep holy the Sabbath as if hee had said as it hath been before observed of you and still to bee kept holy Thirdly all the principall words annexed to the Commandement tell us of no new thing then imposed but what was well enough known and made use of before as first six dayes for labour they were allowed before Exod. 16. 4. 5. Secondly the seventh day to be the Sabbath this also in plain words Moses had taught them Exod. 16 23. 26. Thirdly of the Lord their God which they knew from Abrahams dayes Gen. 17. 7. and by Moses in Egypt Exod. 6. 7. Fourthly That in it they should not doe any manner of work this they were forewarned of Exod. 16. 29. and some were reproved for offending vers 28. Fiftly that in six dayes God made heaven and earth c. This was evident of old time unto the Fathers Gen. 24. 3. 7. And lastly that hee rested the seventh day blessed and hallowed the Sabbath Gods owne words of the institution Gen. 2. 2. 3. So that we see it clear from the fourth Commandement and the words thereto annexed that this Law was known practised before it was given in Horeb. 9 And lastly to make up all sure Moses telleth us in
out of frame 5. It cannot stand with the beginning of the second chapter of Genesis that Adam should fall the first sixth day because when Moses had mentioned in the other chapter the sixth day consisting of the evening and morning he begineth with a summary repetition of all Gods works Gene. 2. 1. as yet without crack or flaw in them secondly with mentioning of Gods ending his work which he had made and not marred again by cursing of it as yet Gene. 2. 2. Thirdly Moses telleth us how God rested on the seventh day to wit from all his work which he had made Now what is resting but the Lords ceasing to create further any other things than what he had created and his pleasureable delight in the full accomplishment of his works done in those six dayes And his resting was from his work made so it was from his creating only and not from punishing as his resting should have beene had man fallen before his rest here spoken of Gen. 2. 2. Therefore from all these reasons it is very likely that Adam and Eve fell not on the day of their creation But now to returne againe to the point 2 From Adams casting out of Paradise unto the restoring of religion by Seth Gen. 4. 26. which was the space of 235 yeares which Story is conteined in one only chapter Gen. 4. In this space of 235 yeares there is no mention of Adams personall repentance of his faith and love to God not a word of his praying to God of his worshipping of him or of any duty performed by him unto God or man can any or will any conclude hence that Adam failed in all these No why then upon the same reason dare any conclude no keeping of the Sabbath by Adam because it is not recorded that he observed it especially seeing wee read of Gods resting and of the institution and making it the Sabbath for man 3. From the restoring of religion by Seth unto the Flood was 1422 yeares all which long space of time is historied within two chapters and a halfe in Gen. 5. and 6. to verse 17. of the seventh chapter Now in all this time for so many hundreds of yeares wherein lived many holy men the sonnes of God mentioned in Gen. 5. yet not one word by Moses set downe of any publick worship in offering sacrifices as before not a word of any holy meeting any where not a word of any good they did one to another not a word of any thing worthy note of any of them or of their children save of Enoch and Noah will we hence conclude them defective in all things no then why judge we them defective in keeping of the Sabbath IV. From the day of the floud and Noahs entring into the Ark unto the calling of Abraham out of Vr which is the space of 352. yeers some say 427. yeers comprehended in part of the seventh Chapter from the seventeenth Verse to the end and in the 8 9 10 11 foure Chapters and no more In this space nothing is spoken of any Divine praises of any solemn meetings of them together can we conclude that so many holy men mentioned in Chapter 11. of blessed Shems race did fail therein if not why dare we say they kept not the Sabbath V. From Abrahams calling out of Vr to Jacobs going down into Egypt is about 215. yeers this space is storied in many Chapters from Gen. 12. to 46. In which space though Morall duties were performed and that its said in the generall terms Gen. 26. 5. that Abraham kept the Lords charge his Commandements his Statutes and his Laws yet the particulars of these are not expressed And therefore here may we include the observation of the Sabbath and can no more seclude it then we can other duties observed which yet are not related to be kept by him in particular especially if we consider how God includeth the fourth Commandement among them Exod. 16. 28. as before is declared If any yet deny it to be kept of Abraham because it is not nominated why deny they not as well other things to have been performed by him seeing they are not by name mentioned VI. From Jacobs going into Egypt to the bringing of them out under Moses into the Wildernesse of Sin spoken of in Exod. 16. 1. The space was also 215 yeers for they came to this Wildernesse upon the fifteenth day of the second moneth after their departure from Egypt which was at the full end of the 430. yeers as God foretold Abraham Gen. 15. The story of all this time is comprised in the five last Chapters of Genesis and in the first sixteen Chapters of Exodus In which space after Jacobs departure from Canaan not one word of their worshipping of God of no Altar no Sacrifice no holy duties in publike yet I hope we will not say that all these things were neglected of them because not mentioned if not then no more may we deny to them the observation of the Sabbath for now at this time they being in the Wildernesse of Sin Exod. 16. it is plainly said they rested upon the seventh day as an holy rest and Sabbath to the Lord. Thus have I c●early shewed that their negative Argument from the Scripture is no good reason to deny the observation of the Sabbath in all this space of time except they will deny upon the same ground so many holy men to have sinfully neglected other necessary duties also as is before rehearsed But before I conclude I think a Question fit to be propounded and answered Quest Why was now in Exod. 16. the keeping of the Sabbath so plainly spoken off and not before Answ 1. Now the people hungring after food for the belly Exod 16. 3. and the Lord determining that he would raigne Mannab which they should gather every day by a certrain rate and on the sixt day twice as much the reason was because the seventh day was the Lords Sabbath on which day the Lord raigned no Mannab nor would he have any to go forth to seek it for that it was an holy rest unto the Lord This was the reason of the mentioning of it as appeareth by all that which is before delivered out of the Text. II. Because now they were a people openly separated to God from all other Nations and an holy people Deut. 7. 6. Exod. 19. 6. Therefore assoone as he had delivered them within six weeks space or thereabouts after they came from Egypt he took order for their keeping holy the Sabbath day as a speciall evidence of their holynesse before God the breach whereof he reproved as the breach of all his Commandments and Laws both then Exod. 16. 28. and afterwards in so high esteem had God his institution of his Sabbath and no marvell because by the breach of it God is much dishonoured and in the observation of it The three first Commandments of the first Table are kept in publike view before men
together where they conveniently might when and on what day did they assemble together On the first day of the weeke as Luke telleth us Acts 20. 7. and the Syriack translation of the 1 Cor. 11. 20. hath it in die Dominico In Apol. 2. Of this Just Martyr beareth witnesse upon the Sunday all of us assemble in the Congregation all that abide in the Cities or about in the fields do meet together in some place Coimus in Caetum Congregationem saith Tertul. In Apol. cap. 39. with cap. 14. 16. on the Lords day he meaneth Cyprian telleth us that the Sunday was the day wherein they met together So Saint Augustine also enformeth us we Christians assemble with Lib. 2. Epist 5. de Civit. Dei l. 22. cap 8. much diligence on the Lords day saith Clemens Rom. constit Apost li. 2. ca. 36. Into this Congregation would some Gentiles come sometime 1 Cor. 14. 23. and none professing Christ might forsake it Heb. 10. 25. Thus wee see clearely without doubting from Seriptures and Fathers when and where Christians met to worship Christ Being met together let us see what was done in the Congregation 1. For Prayer THey prayed together thus we read of them in the first Congregation after Christs Ascension Acts 1. 14. 24. so 〈◊〉 Acts 4. 23. 24. 16. 13. For prayer was one pa●● of their Divine Service mentioned in Act. 2. 42. The Apostles were much addicted to prayer as well as preaching Acts 6. 4. and they and the Christian beleevers were frequent in it as occasions were offered Act. 16. 16. 8. 15. 1● 3. 20. 36. 12. 5. 12. To the performance of this dutie with thanksgiving they were exhorted 1 Tim. 2. 1. 2. 2. For Reading THere was reading of the Scriptures of the Apostles writings by the Apostles command Col. 4. 16. a charge by the Lord 1 Thes 5. 27. and the Apostles decrees Act. 15. Tertul. Apol. cap. 39. In Apol. 2. 30. 31. They met together saith a Father To heare the holy Scriptures rehearsed In the Congreation saith Just Martyr the Records of the Apostles and the Writings of the Prophets In Ios Ho● 15. In Civit. l. ●2 c. 8. are read and other Scriptures saith Origen by the Apostles appointment at the reading whereof all were silent and attentive as S. Augustine telleth us 3. For Preaching THere was also preaching in the Congregation S. Paul on the first day of the week when the Disciples came together preached unto them Acts 20. 7. The Apostles in this spent their strength Acts 5. 42. and S. Paul exhorteth to this in vehemence of spirit and with a thundring charge 2 Tim. 4. 1. 2. Of this speaketh this same Apostle in 1 Cor. 14. and giveth order for the use of mens gifts in the Congregation The preaching then was with reprehension with exhortation 2 Tim. 4. 2. admonition Act. 20. 31. with convincing of errours Tit. 1. 9. with consolation 1 Cor. 14. 3. The matter was the word Acts 13. 5. 14. 25. 17. 13. Rom. 10. 8. 2. Tim. 4. 2. The manner was not with entising words of mans wisdome but in the demonstration of the spirit and power of God 1 Cor. 2. 4. 5. The end for conversion Act. 26. 18. 20. and to save men Act. 11. 14. Of preaching and making a Sermon on this day speaketh Just Martyr and Saint Augustine in the fore cited places When the Sermon was done they sent up their prayers unto the Lord saith Justine Martyr 4. For receiving of the Sacraments ON the first day of the week or Lords day they received the Lords supper Act. 20. 7. They came together to break bread saith the Text So did the Corinthians Apol. 2. Epist 118. come together to receive the Sacrament 1 Cor. 11. 20. This Just Martyr also certifieth us of and S. Augustine in the Primitive times it was administred every Sunday 5. For Psalmes THey in the Congregation sang Psalmes so the Apostle intimateth to us 1 Cor. 14. which as they might learne from the ancient people of God as is observed in the former Treatise so from our Saviour and his Apostles who sang a Psalme when the Passeover was received and the Sacrament instituted and administred Mark 14. 26. Plinie secundus in an Epistle to Traian maketh mention of Christians singing of Hymnes when they met together to worship Christ before day How comfortable singing of Psalmes bee when men sing with understanding and with the spirit as they ought 1 Cor. 14. 15. we may see by Paul and Sylas singing Psalmes in prison Act. 16. 25. 6. For care of the poore THe true Church of Christ had ever care for the poore from the very first Plantation as we may see Acts 2. 45. and 4. 34. And for this purpose were Deacons appointed Act. 6. The Apostles gave a charge for to remember the poore Gal. 2. 10. and Saint Paul took order for the collection every Lords day 1. Cor. 16. 2. which Saint Chrysostome Chrys Hom. 43. on 1 Cor. speaketh much of And this continued in the Christian primitive Congregations They made collections for the widdowes of whom care should ever be had Act. 6. 1. 1 Tim. 5. 3. for the fatherlesse as religion teacheth Iames 1. 27 for the sick poore people captives exiles and strangers Iusti● Martyr Apo. 2. which came from farre as Just. Martyr witnesseth 7 For Excommunication and Ordination UPon just cause on this day when they did meet the Leo. Mag. ad Dioscorum Episc Alex. Epi. 41. cap. 3. See Tertul. Apolog. Origen and others cited by Bish ●hit● pag 214. See Dr. Heylin Histor part 2. p. 118. sentence of Excommunication was pronounced against some which were v●ry notorious offenders 1 Cor. 5. 4. 5. On this day it was thought most proper for investing men with holy Orders for that the holy Ghost descended upon the Apostles this day and there gave us as it were this celestiall rule that on this day alone we should conferre spirituall Orders in quo collata sunt omnia dona gratiarum All spituall graces are conferred And it was appointed that such men as were to receive Ordination should continue fasting from the Even before that spending all that time in prayer humbling themselves before the Lord they might be the ☞ better fitted to receive his graces 8 Of their Love-Feasts DIvine Service being ended Christians observed a Love-Feast or feast of charity where all the rich and poore sate downe promiscuously together recreating themselves with godly conference and singing of Psalmes which as Tertullian saith did admit of Nihil vilitatis nihil immodestiae Apolog. and at what time he saith non prius discumbitur quam oratio ad Deum praegustetur Of this speaks also S. Chrysostome Omnes commune inibant convivium pauperibus qui nihil habebant vocatis omnibus communiter vescentibus S. Paul toucheth upon these Feasts 1 Cor. 11. and S. Jude verse 12.
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