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A03146 The history of the Sabbath In two bookes. By Pet. Heylyn. Heylyn, Peter, 1600-1662. 1636 (1636) STC 13274; ESTC S104023 323,918 504

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it was conceived had on the Lords day made great spoyle of men and houses in the Citty of Limoges This Gregory of Tours who lived about the end of this sixt Centurie pronounceth to have fallen upon them ob diei dominici injuriam because some of them used to worke upon the Sunday But how could he tell that or who made him acquainted with Gods secret counsailes Had Gregory beene Bishop of Limoges as he was of Toures it may be Limoges might have scaped so fierce a censure and onely Tours have suffered in it For presently he addes in Turonico vero nonnulli a● hoc igne sed non die dominico adusti sunt that even in Tour● it selfe many had perished by the selfe same fire but being it fell not on the Sunday as it did at Limoges therefore that misery fell on them for some other reason Indeed he tells us of this day that being it was the day whereon God made the light and after was the witnesse of our Saviours resurrection Ideo omni fide a Christianis observari debet ne fiat in eo omne opus publicum therefore it was to be observed of every Christian no manner of publicke businesse to be done upon it A peece of new Divinity and never heard of till this age nor in any afterwards 7 Not heard of till this age but in this it was For it the 24. yeare of Gunthram King of the Burgundians Anno 588. ●onc Mati so●e●s 2● Can. 1. there was a Councell called at Mascon a towne situate in the Duchie of Burgundie as we now distinguish it wherein were present Priscus Evantuis Praetextatus and many other reverend and learned Prelates They taking into consideration how much the Lords day was of late neglected for remedy thereof ordeined that it should be observed more carefully for the times to come Which Canon I shall therefore set downe at large because it hath beene often produced as a principall ground of those precise observances which some amongst us have endeavored to force upon the consciences of weake and ignorant men It is as followeth Videmus populum Christianum temerario more diem dominicum contempt●i tradere c. It is observed that Christian people doe very rashly slight and neglect the Lords day giving themselves thereon as on other dayes to continuall labours c. Therefore let every Christian in case he carry not that name in vaine give care to our instruction knowing that we have care that you should doe well as well as power to bridle you that you doe not ill It followeth Custodite die● dominicum qui nos denuo peperit c. Keepe the Lords day the day of our new birth whereon wee were delivered from the snares of sinne Let no man meddle in litigious controversies or deale in actions or law-suites or put himselfe at all upon such an exigent that needes hee must prepare his Oxen for their daily worke but exercise your selves in hymnes and singing prayses unto God being intent thereon both in minde and body If any have a Church at hand let him goe unto it and there powre forth his soule in teares and prayers his eyes and hands being all that day lifted up to God It is the everlasting day of rest insinuated to us under the shadow of the Seventh day or Sabbath in the Law and Prophets and therefore it is very meete that wee should celebrate this day with one accord whereon we have beene made what at first wee were not Let us then offer unto God our free and voluntary service by whose great goodnesse wee are freede from the Gaole of errour not that the Lord exacts it of us that we should celebrate this day in a corporall abstinence or rest from labour who onely lookes that wee doe yeeld obedience to his holy will by which contemning earthly things he may conduct us to the heavens of his infinite mercy However if any man shall set at naught this our exhortation be he assured that God shall punish him as he hath deserved and that he shall be also subject unto the censures of the Church In case he be a Lawyer he shall loose his cause If that he be an husbandman or servant he shall be corporally punished for it but if a Clergy man or Monke he shall bee six moneths separated from the Congregation Adde here that two yeares after this being the second yeare of the second Clotaire King of France there was a Synod holden at Auxxerre a towne of Champaigne concilium Antisiodorense in the Latin writers wherein it was decreed as in this of Mascon Non licet die dominico boves jungere vel alia oper● exercare that no man should be suffered to yoake his Oxen or doe any manner of worke upon the Sunday This is the Canon so much urged I meane that of Mascon to prove that wee must spend the Lords day holily in religious exercises and that there is no part thereof which is to be imployed unto other uses But there are many things to be considered before we yeeld unto this Canon or the authority thereof some of them being of that nature that those who most insist upon it must be faine to traverse For first it was contrived of purpose with so great a strictnes to meete the better with those men which so extreamely had neglected that sacred day A sticke that bends too much one way cannot bee brought to any straightnesse till it be bent as much the other This Synod secondly was Provinciall onely and therefore can oblige none other but those for whom it was intended or such who after did submit unto it by taking it into their Canon Nor will some part thereof be approved by them who most stand upon it none being bound hereby to repaire to Church to magnifie the name of God in the Congregation but such as have some Church at hand and what will then become of those that have a mile two three or more to their parish Churches no Chappell nearer they are permitted by the Canon to abide at home As for religious duties here are none expressed as proper for the Congregation but Psalmes and hymnes and singing prayse unto the Lord and powring forth our soules unto him in teares and prayers and then what shall wee doe for preaching for preaching of the Word which wee so much call for Besides King Gunthram on whose authority this Counsell met in his Confirmatory letters doth extend this Canon as well unto the other holy dayes as unto the Sunday commanding all his Subjects Vigore huju● decreti definitionis generalis by vertue of his present mandate that on the Lords day vel in quibuscunque alijs sole●nitatibus and all solemne festivalls whatsoever they should abstaine from every kind of bodily labour save what belong'd to dressing meate But that which needes must most afflict them is that the councell doth professe this abstinence from bodily labour which is there decreed
care of one than of the other 11 And so indeede it had not in this alone but in all things else the holy dayes as wee now distinguish them being in most points equall to the Sunday and in some superiour Leo the Emperour by his Edict shut up the Theater and the Cirque or shewplace on the Lords day The like is willed expressely in the sixt generall Councell holden at Constantinople Anno 692. Can. 66. for the whole Easter weeke Nequaquam ergo his diebus equorum cursus vel aliquod publicum fiat spectaculum so the Canon hath it The Emperour Charles restrained the Husbandman and the tradesman from following their usuall worke on the Lords day The Councell of Melun doth the same for the said Easter weeke and in more particulars it being ordered by that Synod that men forbeare during the time above remembred Can. 77. ab omni opere rurali fabrili Carpentario gynaeceo coement ario pictorio venatorio forensi mercatorio audientiali ac sacrametis exigendis from husbandry the craft of Smithes Carpenters from needle-work cementing painting hunting pleadings merchandize casting of accounts from taking Oathes The Benedictines had but three messe of pottage upon other dayes die vero dominico in praecipuis festivitatibus but on the Lords day and the principall festivalls a fourth was added as saith Theodomare the Abbot in an Epistle to Charles the Great Law-suites and Courts of judgement were to bee layd aside and quite shut up on the Lords day as many Emperours and Councells had determined severally The Councell held at Friburg Anno 895. Conc. Tribu 〈◊〉 26. did resolve the same of holy dayes or Saints dayes and the time of Lent Nullus omnino secularis diebus dominicis vel Sanctorum in festis seu Quadragesimae aut jejuniorum placitum habere sed nec populum illo pr●●sumat coercere as the Canon goeth The very same with that of the Councell of Erford Anno 932. cap. 2. But what neede private and particular Synods bee produced as witnesses herein when wee have Emperours Popes and Patriarkes that affirme the same To take them in the order in which they lived Photius the Patriarke of Constantinople Anno 858. Ap. Balsam tit 7. cap. 1. thus reckoneth up the Festivalls of especiall note viz. Seaven dayes before Easter and seaven dayes after Christmasse Epiphanie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the feasts of the Apostles and the Lords day And then he addes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that on those dayes they neither suffer publicke shewes nor Courts of justice Emanuel Comnenus next Emperour of Constantinople Ap● Balsam Anno 1174. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. We doe ordeine saith he that these dayes following be exempt from labour viz. the nativity of the Virgin Mary holy-rood day and so hee rockoneth all the rest in those parts observed together with all the Sundayes in the yeare and that in them there be not any accesse to the seates of judgement Lib. 2. tit de ferijs cap. 5. The like Pope Gregory the ninth Anno 1228. determineth in the Decretall where numbring up the holy dayes he concludes at last that neither any processe hold nor sentence bee in force pronounced on any of those dayes though both parts mutually should consent unto it Consentientibus etiam partibus nec processus habitus teneat nec sententia quam contingit diebus hujusmodi promulgari So the Law resolves it Now lest the feast of Whit sontide might not have some respect as well as Easter it was determined in the Councell held at Engelheim Cap. 6. Anno 948. that Munday Tuesday Wednesday in the Whitsun-weeke non minus quam dies dominicus solenniter honorentur should no lesse solemnely be observed than the Lords day was So when that Otho Bishop of Bamberg had planted the faith of Christ in Pomerania Vrspergens Chronic. and was to give account thereof to the Pope then being he certifieth him by his letters Anno. 1124 that having christned them and built them Churches he left them three injunctions for their Christian carriage First that they eate no flesh on Fridayes secondly that they rest the Lords day ab omni opere malo from every evill worke repairing to the Church for religious dueties and thirdly Sanctorum solennitates cum vigiliis omni diligentia observent that they keepe carefully the Saints dayes with the Eves attendant So that in all these outward matters we finde faire equality save that in one respect the principall festivals had preheminence above the Sunday For whereas fishermen were permitted by the Decretall of Pope Alexander the third as before was sayd diebus dominicis aliis festis on the Lords day and other holy dayes to fish for herring in some cases there was a speciall exception of the greater festivals praeterquam in majoribus anni solennitatibus as the order was But not to deale in generals onely Isidore Arch-bishop of Sevill in the beginning of the seventh Century making a Catalogue of the principall festivalls beginnes his list with Easter and ends it with the Lords day as before we noted in the fifth section of this Chapter Now lest it should be thought that in sacred matters and points of substance the other holy dayes were not as much regarded as the Lords day was the Councell held at Mentz Anno 813 did appoint it thus that if the Bishop were infirme or not at home Non desit tamen diebus dominicis festivitatibus qui verbum dei praedicet juxta quod populus intelligat yet there should still be some to preach Gods word unto the people according unto their capacities both on the Lords day and the other festivals Indeed why should not both be observed alike the Saints dayes being dedicated unto God as the Lords day is and standing both of them on the same authority on the authority of the Church for the particular institution on the authority of Gods Law for the generall warrant It was commanded by the Lord and written in the heart of man by the penne of nature that certaine times should bee appointed for Gods publicke worship the choycing of the times was left to the Churches power and she designed the Saints dayes as shee did the Lords both his and both alotted to his service onely This made Saint Bernard ground them all the Lords day and the other holy dayes on the fourth Commandement the third in the Account of the Church of Rome Spirituale obsequium deo praebetur in observantia sanctarum solennitatum unde tertium praceptum contexitur Serm. 3. Super Salve reg Observa diem Sabbati i. e. in sacris ferijs te exerce So S. Bernard in his third Sermon Super salve Regina 12 The Lords day and the holy dayes or Saints dayes being of so neere a kinne we must next see what care was taken by the Church in these presentages for hallowing them unto the Lord. The times were
certainely devout and therefore the lesse question to be made but that the holy dayes were employed as they ought to be in hearing of the Word of God receiving of the Sacraments and powring forth their prayers unto him The sixt generall counsell holden at Constantinople appointed that those to whom the cure of the Church was tr●sted should on all dayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 especially on the Lords day instruct the Clergie and the people out of the holy Scripture in the wayes of godlinesse I say the Clergie and the people for in these times the Revenue of the Church being great and the offerings liberall there were besides the Parish Priest who had Cure of soules many assisting ministers of inferiour Orders which lived upon Gods holy Altar Somewhat to this purpose of preaching every Sunday yea and Saints dayes too in the Congregation we have seene before established in the Councell at Mentz Anno 813. So for receiving of the Sacrament whereas some would that it should be administred every day singulis in anno diebus as Bertram hath it lib de corp sangu Christi Rabanus Maurus who lived 824 leaves it as a thing indifferent advising all men notwithstanding De Sermon proprieta● l 4 10. in case there be no lawfull let to communicate every Lords day Quotidie Eucharistiae communionem percipere nec vitupero nec laudo omnibus tamen dominicis diebus communicandum hortor sitamen mens in affectu peccandi non sit as his words there are And whereas this good custome had beene long neglected it was appointed that the Sacrament should be administred every Lords day Can. 2● by the Councell at Aken Anno 836. Ne forte qui longe est a sacramentis quibusest redemptus c least saith the councell they which keepe so much distance from the Sacraments of their redemption be kept as much at distance from the fruition of their Salvation As for the holy dayes or Saints dayes there needed no such Canon to enjoyne on them the celebration of the Sacrament which was annexed to them of course So likewise for the publicke prayers besides what scatteringly hath beene sayd in former places the Councell held at Friburg Anno 895 hath determined thus Conc. Friburiens Can. 26. Diebus dominicis sanctorum festis vigilis orationibus nisistendumest ad missas cuilibet Christiano cum oblationibus currendum that on the Lords day and the festivalls of the Saints every Christian was to be intent upon his devotions to watch and pray and goe to Masse and there make his offering It s true the Service of the Church being in the Latine and in these times that language being in some Provinces quite worne out and in some others growne into a different dialect from what it was that part of Gods worship which was publicke prayer served not so much to comfort and to ●dification as it should have done As for the outward adjuncts of Gods publicke service on the Churches part the principall was that of Musicke which in these Ages grew to a perfect height We shewed before that vocall musicke in the Church is no lesse antient than the liturgie of the Church it selfe which as it was begunne in Ignatius time after the manner of plaine-song or a melodious kinde of pronunciation as before was sayd so in S. Austins time it became so excellent that it drew many to the Church and consequently many to the faith Now to that vocall musicke which was then in use and of which formerly we spake it pleased the Church in the beginning of these Ages to adde instrumentall the organ being added to the voyce by Pope Vitalian Anno 653 almost 1000 yeares agoe and long before the aberration of the Church from its pristine piety And certainely it was not done without good advise there being nothing of that kinde more powerfull than melody both vocall and instrumentall for raising of mens hearts and sweetning their affections towards God Not any thing wherein the militant Church here on Earth hath more resemblance to the Church in heaven triumphant then in that sacred and harmonious way of singing prayse and Allelujahs to the Lord our God which is and hath of long beene used in the Church of Christ. 13 To bring this Chapter to an end in all that hath beene sayd touching the keeping of the Lords day wee finde not any thing like a Sabbath either in the practise of the Church or writings of particular men however these last Ages grew to such an height in restraint of labours on this day that they might seeme to have a minde to revive that part of the fourth Commandement Thou shalt doe no manner of worke upon it For where they tell us of this day as before was sayd that it was taken up by custome on the authority of the Church at most on Apostolicall tradition this makes it plaine that they intended no such matter as a Sabbath day though that the Congregation might assemble in the greater numbers and men might joyne together in all christian dueties with the greater force it pleased the Church and principall powers thereof to restraine men from corporall labours and binde them to repaire to the house of God Or if they did intend the Lords day for a Sabbath day its plaine they must have made more Sabbaths than one day in seven those holy dayes which universally were observed in the Christian Church being no otherwise to be kept than the Lords day was and those increasing in these Ages to so great a number that they became a burden to the common people Nor is it likely that being once free from the bondage of the Iewish Sabbath they would submit themselves unto another of their owne devising and doe therewith as the Idolaters of old with their woodden gods first make them and then presently fall downe and worship them Rather they tooke a course to restraine the Iewes from sanctifying their Sab●ath and other legall festivals as before they used Statutum est de Iudoeis in the 12 Councell of Tolledo Anno 681 Can. 10. Ne Sabbata coeterasque festivitates ritus sui celebrare praesumant and not so onely Sed ut diebus dominicis ab opere cessent but that they should refraine from labour on the Lords day also Of any Sabbath to be kept in the Christian Church some few might dreame perhaps such filthy dreamers as Saint Iude speakes of but they did onely dreame thereof they saw no such matter They which had better visions could perceive no Sabbath but in this life a Sabbath or a rest from sinne and in the life to come a Sabbath or a rest from misery Plainely Rupertus so conceived it as great a Clerke as any in the times wherein hee lived which was in the beginning of the twelfth Century Nam sicut signum circumcisionis inc●rnationem c. For as saith he the signe of Circumcision foreshewed the incarnation of our Lord and
THE HISTORY OF THE SABBATH IN TWO BOOKES BY PET. HEYLYN DEVT. 32. 7. Remember the dayes of old consider the yeeres of many Generations aske thy Father and hee will shew thee thy Elders and they will tell thee LONDON Printed for Henry Seile and are to bee sold at the Signe of the Tygers-head in Saint Pauls Church-yard 1636. TO THE MOST HIGH AND MIGHTIE PRINCE CHARLES By the Grace of God King of Great Brittaine France and Ireland Defender of the Faith c. Most dread Soveraigne YOur Maiesties most Christian care to suppresse those rigours which some in maintenance of their Sabbath-Doctrines had pressed upon this Church in these latter dayes iustly deserves to be recorded amongst the principall Monuments of your zeale and pietie Of the two great and publike enemies of Gods holy Worship although prophanenesse in it selfe be the more offensive yet superstition is more spreading and more quicke of growth In such a Church as this so setled in a constant practise of Religious Offices and so confirmed by godly Canons for the performance of the same there was no feare that ever the Lords Day the day appointed by Gods Church for his publike service would have beene over-runne by the prophane neglect of any pious duties on that day required Rather the danger was lest by the violent torrent of some mens affections it might have beene ore-flowne by those superstitions wherewith in imitation of the Iewes they began to charge it and thereby made it farre more burdensome to their christian Brethren than was the Sabbath to the Israelites by the Law of MOSES Nor know wee where they would have staid had not your Maiestie been pleased out of a tender care of the Churches safetie to give a checke to their proceedings in licencing on that day those Lawfull Pastimes which some without authority from Gods Word or from the practise of Gods Church had of late restrained Yet so it is your Maiesties most pious and most Christian purpose hath not found answerable entertainment especially amongst those men who have so long dreamt of a Sabbath day that now they will not be perswaded that it is a Dreame For the awakening of the which and their reduction to more sound and sensible counsailes next to my duty to Gods Church and your sacred Maiestie have I applyed my selfe to compose this Story wherein I doubt not but to shew them how much they have deceived both themselves and others in making the old Iewish Sabbath of equall age and observation with the Law of Nature and preaching their new Sabbath doctrines in the Church of Christ with which the church hath no acquaintance wherin I doubt not but to shew them that by their obstinate resolution not to make publication of your Maiesties pleasure they tacitely condemne not onely all the Fathers of the primitive times the learned Writers of all Ages many most godly Kings and Princes of the former dayes and not few Councels of chiefe note and of faith unquestionable but even all states of Men Nations and Churches at this present whom they most esteeme This makes your Maiesties interest so particular in this present Historie that were I not obliged unto your Maiestie in any neerer bond than that of every common Subiect it could not be devoted unto any other with so iust propriety But being it is the Worke of your Maiesties servant and in part fashioned at those times which by your Maiesties leave were borrowed from attendance on your sacred person your Maiesty hath also all the rights unto it of a Lord and Master So that according to that Maxime of the civill Lawes Quodcunque perservum acquiritur id domino acquirit ●uo Institut l. 1. tit ● 5. 1. your Maiestie hath as absolute power to dispose therof as of the Author who is Dread Soveraigne Your Majesties most obedient Subject and most faithfull Servant PET. HEYLYN A PREFACE To them who being themselves mistaken have misguided others in these new Doctrines of the Sabbath NOt out of any humour or desire of being in action or that I love to have my hands in any of those publike quarrels wherewith our peace hath beene disturbed but that posteritie might not say we have beene wanting for our parts to your information and the direction of Gods people in the wayes of truth have I adventured on this Story A Story which shall represent unto you the constant practise of Gods Church in the present busines from the Creation to these daies that so you may the better see how you are gone astray from the paths of truth and tendries of Antiquity and from the present judgement of all Men and Churches The Arguments whereto you trust and upon seeming strength whereof you have beene emboldned to presse these Sabbatarian Doctrines upon the consciences of poore people I purpose not to meddle with in this Discourse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They have beene elsewhere throughly canvassed and all those seeming strengths beate downe by which you were your selves misguided and by the which you have since wrought on the affections of unlearned men or such at least that judged not of them by their weight but by their numbers But where you give it out as in matter of fact how that the Sabbath was ordained by God in Paradise and kept accordingly by all the Patriarkes before Moses time or otherwise ingraft by nature in the soule of man and so in use also amongst the Gentiles in that I have adventured to let men see that you are very much mistaken and tell us things directly contrary unto truth of Story Next where it is the ground-worke of all your building that the Commandement of the Sabbath is morall naturall and perpetuall as punctually to be observed as any other of the first or second Table I doubt not but it will appeare by this following History that it was never so esteemed of by the Iewes themselves no not when as the observation of the same was most severely pressed upon them by the Law and Prophets nor when the day was made most burdensome unto them by the Scribes and Pharisees Lastly whereas you make the Lords day to be an institution of our Saviour Christ confirmed by the continuall usage of the holy Apostles and both by him and them imposed as a perpetuall ordinance on the Christian Church making your selves beleeve that so it was observed in the times before as you have taught us to observe it in these latter dayes I have made manifest to the world that there is no such matter to be found at all either in any writings of the Apostles or monument of true Antiquity or in the practise of the middle or the present Churches What said I of the present Churches so I said indeed and doubt not but it will appeare so in this following Storie the present Churches all of them both Greeke and Latin together with the Protestants of what name soever being farre different both in their Doctrine
Iewes were very much affected to their antient ceremonies and Calvin rightly hath affirmed In Act. 〈…〉 Corr●ctionem ut difficilis ●ra● ita subitam esse non potuisse that a full reformation of that zeale of theirs as it was full of difficultie so could it not be done upon th● s●dden Therefore it pleased the 〈◊〉 as it is co●ceived Concil● To●●● 〈◊〉 in their fo●rth Councell hol●●●●● Hierusalem mention whereof is made in the 21. of the Acts to make it lawfull for the Iews to retaine circumcision and such legall rites together with the faith in Christ Quamdiu templum sacrifi●ia legis in Hier●salem stabant as long as the Iewish Temple and the legall sacrifices in Hierusalem should continue standing Not that the faith of Christ was not sufficient of it selfe for their salvation Sed ●t mater Synagoga paulatim ●um honore s●p●liretur but that the Synogogue might be layed to ●●eepe with the greater honour But this if so it was was for no long time For when the third Councell holden in Hierusalem against Cerinthus and his partie was held in Ann. 51. and this which now we speake of Ann. 58. the final ruine of the Temple was in 72. So that there was but one and twenty yeares in the largest reckoning wherein the Christian Iewes were suff●red to observe their Sabbath and yet not as before they did as if it were a necessarie dutie but as a thing indifferent onely But that time come the Temple finally destroyed and the legall ceremonies therein buri●d it was accounted afterwards both dangerous and hereticall to observe the Sabbath or mingle any of the Iewish leaven with the bread of life S. Hierome roundly so proclaimes it Ceremonias Iudae●rum perniciosus pestiferas esse Christianis that all the Ceremonies of the Iewes whereof before he named the Sabbath to be one were dangerous yea and deadly too to a Christia● man Sive e● Iudaeis esset sive ex Gentibus whether he were originally of the Iews or Gentiles To which S. Austin gives allowance Eg● ha●c vocem tuam omnino confirmo in his reply unto Saint Hierome That it was also deemed hereticall to celebrate a sabbath in the Christian Church we shall see hereafter 9 In the meane time we must proceed in search of the Lords day and of the duties then performed whereof we can finde nothing yet by that name at least The Scripture tels us somewhat that S. Paul did at Troas upon the first day of the weeke Which happening much about this time comes in this place to be considered The passage in the Text stands thus Vpon the first day of the weeke when the disciples came together to breake bread Act. 20. 7. Paul preached unto them ready to depart on the morrow and continued his speech untill midnight Take notice here that Paul had tarried there seven dayes before this happened Now in this Text there are two things to be considered first what was done upon that day and secondly what day it was that is there remembred First for the action it is said to be breaking of bread which some conclude to be administring the Sacrament of the Lords Supper and Pauls discourse which followed on it to be a Sermon But sure I am Saint Chrysost●me tells us plainly otherwise I● locum who relates it thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Their meeting at that time saith he was not especially to receive instruction from Saint Paul but to eate bread with him and there upon occasion given he discoursed unto them See saith the Father how they all made bold with S. Pauls table as it had beene common to them all and as it seemes to me saith he Paul sitting at the table did discourse thus with them Therefore it seemes by him that as the meeting was at an ordinary supper so the discourse there happening was no Sermon properly but an occasionall dispute Lyra affirmes the same and doth glosse it thus They came together to breake bread i. e. saith he Pro refectione corporali for the refection and support of their bodies onely and being there Paul preached unto them or as the Greeke and Latine have it hee disputed with them prius eos reficiens pane verbi divini refreshing of them first with the bread of life This also seemes to be the meaning of the Church of England 〈◊〉 80. who in the margin of the Bible allowed by Canon doth referre us unto the second of the Acts vers 46. where it is said of the disciples that they did breake their bread from house to house and eate their meat together with joy and singlenesse of heart which plainly must be meant of ordinarie and common meats Calvin not onely so affirmes it but censures those who take it for the holy Supper Nam quod hic fractionem panis nonnulli interpretantur sacram coenam I● Act. 〈◊〉 al●enum mihi videtur à mente Lucae c. as he there discourseth Then for the time our English reades it upon the first day of the weeke agreeablie unto the 〈◊〉 exposition of most ancient Writers and the vulgar Latine which here as in the foure Evangelists doth call the first day of the weeke una Sabbati Yet since the Greeke phrase is not so perspicuous but that it may admit of a various exposition Erasmus renders it by uno die sabbatorum quodam die sabbatorum that is upon a certaine Sabbath and so doth Calvin too and Pellican and Gualter all of them noted men in their translations of that Text. Nor do they onely so translate it but frame their expositions also unto that translation and make the day there mentioned to be the Sabbath I● lo●um Calvin takes notice of both readings Vel proximum sabbat● diem intelligit vel unum quodpiam sabbatum but approves the last Quod dies ille ad habendum conventum aptior fuerit because the Sabbath day was then most used for the like assemblies Gualter doth so conceive it also that they assembled at this time on the Sabbath day Qui propter veterem morem haud dubie tunc temporis celebrior habebatur Hom. as that which questionlesse was then of most repute and name amongst them So that the matter is not cleare as unto the day if they may j●dge it But take it for the first day of the weeke as the English reade● it yet doth S. Austin put a scruple which may perhaps disturbe the whole expectation though otherwise he be of opinion that the breaking of the bread there mentioned might have some reference or resemblance to the Lords Supper Now this is that which S. Austin tells us Aut post peractum diem Sabbat● ●p 86. nocti● initio fuerunt congregati quae utique nox ad diem Dominicum h●e ad unū Sabbat● pertin●bat c. Either saith he they were assembled on the beginning of the night which did immediately follow the Sabbath day
and was to be accounted as a part of the Lords day or first day of the weeke and breaking bread that night as it is broken in the Sacrament of the Lords bodie continued his discourse till midnight Vt lucescente proficisceretur Dominico die that so he might begin his journey with the first dawning of the Lords day which was then at hand Or if they did not meet till the day it selfe since it is there expressed that he preached unto them being to depart upon the morrow we have the reason why he continued his discourse so long viz. because he was to leave them Et eos sufficienter instruere cupiebat and he desired to lesson them sufficiently before he left them So farre S. Austin Chuse which of these you will and there wil be but little found for sanctifying the Lords day by Saint Paul at Troas For if this meeting were upon Saturday night then made Saint Paul no scruple of travailing upon the Sunday or if it were on the Sunday and that the breaking bread there mentioned were the celebration of the Sacrament which yet Saint Augustine saith not in termes expresse but with a sicut yet neither that nor the discourse or sermon which was joyned unto it were otherwise then occasionall onely by reason of S. Pauls departure on the morrow after Therefore no Sabbath or established day of publick meeting to be hence collected 10 This action of Saint Paul at Troas is placed by our Chronologers in Anno 57 of our Saviours birth and tha● yeare also did he write his first Epistle to the Corinthians wherein amongst many other things hee gives them this direction touching collections for the poorer brethern at Hierusalem C. 16. v 1. Concerning the gathering for the Saints saith he as I have ordained in the Churches of Galatia so do ye also And how was that Every first day of the weeke let every one of you s●t aside by himselfe and lay up as God hath prospered him that there be no gatherings when I come This some have made a principall argument to prove the institution of the Lords day to be Apostolicall and Apostolicall though should we grant it yet certainly it never can be proved so from this Text of Scripture For what hath this to do with a Lords-day dutie or how may it appeare from hence that the Lords day was ordered by the Apostles to be weekly celebrated instead of the now antiquated Iewish Sabbath being an intimation onely of Saint Pauls desire to the particular Churches of the Galatians and Corinthians what he would have them do in a particular and present case Agabus had signified by the Spirit Act. 11. 28. 29. that there should be a great dearth over all the world and thereupon the Antiochians purposed to send reliefe unto the brethren which dwelt in Iu daea It is not to be thought that they made this collection on the Sunday onely but sent their common bounties to them when and as often as they pleased Collections for the poore in themselues considered are no Lords day duties no duties proper to the day and therefore are not here appointed to be made in the congregation but every man is ordered to lay up somewhat by himselfe as it were in store that when it came to a full round summe it might be sent away unto Hierusalem which being but a particular case and such a case as was to end with the occasion can be no generall rule for a perpet●ity For might it not fall out in time that there might be no poore nay no Saints at a●l in all Hierusalem as when the Towne was razed by Adrian or after peopled by the Saracens Surely if not before yet then this dutie was to ●ease and no collection to ●e made by those of Corinth and consequently no Lords day to be k●pt amongst them because no coll●ction in case collections for the ●aints as some do ga●her from this place were a sufficient argument to 〈◊〉 the Lords d●y 〈◊〉 ●y divine authority 〈…〉 us take the 〈…〉 observations as have beene made upon it by the Fathers Vpon the first day of the weeke i. e. as generally they conceive it on the Lords day I● locum And why on that Chrysostome gives this reason of it that so the very day might prompt them to be bountifull to their poore brethren as being that day whereon they had received such inestimable bounties at the hands of God in the resurrection of our Saviour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as that Father hath it What to be done on that day V●usquisque apud se reponat Let every man lay by himselfe saith the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He saith not saith S. Chrysostome let every man bring it to the Church And why 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for feare lest some might be ashamed at the smallnesse of their offering but let them lay it by saith he and adde unto it weeke by weeke that at my comming it may grow to a fit proportion That there be no gathering when I come but that the money may be ready to be sent away immediately upon my comming and being thus raised up by little and little they might not be so sensible thereof as if upon his comming to them it were to be collected all at once and upon the sudden Vt Paulatim reservantes non una hora gravari se putent In locum as S. Hierome hath it Now as it is most cleare that this makes nothing for the Lords day or the translation of the sabbath thereunto by any Apostolical precept so is it not so cleare that this was done upon the first day of the weeke but that some learned men have made doubt ther●of Calvin upon the place takes notice how S. Chrysostome expounds the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Apostle by primo sabbati the first day of the weeke as the English reades it but likes it not Cui ego non assentior as his phrase is conceiving rather this to be the meaning of S. Paul that on some sabbath day or other untill his comming every man should lay up somewhat towards the collection And in the second of his Institutes he affirmes expresly that the day destinate by Saint Paul to these Collections C●p. 8. ● 3● was the Sabbath day The like do Victorinus Strigelius Hunnius and Aretius Protestant Writers all note upon the place Singulis sabbatis saith Strigelius per singula sabbata so Aretius diebus sabbatorum saith Egidius Hunnius all rendring 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 on the Sabbath dayes More largely yet Hemingius who in his Comment on the place takes it indefinitely for any day in the week so they fixed on one Vult enim ut quilibet certum diem in septimana constituat in quo apud se seponat quod irrogaturus est in pauper●s Take which you will either of the Fathers or the Modernes and we shall find no Lords Day instituted by any
Apostolicall Mandate no Sabbath set on foot by them upon the first day of the weeke as some would have it much lesse that any such Ordinance should be henc● collected out of these words of the Apostle 11 Indeed it is not probable that hee who so opposed himselfe against the old Sabbath would erect a new This had not been to abrogate the ceremony but to change the day whereas hee laboured what he could to beat down all the difference of dayes and times which had been formerly observed In his Epistle to the Galatia●s written in Anno 59 he layes it home unto their charge that they oberued dayes and moneths Cap. 4 v. 10. and times and years and seemes a little to bewaile his own misfortune as if he had bestowed his labour in vain amongst them I know it is conceived by some that Saint Paul spake it of the observation of those dayes and times that had been used among the Gentiles and so had no relation to the Iewish Sabbath or any difference of times observed amongst them Saint Ambrose so conceived it and so did Saint Augustine In lo●um Dies observant qui dicunt crastino non est pro●iciscendum c. They observe dayes who say I will not goe abroad to morrow or begin any worke upon such a day because of some unfortunate aspect as Saint Ambrose hath it it seem● Saint A●gustine learnt it who in his ●19 Epistle directly falls upon the very same expression E●s inculpat qui dicunt non proficiscor quia posterus dies est aut quia l●na sic fertur vel proficiscar ut prospere cedat quia ita se habet positio syderum c. The like conceit he hath in his Ench●i●idi●n ad Laurentium cap. 79. But whatsoever S. Ambrose did Saint Augustine lived I am sure to correct his errour observing very rightly that his former doctrine could not consist with Saint Pauls purpose in that place which was to beat down that esteeme which the Iewes had amongst them of the Mosaicall Ordinances their New-moons and Sabbaths I shall report the place at large for the better cleering of the point Vulgatissimu● est Gentilium error nt vel in agendis rebus vel expectandis eventibus vitae ac negotiorum su●rum ab Astrologis Chalda●is notatos dies observent This was the ground whereon he built his former errour Then followeth the correction of it Fortass● tamen non ●pus est ut haec de Gentilium errore intelligamus ne intentionem ca●sae mark that quam ab exordio susceptam ad fi●em usque perducit ●ubit● in aliud temere detorquere velle videamur sed de his 〈◊〉 de quibus ●avendis ●um agere per t●tam Epistolam app●●et Nam Iudae iserviliter observant dies menses annos tempora in carnali observatione sabbati ne●meniae c. But yet perhaps saith hee it is not necessary that we should understand this of the Gentiles lest so we vary from the scope and purpose o● the Apostl● but rather of those men of the avoyding of whose Doctrines hee seemes to treat in all this Epistle which were the Iewes who in their carnall keeping of New-moones and Sabbaths did observe dayes and yeares Cap. 8. n. 33. and times as he here objecteth Compare this with Saint Hieromes preface to the Galathians and then the matter will be cleere that Saint Paul meant not this of any Heathenish but of the Iewish observation of dayes and times So in the Epistle to the Colossia●s writ in the six●teth yeare after Christs Nativity he layes it positively downe that the Sabbath was now abrogated with the other ceremonies which were to vanish at Christs comming Co●o●● 2. 16. Let no man judge you saith the Apostle in meat and drinke or in respect of an holy-day or of the New-moon or of the Sabbath dayes which are a shadow of things to come but the body is of Christ. In which the Sabbath is well matched with meats drinks new-mones and holy-dayes which were all temporary ordinances and to go off the stage at our Saviours entrance Now whereas some that would be thought great sticklers for the Sabbath conceive that this was spoken not of the weekly morall Sabbath as they call it which must be perpetuall but of the annuall ceremoniall Sabbaths which they acknowledge to be abrogated this new devise directly crosseth the whole current of the ancient Fathers who do apply this Text to the weekly Sabbath It is sufficient in this point to note the places The Reader may peruse them as leisure is and looke on Epiphan lib. 1. h●●res 33. n. 11. Ambrose upon this place Hieromes Epistle ad Algas qu. 10. Chrysost. hom 13 in Hebr. 7. August cont Iudaeos cap. 2. cont Faust Manich. l. 16. c. 28. I end this list with that of Hierome Praefat. in Gala● Apocal. 10. Nullus Apostoli ser●o est vel per Epistolam vel prae●entis in quo non laboret docere antiquae legis onera deposita omnia illa quae in typis imaginibus praecessere i. e. otium Sabbati circumcisionis injuriam Kalendarum trium per annum solennitatum recursus c. gratia Evangelii subrepente cessasse There is saith he no Sermon of the Apostles either delivered by Epistle or by word of mouth wherein he labours not to prove that all the burdens of the Law are now laid away that all those things which were before in types and figures namely the Sabbath Circumcision the New-moones and the three solemne Festivals did cease upon the preaching of the Gospell 12 And cease it did upon the preaching of the Gospell insensibly and by degrees as before wee fore we said not being afterwards observed as it had bin formerly or counted any necess●ry part of Gods publick worship Onely some use was made thereof for the enlargement of Gods Church by reason that the people had been accustomed to meet together on that day for the performance of religious spirituall duties This made it more regarded then it would have been especially in the Easterne parts of Greece and A sia where the Provinciall Iewes were somewhat thick dispersed and being a great accession to the Gospell could not so suddenly forsake their ancient customes Yet so that the first day of the weeke began to grow into some credit towards the ending of this Age especially after the finall desolation of Hi●rusalem and the Temple which hapned Anno 72 of Christs Nativity So that the religious observation of this day beginning in the Age of the Apostles no doubt but with their approbation and authoritie and since con●●nuing in the same respect for so many Ages may be very well accounted amongst those Apostolicall traditions which have been universally received in the Church of God For being it was the day which our Redeemer hono●●●d with his resurrection it easily might attain unto that esteeme as to be honoured by the
Christians with the publick meetings that so they might with greater comfort preserve and cherish the memoriall of so great a mercie in reference unto which the Worlds Creation seemed not so considerable By reason of which work wrought on it it came in time to be entituled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lords day Apocal 10. which attribute is first found in the Revelation writ by Saint Iohn about the 94 ye●re of our Saviours birth So long it was before wee finde the Church tooke notice of it by a proper name For I perswade my selfe that had that day been destm●te at that time to religious duties or honoured with the name of the Lords day when Paul preached at Troas or write to the Corinthi●ns which as before wee shewed was in the fifty ●eventh neither Saint Luke nor the Apostle had so passed it over and called it onely the first day of the weeke as they both have done And when it had this attribute affixed unto it it onely was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as before we said by reason of our Saviours resurrection performed upon it and that the Congregation might not be assembled as well on them as on the other For first it was not called the Lords Day exclusively but by way of eminencie in reference to the resurrection onely all other dayes being the Lords In Psal. 23. aswell as this Prima sabbati significat diem Dominicum quo Dominus resurrexit resurgendo isti seculo subvenit mu●dumque ipso die creavit qui ob excellentiam tanti miraculi propri● dies Dominica appellatur i.e. dies Domini quamvis omnes sunt Domini So Bruno Herbipolensis hath resoluted it And next it was not so designed for the publick meetings of the Church as if they might not be assembled as well on every day as this For as Saint Hierome hath determined In Gal. ● omnes dies aequales sunt nec per parasceven tantum Christum cruci●igi die Dominica resurgere sed semper sanctum resurrectionis esse diem semper ●um ca●rne vesci Dominica c. All dayes are equall in themselues as the Father tells us Christ was not crucified on the Friday onely nor did hee rise onely upon the Lords Day but that wee may make every day the holy-day of his resurrection and every day eat his blessed body in the Sacrament When therefore certain days were publickly assigned by Godly men for the assemblies of the Church this was done onely for their sakes qui magis seculo vacant quam Deo who had more minde unto the World then to him that made it and therefore either could not or rather would not every day assemble in the Church of God Vpon which ground as they made choice of this even in the Age of the Apostles for one because our Saviour rose that day from amongst the dead so chose they Friday for another by reason of our Saviours passi●n and Wednesday on the which he had beene betrayed the Saturday or ancient Sabbath being mean-while retained in the Eastern Churches Nay in the primitive times excepting in the heat of persecution they met together every day for the receiving of the Sacrament that being fortified with that viaticum they might with greater courage encounter death if they chanced to meet him So that the greatest honour which in this Age was given the first day of the week or Sunday is that about the close th●●of they did begin to honour it with the name or title of the Lords Day and made it one of those set dayes whereon the people met together for religious exercises Which their religious exercises when they were performed or if the times were such that their assemblies were prohibited and so none were performed at all it was not held unlawfull to apply themselues unto their ordinary labours as we shall see annon in the following Ages For whereas some have gathered from this Text of the Revelation from S. Ioh●● being in the sp●rit on the Lords Day as the phrase there is that the Lords Day is wholy to be spent in spirituall exercises that their conceit might probably have had some shew of likelihood had it been said by the Apostle that he had been in the spirit every Lords Day But being as it is a particular case it can make no rule unlesse it be that every man on the Lords Day should have dreames and visions and be inspired that day with the spirit of prophecie no more then if it had beene told us upon what day Saint Paul had beene rapt up into the third Heaven every man should upon that day expect the like celestiall raptures Adde here how it is thought by some that the Lords Day here mentioned is not to bee interpreted of the first d●y of the weeke 〈…〉 as wee use to take it but of the day of his last comming of the day of judgement wherein all flesh shall come together to receive their sentence which being called the Lords Day too in holy Scripture that so the spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord 1. Cor. 5. 5. S. Iohn might see it being rapt in spirit as if come already But touching this we will not meddle let them that owne it looke unto it the rather since S. Iohn hath generally beene expounded in the other sence by Aretas and Andra●as Caesariensis upon the place by Bede de rat temp c. 6. and by the suffrage of the Church the best expositour of Gods Word wherein this day hath constantly since the time of that Apostle beene honoured with that name above other dayes Which day how it was afterwards observed and how farre different it was thought from a Sabbath day the prosecution of this story will make cleare and evident CHAP. II. In what estate the Lords day stood from the death of the Apostles to the reigne of Constantine 1 Touching the orders setled by the Apostles for the Congregation 2 The Lords day and the Saturday both festivals and both alike observed in the East in Ignatius time 3 The Saturday not without great difficulty made a fasting day 4 The Controversie about keeping Easter and how much it conduceth to the present businesse 5 The feast of Easter not affixed to the Lords day without much opposition of the Easterne Churches 6 What Iustin Martyr and Dionysius of Corinth have left 〈◊〉 of the Lords day Clemens of Alexandria his dislike thereof 7 Vpon what grounds the Christians of the former times used to pray standing on the Lords day and the time of Pentecost 8 What is recorded by Tertullian of the Lords day and the assemblies of the Church 9 Origen as his master Clemens had done before dislikes set dayes for the assemblie 10 S. Cyprian what he tells us of the Lords day and of the reading of the Scriptures in S. Cyprians time 11 Of other holy dayes established in these three first ages and that they were observed as solemnely as the
Lords day was 12 The name of Sunday often used for the Lords day by the primitive Christians but the Sabbath never 1 WE shewed you in the former Chapter what ever doth occurre in the Acts and Monuments of the Apostles touching the Lords day and the Sabbath how that the one of them was abrogated as a part of the Law of Moses the other rising by degrees from the ruines of it not by authoritie divine for ought appeares but by authoritie of the Church As for the duties of that day they were most likely such as formerly had beene used in the Iewish Synagog●es reading the Law and Prophets openly to the Congregation and afterwards expounding part thereof as occasion was calling upon the Lord their God for the continuance of his mercies and singing Psalmes and Hymnes unto him as by way of thankfulnesse These the Apostles found in the Iewish Church and well approving of the same as they could not otherwise commended them unto the care of the disciples by them to be observed as often as they met together on what day soever First for the reading of the law In Ios. hom 15. Origen saith expresly that it was ordered so by the Apostles Iu●aicarum histooriarum libri traditi sunt ab Apostolis legendi in Ecclesiis as he there informes us To this was joyned in tract of time the reading of the holy Gospell and other Evangelicall writings it being ordered by S. Peter that S. Marks Gospell should be read in the Congregation Hist l. 2. 15. as Eusebius tells us and by S. Paul 1. Thes. ca. ul● v. 17. that his Epistle to the Thessalonians should be read unto all the holy brethren and also that to the Colossians to be read in the Church of the Laodiceans as that from Laodicea Ca ul● v. 16. in the Church of the Colossians By which example not onely all the writings of the Apostles but many of the writings of Apostolicall men were publickly read unto the people and for that purpose one appointed to exercise the ministerie of a Reader in the congregation So antient is the reading of the Scriptures in the Church of God To this by way of Comment or application was added as we finde by S. Pauls dir●ctions the use of prophecie or preaching 1 Cor. 14. ● 3. interpretation of the ●criptures to edifying and to exhortation and to comfort this exercise to be performed with the head uncovered 1. Co● 11. 4. as wel the Preacher as the hearer Every man praying or prophecying with his head covered dishonoureth his head as the Apostle hath informed us Where we have publicke prayers also for the Congregation the Priest to offer to the Lord the prayers and supplications of the people and they to say Amen unto those prayers which the Priest made for them These to conteine in them all things necessarie for the Church of God which are the subject of all supplications 1. Tim. 2. prayers intercessions and giving of thanks and to extend to all men also especially unto Kings and such as be in authoritie that under them we may be godly and quietly governed leading a peaceable life in all godlinesse and honestie For the performance of which last duties with the greater comfort it was disposed that Psalmes and Hymnes should be intermingled with the rest of the publicke service which comprehending whatsoever is most excellent in the booke of God and being so many notable formes of praise and prayer were chearfully and unanimously to be sung amongst them And thereupon S Paul reprehended those of Corinth 1. Cor. 14. 26. in that they joyn'd not with the assemblie but had their psalmes unto themselves Whereby it seemes that they had left the true use of psalmes which being so many acclamations exultations and holy provocations to give God the glory were to be sung together by the whole assemblie their singing at that time being little more then a melodious kinde of pronuntiation such as is commonly now used in singing of the ordinarie psalmes and prayers in Cathedrall Churches And so it stood till in the entrance of this age Ignatius Bishop of Antiochia one who was conversant with the Apostles brought in the use of singing alternatim course by course according as it still continues in our publicke Quires where one side answers to another some shew whereof is left in Parochiall Churches in which the Minister and the people ans●er one another in their severall turnes To him doth Socrates referre it Hist. li. 6. ● 8. and withall affirmes that he first learn't it of the Angels whom in a vision he had heard to sing the praise of God after such a manner 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as that Author hath it And where Theodoret doth referre it to Flavianus and Diodorus Priests of Antiochia Hist. l. 2 c. 24. during the bustlings of the Arian Hereticks In D●maso and Platina unto Damasus Pope of Rome Theodoret is to be interpreted of the restitution of this custome having beene left off and Platina of the bringing of it into the Westerne Churches For that it was in use in Ignatius time who suffered in the time of Trajan and therefore probablie began by him as is said by Socrates is evident by that which Plinie signified to the selfe same Trajan where he informes him of the Christians Quod soliti essent stato die ante lucem convenire carmenque Christo tanquam Deo dioere secum invicem c. Their greatest crime said he was this that at a certaine day but what that day was that he tells not they did meet together before day-light and there sing hymmes to Christ as unto a God one with another in their courses and after binde themselves together by a common Sacrament not unto any wicked or unjust attempt but to live orderly without committing robberie theft adulterie or the like offences 2 Now for the day there meant by Plinie it must be Saturday or Sunday if it were not both both of them being in those time● and in those parts where Pliny lived in especial honour as may be gathered from Ignatius who at that time flourished For demonstration of the which we must first take notice how that the world as then was very full of dangerous fancies and hereticall dotages whereby the Church was much disquieted and Gods worship hindred The Ebionites they stood hard for the Iewish Sabbath and would by all meane● have it celebrated as it had beene formerly observing yet the Lords day as the Christians did in honour of the resurrection of our Lord and Saviour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Eusebius tells His● l. 3 c. ● 3. The like saith Epipha●ius of them l. 1. Haeres 30. n. 2. And on the other side there was a sort of Hereticks in the Easter●e parts whereof see Irenaeus li. 1. ca. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. who thought that this world being corruptible could not be made but by a
unlesse some out of poore devotion did it secretly Which dispensation probablie occasioned the neglect thereof in the times succeeding the rather since those hereticks who formerly had denied the resurrection were now quite exterminated This circumstance we have considered the more at large as being the most especiall difference whereby the Sundayes service was distinguished from the weeke-dayes worship in these present times whereof we write And yet the difference was not such but that it was proper to the Lords day onely but if it were a badge of honour communicated unto more then forty other dayes of which more anon But being it was an Ecclesiasticall and occasionall custome the Church which first ordained it let it fall againe by the same authoritie 8 In the third Centurie the first we meete with is Tertullian who flourished in the very first beginnings of it by whom this day is called by three severall names For first he cals it Dies solis Sunday as commonly we now call it and saith that they did dedicate the same unto mirth and gladnesse not to devotion altogether Cap. 16. Diem solis laetitiae indulgemus in his Apologetick The same name is used by Iustin Martyr in the passages before remembred partly because being to write to an heathen Magistrate it had not beene so proper to call it by the name of the Lords day which name they knew not and partly that delivering the forme and substance of their service done upon that day they might the better quit themselues from being worshippers of the Sunne as the Gentiles thought For by their meetings on this day for religious exercises in greater numbers then on others in Africke and the West especially and by their use of turning towards the East when they made their prayers the world was sometimes so perswaded Inde suspic●o quod innotuerit nos ad Orientis regionem precari as he there informed us Whereby we may perceive of what great antiquitie that custome is which is retained in the Church of England of bowing kneeling and adoring towards the Easterne parts The second name by which Tertullian cals this day De Idolat c 14. is the eight day simply Ethnic is semel annuus dies quisquis festus est tibi octavo quoque die The third i● De 〈◊〉 mil. c. 3. Dies Dominicus or the Lords day which is frequent in him as Die Dominico jej●nium nefas duci●us we hold it utterly unlawful to fast the Lords day of which more hereafter For their performances in their publicke meetings he describes them thus Coimus in coetum congregati●nem c. Apol. c. 39. We come together into the assemblie or congregation to our common prayers that being banded as it were in a troope or Armie we may besiege God with our petitions To him such violence is exceeding gratefull It followeth Cogimur ad sacrarum lit commemorationem c. We meet to heare the holy Scriptures rehearsed unto us that so according to the qualitie of the times we may either be premonished or corrected by them Questionlesse by these holy speeches our faith is nourished our hopes erected our assurance setled and notwithstanding by inculcating the same we are the better stablished in our obedience to Gods precepts A litle after Praesident probati quique seniores c. Now at these generall meetings some Priests or Elders do preside which have attained unto that honour not by money but by the good report that they have gotten in the Church And if there be a poore-mans Boxe every one cast in somewhat menstrua die at least once a moneth according as they would and as they were able Thus he describes the forme of their publicke meetings but that such meetings were then used amongst them on the Sunday onely that he doth not say Nor can we learne by him or by Iustin Martyr who describes them also either how long those meetings lasted or wheth●r they assembled more then once a day or what they did after the meetings were dissolved But sure it is that their Assemblies held no longer then our Morning service that they met onely before noone for Iustin saith that when they met they used to receive the Sacrament and that the service being done every man went againe to his daily labours Of all these I shall speake hereafter In Cant. Sol. hom 30. Onely I note it out of Beza that hitherto the people used not to forbeare their labours but while they were assembled in the Congregation there being no such dutie enjoyned amongst them neither in the times of the Apostles nor after many yeares not till the Emperours had embraced the Gospell and therewith published their Edicts to enforce men to it But take his words at large for the more assurance Vt autem Christiani eo die à suis quotidianis laboribus abstiner●nt praeter idtemporis quod in coetu ponebatur idneque illis Apostolicis temporibus mandatum neque pri●s fuit observatum quam id à Christianis Imperatoribus ne quis a rerum sacrarum meditatione abstraharetur quidem non it a praecise observatum Which makes it manifest that the Lords day was not taken for a Sabbath day in these three first Ages But for Tertullian where I left note that I rendred seniores by Priests or Elders because I thinke his meaning was to render the Greeke Presbyter by the Latine senior For that he should there meane lay-elders as some men would have it is a thing impossible considering that he tels us in another place that they received the Sacrament at the hands of those that did preside in the assemblies De coron milit c. 3. Eucharistiae Sacramentum non de aliorum manu quam de Praesidentium sumimus and therefore sure they must be Priests that so presided 9 Proceed we next to Origen who flourished at the ●ame time also Hee being an Auditor of Clemens in the schooles of Alexandria became of his opinions too in many things and amongst others in dislike of those selected festivals which by the Church were set apart for Gods publicke service In Gen hom 10. Cont Cels. l. 8. Dicite mihi vos qui festis tantum diebus ad Eccles. convenitis coeteri dies non sunt festi non suntdies Domini Indaeor●● est dies certos raros observare solennes c. Christiani omni die carnes agni comedunt i.e. carnes verbi Dei quotidie sumūt Tel me saith he you that frequent the Church on the feast dayes onely are not all dayes festivall are not all the Lords It appertaines unto the Iews to observe dayes and festivals the Christians every day eate the flesh of the Lambe i.e. they every day do heare the Word of God And in another place Cent. 2 C. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. He truly keepes the festivals that performes his dutie praying continually and offering every day the unbloudy sacrifice in his prayers to God
French do delight in dancing Dalling●●●●ew ●f F● hath beene no small impediment unto the generall entertainment of the reformed Religion in that kingdome So great is their delight therein and with such eagernesse they pursue it when they are at leisure from their businesse that as it seemes they do neglect the Church on ●he holidayes that they may have the more time to ●ttend their dancing Vpon which ground it was Ap Boche●● and not that dancing was conceived to be no lawfull sport for the Lords day that in the Councell of Sens Ann. 1524. in that of Paris Ann. 1557. in those of Rhemes and Touts Ann. 1583. and finally in that of Bourges Ann. 1584. dancing on Sundayes and the other holy dayes hath beene prohibited prohibited indeed but practised by the people notwithstanding all their Canons But this concernes the French and th●ir Churches onely our Northerne Nations not being so bent upon the sport as to need restraint Onely the Polish Churches did conclude in the Synod of Petricow before remembred that Taverne-meetings drinking-matches dice cards and such like pastimes as also musicall instruments and dances should on the Lords day be forbidden But then it followeth with this clause Praesertim eo temporis momento quo concio cultus divinus in templo peragitur especially at that instant time when men should be at Church to heare the Sermon and attend Gods worship Which clearly shews that they prohibited dancing and the other pastimes then recited no otherwise then as they were a meanes to keepe men from Church Probably also they might be induced unto it by such French Protestants as came into that countrey with the Duke of Anjou when he was chosen King of Poland Ann. 1574 which was foure yeares before this Councell 11 As for the Churches of the East being now heavily oppressed with Turkish bondage we have not very much to say Yet by that little which wee finde thereof it seemes the Lords day keeps that honour which before it had and that the Saturday continues in the same regard wherein once it was both of them counted dayes of feasting and both retained for the assemblies of the Church First that they are both dayes of feasting or at the least exempted from their publicke Fasts appeares by that which is related by Christopher Angelo a Graecian whom I knew in Oxford De institu● Gra●c c. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that on the Saturday and Sunday which wee call the Lord day they do both eat oile and drinke wine even in Lent it selfe whereas on other dayes they feed on pulse and drink onely water Then that they both are still retained for the assemblies of the Church Id. c. 17. with other Holy-dayes hee tells us in another place where it is said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. that for the Lords day and the Saturday and the other Festivals they use to goe unto the Church on the Eve before and almost at midnight where they continue till the breaking up of the Congregation For the Egyptian Christians or Cophties as we call them now Travels l 2. it is related by G. Sandys that on the Saturday presently after midnight they repaire unto their Ch●rches where they remayne well nigh untill Sunday at noone during which time they neither sit nor kneele but support themselues on Crutches and that they sing over the most part of Davids Psalm●s at every meeting with divers parcels of the old new Testament He hath informed us also of the Armenians another sort of Easterne Christians that comming into the place of the Assembly on Sunday ● the afternoon he found one sitting in the middest of the Congregation in habit not differing from the rest reading on a Bible in the Chaldaean tongue that annon after came the Bishop in an hood or vest of black with a staffe in his hand that first he prayed and then sung certaine Psalmes assisted by two or three after all of them ●inging joyntly at interims praying to themselues the Bishop all this while with his hands erected and face towards the Altar That service being ended they all kissed his hand and bestowed their Almes he laying his other hand on their heads and blessing them finally that bidding the succeeding Fasts Festivals he dismissed the assembly The Muscovites being neer unto the Greeks once within the jurisdiction of the Patriark of Constantinople partake much also of their customes They count it an unlawfull thing to fast the Saturday Gagvinus de M●scovit which shewes that somewhat is remayning of that esteeme in which once they had it and for the Holydayes Sundayes aswell as any other they doe not hold themselues so strictly to them but that the Citizens and Artificers im●ediatly after Divine Service betake themselues unto their labour● and domesticke businesses And this most probably is the custome also of all the Churches of the East as holding a Communion with the Church of Greece though not subordinate thereunto from the which Church of Greece the faith was first derived unto these Muscovites as before was said and with the faith the observation of this day and all the other holydayes at that time in u●e As for the Country people as Gaguinus tells us they seldome celebrate or ob●erve any day at all at lest not with that care and order as they ought to doe saying that it belongs onely unto Lords and Gentlemen to keepe Holydayes Last of all for the Habassines or Ethiopian Christians though further off in situation they come as neere unto the fashions of the ancient Graecians Of them wee are enformed by Master Br●rewood out of Damiani Enquiries c. 23. that they reverence the Sabbath keeping it solemne equally with the Lords day Emend Temp. lib. 7. Scaliger tells us that they call both of them by the name of Sabbaths the one the first the other the later Sabbath or in their owne language the one Sanbath Sachristos that is Christs Sabbath the other Sanbath Iudi or the Iewes Sabbath Bellarmine thinks that they derived this observation of the Saturday or Sabbath from the Constitutions ascribed to Clemens De Script E● c● in Clem. which indeed frequently doe presse the observation of that day with no lesse fervour then the Sunday Of this we have already spoken And to this Bellarmine was induced the rather because that in this Country they had found autority and were esteemed as Apostolicall Audio Ethiopes his Constitutionibus uti ut vere Apostolicis ea de causa in erroribus versari circa cultum Sabbati diei Dominicae But if this be an errour in them they have many partners and those of ancient standing in the Church of God as before was shewne As for their service on the Sunday they celebrate the Sacrament in the morning early except it be in the time of Lent when fasting all the day they discharge that duty in the Evening and then fall to
c. as their bounden dutie doth require therefore to call men to remembrance of their dutie and to helpe their infinnitie it hath beene wholesomely provided that there should be some certaine times and dayes appointed wherein the Christians should cease from all kind of labour and apply themselves only and wholly unto the aforesaid holy works properly pertaining to true Religion c. Which workes as they may well be called Gods Service so the times especially appointed for the same are called holy dayes Not for the matter or the nature either of the time or day c. for so all dayes and times are of like holinesse but for the nature and condition of such holy workes c. whereunto such times and dayes are sanctified and hallowed that is to say separated from all prophane uses and dedicated not unto any Saint or Creature but onely unto God and his true worship Neither is it to bée thought that there is any certaine time or definite number of dayes prescribed in holy Scripture but the appointment both of the time and also of the number of dayes is left by the authoritie of Gods Word unto the libertie of Christs Church to bée determined and assigned orderly in every Countrey by the discretion of the Rulers and Ministers thereof as they shall iudge most expedient to the true setting forth of Gods glorie and edification of their people Nor is it to be thought that all this Preamble was made in reference to the holy dayes or Saints dayes onely whose being left to the authoritie of the Church was never questioned but in relation to the Lords Day also as by the Act it selfe doth at full appeare for so it followeth in the Act Bee it therefore enacted c. That all the dayes hereafter mentioned shall bee kept and commanded to be kept holy dayes and non● other that is to say all Sundayes in the yeere the Feasts of the Circumcision of our Lord Iesus Christ of the Epiphanie of the Purification with all the rest now kept and there named particularly and that none other day shall be kept and commanded to bee kept holy day and to abstaine from lawfull bodily labour Nay which is more there is a further Clause in the selfe-same Act which plainly shewes that they had no such thought of the Lords day as that it was a Sabbath or so to bee ob●erved as the Sabbath was and therefore did provide it and enact by the authoritie aforesaid That it shall be lawfull to every Husbandman Labourer Fisherman and to all and every other person and persons of what estate degree or condition he or they be upon the holy dayes aforesaid in Harvest or at any other times in the yeere when necessitie shall so require to labour ●ide fish or worke any kind of worke at their free-wills and pleasure any thing in this Act unto the contrary notwithstanding This is the totall of this Act which if examined well as it ought to bee will yeeld us all those propositions or conclusions before remembred which we collected from the writings of those three particular Martyrs Nor is it to be said that it is repealed and of no authoritie Repealed indeed it was in the first yeere of Queene Mary and stood repealed in Law though otherwise in use and practice all the long Reigne of Queene El●zabeth but in the first yeere of King Iames was revived againe Note here that in the selfe-same Parliament the Common Prayer-Book● now in use being reviewed by many godly Prelates was confirmed and authorized wherein so much of the said Act as doth concerne the names and number of the holy dayes is expressed and as it were incorporate into the same Which makes it manifest that in the purpose of the Church the Sunday was no otherwise esteemed of than another holy day 3 This Statute as before wee said was made in anno 5. 6. of Edward the sixt And in that very Parliament as before wee said the Common Prayer-Booke was confirmed which still remaines in use amongst us save that there was an alteration or addition of certaine Lessons to be used on every Sunday of the yéere 1. Eliz. cap. 2. the forme of the Letanie altered and corrected and two Sentences added in the deliverie of the Sacrament unto the Communicants Now in this Common Prayer-Booke thus confirmed in the fift and sixt yeeres of King Edward the sixt Cap. 1. it pleased those that had the altering and revising of it that the Commandements which were not in the former Liturgie allowed of in the second of the said Kings Reigne should now be added and accounted as a part of this the people being willed to say after the end of each Commandement Lord hav● mercie upon us and incline our hearts to keepe this Law Which being used accordingly as well upon the hearing of the fourth Commandement as of any others hath given some men a colour to perswade themselves that certainely it was the meaning of the Church that wee should keepe a Sabbath still though the day be changed and that wee are obliged to doe it by the fourth Commandement Assuredly they who so conclude conclude against the meaning of the Booke and of them that made it Against the meaning of the Booke for if the Booke had so intended that that ej●culation was to be understood in a literall sence according as the words are layd downe in terminis it then must be the meaning of the Booke that wee should pray unto the Lord to keepe the Sabbath of the Iewes even the seventh day precisely from the Worlds Creation and keepe it in the selfe-same manner as the Iewes once did which no man I presume will say was the meaning of it For of the changing of the day there is nothing said nor nothing intimated but the whole Law laid downe in terminis as the Lord delivered it Against the meaning also of them that made it for they that made the Booke and reviewed it afterwards and caused these Passages and Prayers to be added to it Cranmer Archbishop of Canterbury Ridley Bishop of London and certaine others of the Prelates then and there assembled were the same men by whose advice and counsaile the Act before remembred about keeping holy dayes was in the selfe-same Parliament drawne up and perfected And is it possible wee should conceive so ill of those reverend persons as that they would erect a Sabbath in the one Act and beat it downe so totally in the other to tell us in the Service-Booke that wee are bound to keepe a Sabbath and that the time and day of Gods publike worship is either pointed out in the fourth Commandement or otherwise ordained by D●vine Authoritie and in the selfe-same breath to tell us that there is neither certaine time nor definite number of dayes prescribed in Scripture but all this left unto the libertie of the Church I say as formerly I said it is impossible wee should thinke so ill of such
what is appertaining to the law of Nature Now it pertaines unto the law of Nature that for the times appointed to Gods publicke worship we wholy sequester our selves from all worldly businesses Id. ib. naturale est quod dum Deum colimus ab ali●s abstineamus as Tostatus hath it and then the meaning of the Homilie will be briefely this that for those times which are appointed by the Church for the assembly of Gods people we should lay by ou● daily businesse all worldly thoughts wholy give our selves to the heavenly exercises of Gods true Religion and Service But to encounter them at their own weapon it is expressely said in the Act of Parliament about keeping holy dayes that on the dayes and times appointed as well the other holy dayes as the Sunday Christians should cease from all kinde of labour and only wholy apply themselves to such holy workes as appertaine to true Religion the very same with that delivered in the Hamilie If wholy in the Homilie must bee applied unto the day then it must bee there and then the Saints dayes and the other holy dayes must bee wholy spene in religious exercises When once we see them doe the one wee will bethinke our selves of doing the other As for the residue of that Homilie which consists in popular reproofes and exhor●ations that concernes not us in reference to the point in hand The Homilies those parts thereof especially which tend to the correction of manners and reformation of abuses were made agreeable to those times wherein they were first published If in those times men made no difference between the working day holy day but kept their faires and markets and bought and sold and rowed and f●rried and drove and carryed and rode and iourneyed and did their other businesse on the Sunday as well as on the other dayes when there was no such need but that they might have tarryed longer they were the more to blame no doubt in trespassing so wilfully against the Canons of the Church Acts of Parliament which had restrained many of the things there specified The Homilie did well to reprove them for it If on the other side they spent the day in ungodlinesse and filthinesse in gluttony and drunkennesse and such like other crying sinnes as are there particularly noted the Prelates of the Church had very ill discharged their duetie had they not tooke some course to have told them of it But what is that to us who doe not spend the Lords day in such filthy steshlinesse what ever one malicious Sycophant hath affirmed therein or what is that to dancing shooting leaping vau●ting may-games and meetings of good neighbourhood or any other recreation not by law prohibited being no such ungodlie and filthie Acts as are therein mentioned 7 Thus upon due search made and full examination of all parties we finde no Lords day Sabbath in the booke of Homilies no nor in any writings of particular men in more then 33 yeeres after the Homilies were published I find indeed that in the yeere 1580 the Magistrates of the Cittie of London obtained from Queene Elizabeth that playes and enterludes should no more bee acted on the Sabbath day within the liberties of their Cittie As also that in 83. on the 14 of Ianuary being Sunday many were hurt and eight killed outright by the suddaine falling of the Scaffolds in Paris-garden This shewes that Enterludes and Beare-baitings were then permitted on the Sunday and so they were a long time after though not within the Cittie of London which certainely had not beene suffered had it beene then conceived that Sunday was to bee accounted for a Sabbath But in the yeere 1595 some of that faction which before had laboured with small profit to overthrow the Hierarchy and government of this Church of England now set themselves on worke to ruinate all the orders of it to bea●e downe at one blow all dayes and times which by the wisdome and authority of the Church had beene appointed for Gods service and in the steed thereof to erect a Sabbath of their owne devising These Sabbath speculations and presbyterian directions as mine Authour calls them they had beene hammering more then ten yeeres before though they produced them not till now and in producing of them now they introduced saith hee a more then either Iewish or Popish superstition into the Land Rogers in preface to the Articles to the no small blemish of our Christian profession and scandall of the true servants of God and therewith doctrine most erroneous dangerous and Antichristian Of these the principall was one Doctor Bound who published first his Sabbath Doctrines Anno 1595 and after with additions to it and enlargements of it Anno 1606. Wherein he hath affirmed in generall over all the booke that the Commandement of sanctifying every seaventh day as in the Mosaicall decalogue is naturall morall and perpetuall that where all other things in the Iewish Church were so changed that they were cleane taken away as the Priesthood the sacrifices and the Sacraments this day the Sabbath was so chāged that it still remaineth p. 91 that there is great reason why we Christians should take our selves as straitly bound to rest upon the Lords day as the Iewes were upō their Sabbath for being one of the morall Commandments it bindeth us as well as them being all of equall authority p. 247. And for the Rest upon this Day that it must be a notable and singular Rest a most carefull exact and precise Rest after another manner than men were accustomed p. 124. Then for particulars no buying of Victuals Flesh or Fish Bread or Drinke 158. no Carriers to travaile on that Day 160. nor Parkmen or Drovers 162. Schollers not to studie the liberall Arts nor Lawyers to consult the Case and peruse mens Evidences 163. Sergeants Apparitours and Sumners to be restrained from executing their Offices 164. Iustices not to examine Causes for preservation of the Peace 166. no man to travaile on that Day 192. that Ringing of more Bells than one that Day is not to be justified p. 202. No solemne Feasts to be made on it 206. nor Wedding Dinners 209. with a permission notwithstanding to Lords Knights and Gentlemen hee hoped to finde good welcome for this dispensation p. 211. all lawfull Pleasures and honest Recreations as Shooting Fencing Bowling but Bowling by his leave is no lawfull pleasure for all sorts of people which are permitted on other dayes were on this Day to be forborne 202. no man to speake or talke of Pleasures p. 272. or any other worldly matter 275. Most Magisterially determined indeed more like a Iewish Rabbin than a Christian Doctor Yet Iewish and Rabbinicall though his Doctrine were it carried a faire face and shew of Pietie at the least in the opinion of the common people and such who stood not to examine the true grounds thereof but tooke it up on the appearance such who did judge
restraint from labour Nay of the two it is more ancient For in his time Tertullian tells us that they did diem solis laetitiae indulgere devote the Sunday partly unto Mirth and Recreation not to Devotion altogether when in an hundred yeeres after Tertullians time there was no Law or Constitution to restraine men from labour on this day in the Christian Church 14 Yet did not his most excellent Majestie finde such obedience in some men and such as should have beene examples unto their flockes as his most Christian purpose did deserve there being some so setled in the opinion of a Sabbath day a day not heard of in the Church of Christ 40 yeeres agoe that they chose rather to deprive the Church of their paines and ministerie then yeeld unto his Majesties most iust Commands For whose sakes specially next to my duetie unto God my Soveraigne and the Church my Mother I have employed my time and studies to compose this Historie that they may see therein in briefe the practise of Gods Church in the times before them and frame themselves to doe thereafter casting aside those errours in the which they are and walking in the way which they ought to travaile Which way when all is done will bee via Regia the Kings high way as that which is most safe and of best assurance because most travailed by Gods people Our private pathes doe leade us often into errour and sometimes also into danger And therefore I beseech all those who have offended in that kinde to lay aside their passions and their private interests if any are that way misguided as also not to shut their eyes against those truths which are presented to them for their information that so the King may have the honour of their due obedience the Church the comfort of their labours and conformable ministery For to what purpose should they hope to be ennobled for their sufferings in so bad a cause that neither hath the doctrine of the Scripture to authorize it or practise of the Church of God the best Expositour of the Scripture to confirme and countenance it or to bee counted constant to their first Conclusions having such weake and dangerous premisses to support the same since constan●y not rightly grounded is at best but obstinacy and many times doth end in heresie Once againe therefore I exhort them even in Gods name whose Ministers they are and unto whom they are to give up an account of their imploiment and in the Kings Name whom as Gods deputie they are bound to obey not for wrath only but for conscience sake and in the Churches name whose peace they are to studie above all things else and their owne names lastly whom it most concernes that they desist and goe not forwards in this disobedience l●st a worse mischiefe fall upon them For my part I have done my best so farre to give them satisfaction in the present point so farre forth as the nature of an Historie would permit as they might thinke it no disparagement to alter their opinions and desert their errors and change their resolutions since in so doing they shall conforme themselves unto the practise of Gods Church in all times and Ages The greatest victorie which a man can get is to subdue himselfe and triumph over sinne and errour I end De Civit. Dei I. 22. c. 30. as I began in S. Augustins language Q●ibus hoc nimium vel quibus parum est mihi ignoscant quibus satis est non mihi sed Demino m●cum congratulantes gratias agant Let such as shall conceive this Treatise to bee too little or too much excuse my weakenesse And as for those whom it may satisfie in the smallest measure let them not unto mee but to God with mee ascribe all the honour to whom belongs all praise and glory even for ever more Pibrac Quadr. 5. Ne va disant ma main a faict cest oeuure Ou ma vertu ce bel oeuure a parfaict Mais dis ainsi Dieu par moy l'oeuure a faict Dieu est l'Autheur du pe● de bien que i'oeuure Say not my hand this Worke to end hath brought Nor this my vertue hath attain'd unto Say rather thus this God by mee hath wrought God's Author of the little good I doe FINIS
could that Adam ever kept the Sabbath Doceant Adamum sabbatizasse as hee there hath it Which doubtlesse neither of them would have done considering with whom the one disputed and against whom the other wrote had they not beene very well assured of what they said The like may be affirmed both of Eusebius De Praepar E. v●●g l. 7. c. 8. and Epipha●ius two most learned Fathers Whereof the first maintayning positively that the Sabbath was first given by Moses makes Ad●m one of those which neither troubled himselfe with Circumcision 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nor any of the Lawes of Moses Adv haer●●●s l. 1. ● 5. The other reckoneth him amongst those also who lived according to that faith which when he wrote was generally received in the Christian Church Therefore no Sabbath kept by our Father Adam 6 But whatsoever Adam did Abel I hope was more observant of this duty Thus some have said indeed but on no authority It is true the Scriptures tell us that he offered Sacrifice but yet the Scriptures do not tell us that in his Sacrifices he had more regard unto the seventh day then to any other To offer Sacrifice he might learne of Adam or of naturall reason which doth sufficiently instruct us that we ought all to make some publick testimony of our subjection to the Lord. But neither Adam did observe the Sabbath nor could nature teach it as before is shewne And howsoever some Moderne Writers have conjectured and conjectured onely that Abel in his Sacrifices might have respect unto the Sabbath yet those whom we may better trust have affirm'd the contrary For Iustin Martyr disputing against Trypho brings Abel in for an example that neither Circumcision nor the Sabbath the two great glories of the Iewes were to be counted necessary For if they were saith hee God had not had so much regard to Abels Sacrifice being as hee was uncircumcised and then he add 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that though he was no Sabbath-keeper yet was he acceptable unto God And ●o Tertullian that God accepted of his Sacrifice Adv. Iudae●● though he were neither circumcised nor kept the Sabbath Abelem offerentem sacrificia incircumcisum neque sabbatizantem laudavit Deus accepta ferens qu● in simplicitate cordis offerebat Yea and hee brings him also into his challenge Doceant Abel hostiam Deo sanctam offerentem Sabbati religionem placuisse which is directly contrary to that which is conjectured by some Moderne Writers Adv. haeres l 1 n. 5. So Epiphani●s also makes him one of those who lived according to the tendries of the Christian Faith The like hee also saith of Seth whom God raised up instead of Abel to our Father Adam Therefore no Sabbath kept by either 7 It is conceived of Abel that hee was killed in the one hundred and thirtieth yeare of the Worlds Creation of E●os Seths sonne that he was borne Anno two hundred thirty six And till that time there was no Sabbath But then as some conceive the Sabbath day began to be had in honour because it is set downe in Scripture that then began men to call upon the Name of the Lord. Gen. 4. A●●al Anno 236. n. 4. That is as Torniellus descants upon the place then were spirituall Congregations instituted as wee may probably conjecture certaine set formes of Prayers and Hymnes devised to set forth Gods glory certaine set times and places also set apart for those pious duties praecipue diebus Sabbati especially the Sabbath dayes in which most likely they began to abstaine from all servile works in honour of that God whom they well knew had rested on the seventh day from all his labours Sure Torniellus minde was upon his Mattins when he made this Paraphrase Hee had not else gathered a Sabbath from this Text considering that not long before hee had thus concluded That sanctifying of the Sabbath here on earth was not in use V. ● 3. of this Chapter untill the Law was given by Moses But certainly this Text will beare no such matter were it considered as it ought The Ch●ldee P●raphrase thus reades it Tunc in diebus ejus inceperunt filii hominum● Q●●ebrai● i●●n G●● ut non orarent in nomine Domini which is quite contrary to the English Our Bibles of the last Translation in the margin thus then began men to call themselues by the name of the Lord and generally the Iewes as Saint Hierome tels us doe thus glosse upon it Tunc primum in nomine Domini in similitudine eius fabricata sunt idola that then began men to set up Idols both in the name and after the similitude of God Ainsworth in his Translation thus Then began men prophanely to call upon the Name of the Lord who tels us also in his Annotations on this Text out of Rabbi Maimony that in these dayes Idolatry tooke its first beginning and the people worshipped the starres and all the host of Heaven so generally that at the last there were few left which acknowledged God as Enoch Methuselah Noah Sem and Heber So that wee see not any thing in this Text sufficient to produce a Sabbath But take it as the English reades it which is agreeable to the Greeke and vulgar Latine and may well stand with the originall yet will the cause be little better For men might call upon Gods Name and have their publick meetings set formes of Prayer without relation to the seventh day more then any other De P●aeparat Evang l 7 8. As for this E●os Eusebius proposeth him unto us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the first man commended in the Scripture for his love to God that we by his example might learn to call upon Gods Name with assured hope But yet withall he tels us of him that he observed not any of those Ordinances which Moses taught unto the Iewes whereof the Sabbath was the chiefe as formerly we observed in Adam And Epiphanius rankes him amongst those Fathers who lived according to the rules of the Christian Church Therfore no Sabbath kept by Enos 8 We will next looke on Enoch who as the Text tels us walked with God and therefore doubt wee not but he would carefully have kept the Sabbath had it been required But of him also the Fathers generally say the same as they did before of others For Iustin Martyr not onely makes him one of those which without Circumcision and the Sabbath had been approved of by the Lord but pleads the matter more exactly The substance of his plea is this that if the Sabbath or circumcision were to be counted necessary to eternall life wee must needs fall upon this absurd opinion Dial. cum Tryph●●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that the same God whom the Iewes worshipped was not the God of Enoch and of other men about those times which neither had been Circumcised 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nor
in the sixteenth of Exod. v. 27. And therefore stood the more in need not onely of a watch-word or Memento even in the very front of the Law it selfe but of some sharper course to stirre up their memory Therefore this execution was the more reqvisite at this instant aswell because the Iewes by reason of their long abode in a place of continual servile toyle could not be suddainly drawne unto contrary offices without some strong impression of terrour as also because nothing is ●ore needfull then with extremity to punish the first transgressours of those Lawes that do require a more exact observation for the times to come What time this Tragedy was acted is not known for certain By Torniellus it is placed in the yeare 2548. of the Worlds Creation which was some foure yeares after the Law was given More then this is not extant in the Scripture touching the keeping of the Sabbath all the life of Moses What was done after we shall see in the land of Promise 3 In the mean time it is most proper to this place to take a little notice of those severall duties wherein the sanctifying of the Sabbath did consist especially that we may know the better what we are to looke for at the peoples hands when wee bring them thither Two things the Lord commanded in his holy Scripture that concern the Sabbath the keeping holy of the same one in relation to the people the other in reference to the Priest In re●erence to the people he comma●ded onely rest from labour that they should doe no manner of worke and that 's contained expresly in the Law it selfe In reference to the Priest Numb 28. he commanded sacrifice that on the Sabbath day over and above the daily sacrifice there should be offered to the Lord two Lambes of an yeare old without blemish one in the morning and the other in the evening as also to prepare first and then place the Shewbread being twelue loaves one for every Tribe continually before the Lorde●very Sabbath day These severall references so divided the Priest might do his part without the people and contrary the people doe their part without the Priest Of any Sabbath duties which were to be performed betweene them wherein the Priest and people were to joyne together the Scriptures are directly silent As for these severall duties that of the Priest the Shew-bread and the sacrifice was not in practice till they came to the Land of Canaan and then though the Priest offered for the people yet he did not with them So that for forty yeares together all the life of Moses the sanctifying of the Sabbath did consist onely for ought we finde in a bodily rest a ceasing from the works of their weekly labours and afterwards in that and in the sacrifices which the Priest made for them Which as they seeme to be the greater of the two so was there nothing at all therein in which the people were to doe no not so much except some few as to be spectatours the sacrifices being offered onely in the Tabernacle as in the Temple after when they had a Temple the people being scattered over all th● Country in their Townes and Villages Of any reading of the Law or exposition of the same unto the people or publicke forme of prayers to be presented to the Lord in the Congregation wee finde no footstep now nor a long time after None in the time of Moses for hee had hardly perfected the Law before his death the booke of De●teronomy being dedicated by him a very little before God tooke him None in a long time after no not till Nehemiahs dayes as wee shall see hereafter in that place and time The resting of the people was the thing commanded in imitation of Gods rest when his works were finished that as hee rested from the works which hee had created so they might al●o rest in memoriall of it But the employment of this rest to parti●ular purposes either of contemplation or dev●tion than not declared unto us in the Word of God but left at large either unto the libertie of the people or the Authoritie of the Church Now what the people did how they imployed this rest of theirs that Philo tels us in his third Booke of the life of Moses Moses saith hee ordained that since the World was finished on the seventh day all of his Common-wealth following therein the course of nature should spend the seventh day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Festivall delights resting therein from all their works yet not to spend it as some do in laughter childish sports or as the Romans did their time of publick Feastings in beholding the activity either of the Iester or common Dancers but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and a little after 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the study of true philosophy and in the contemplation of the workes of nature And in another place De Dec●log He did command saith he that as in other things so in this also they should imitate the Lord their God working six dayes and resting on the seventh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and spending it in meditation of the works of nature as before is said And not so only but that upon that day they should consider of their actions in the weeke before if happily they had offended against the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. that so they might correct what was done amisse and be the better armed to offend no more So in his booke de mundi opificio he affirmes the ●ame that they implyed that day in divine Philosophy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even for the bettering of their manners and reckoning with their consciences That thus the Iewes did spend the day or some part thereof is very probable and wee may take it well enough upon Philo's word but that they spent it thus by the direction or command of Moses is not so easily proved as it is affirmed though for my part I willingly durst assent unto it For be it Moses so appointed yet this concernes onely the behaviour of particular persons and reflects nothing upon the publick duties in the Congregation 4 It 's true that Philo tels us in a booke not extant how Moses also did ordaine these publick meetings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ap. Euseb. Praepar l. 8 7. What then did Moses order to be done on the Sabbath day He did appoint saith he that we should meet all in some place together and there set down with modesty and a generall silence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to heare the Law that none plead ignorance of the same Which custome we continue sti●l harkening with wonderfull silence to the Law of God unlesse perhaps we give some joyfull acclamation at the hearing of it some of the Priests if any present or otherwise some of the Elders reading the Law and then expounding it unto us till the night come on Which done the people are dismissed full of divine
Which whosoever doth and is upright in thought word and deed adhering alwayes unto God our naturall Lord 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Every day is to him a Lords day It seemes too that he had his desire in part it being noted by the Mandeburgians that every day there were assemblies in Alexandria where he lived for hearing of the word of God Et de collectis quotidie celebratis in quibus praedicatum sit verbum Dei Hom. 9. in Isa. significare videtur as they note it from him Indeed the Proem to his severall Homilies seeme to intimate that if they met not every day to heare his Lectures they met very often But being a learned man and one that had a good conceit of his owne abilities he grew offended that there was not as great resort of people every day to heare him as upon the Festivals Of Sunday there is little doubt but that it was observed amongst them and so was Saturday also as we shall see hereafter out of Athanasius Of Wednesday and Friday it is positively said by S●crates Hist. l. 5 c. 21. that on them both the Scriptures were read openly and afterwards expounded by the Doctors of the Church and all things done appointed by the publicke Liturgie save that they did not use to receive the sacrament 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And this saith he was the old in Alexandria which he confirmes by the practi●e of Origen who was accustomed as he tells us to preach upon these dayes to the Congreg●●ion Tertullian too takes speciall notice of these two dayes whereof consult him in his booke adv Psychicos 10 About the middle of this Centurie did Saint Cyprian live another Af●ican and he hath left us somewhat although not much which concernes this busines Aurelius Lib. 2. Epist. 5. one of excellent part● was made a Reader in the Church I thinke of Carthage which being very welcome newes to the common people Saint Cyprian makes it ●●wne unto them and withall lets them understand that Sunday was the day appointed for him to begin his Ministerie Et quoni●m semper gaudium properat nec mera ferre potest laetitia dominico legit So that as Sunday was a day which they used to meet on so reading of the Scripture was a speciall part of the Sundayes exercise Not as an exercise to spend the time when one doth wait for anothers comming till the assemblie be complete and that without or choice or stint appointed by determinate order as is now used both in the French and Belgicke Churches for what need such an eminent man as Aurelius was be taken out with so much expectation to exercise the Clarks or the Sextons dutie But it was used amongst them then as a chiefe portion of the service which they did to God in hearkening reverently unto his voice It being so ordered in the Church that the whole Bible or the greatest part thereof Preface to 〈◊〉 Common prayer should be read over once a yeare And this that so the Ministers of the congregation by often reading and meditation of Gods Word be stirred up to godlinesse themselves and be the more able to● exhort other by wholesome doctrine and to conf●te them that were Adversaries to the truth as that the people by daily hearing of the Scriptures should profit more and more in the knowledge of God and be the more inflamed with the love of his true Religion Nor for the duties of the people on this day in the Congregation as they used formerly to heare the Word and receive the Sacraments and to powre forth their soules to God in affectionate prayers Decret l. 5. C 7. so much about these times viz. in Ann. 237. it had beene appointed by Pope Fabian that every man and woman should on the Lords day bring a quantitie of bread and wine first to be offered on the Altar and then distributed in the Sacrament A thing that had beene done before as of common course but now exacted as a duty for the neglect whereof Saint Cyprian chides with a rich widdow of his time who neither brought her offering nor otherwise gave any thing to the poore-mans Boxe and therefore did not keepe the Lords day D● pietat Eleemos as she should have done Locuples dives dominicum celebrarete credis quae Corbonam omnino non respicis quae in Dominicum here he meanes the Church sine sacrificio venis quae partem de sacrificio quod pauper obtulit sumis In after times this custome went away by little and little instead of which it was appointed by the Church and retained in ours that Bread and Wine for the Communion shall bee provided by the Churchwardens at the charge of the Parish I should now leave Saint Cyprian here V. l. 3 Epi 8. but that I am to tell you first that he conceives the Lords day to have beene prefigured in the eight day destinate to circum●ision Which being but a private opinion of his owne I rather shall referre the Reader unto the place then repeate the words And this is all this Age affords me in the present search 11 For other holy dayes by the Church for Gods publicke service those three Centuries precedent besides the Lords day or the Sunday which came every weeke Origen names the Good Friday as we call it now Cont. Cels. l 8. the Parasceve as he cals it there the feast of Easter and of Pente●ost Of Easter we have spoke already For Pentecost or Whitsontide as it began with the Apostles so it continues till this present but not in that solemnitie which before it had For antiently not that day onely which wee call Whitsunday or Pentecost 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but all the fiftie dayes from Easter forwards were accounted holy and solemnized with no lesse observation then the sundayes were no kneeling on the one nor upon the other no fasting on the one nor upon the other Of which dayes that of the Ascention or Holy-Thursday being one became in little time to be more highly reckoned of then all the rest as we shall prove hereafter out of Saint Austin But for these 50. dayes aforesaid De Coron 〈◊〉 c● 3. Tertullian tels us of them thus Die Dominico jejunium nefas ducimus vel de geniculis adorare Eadem immunitate a die Pasehae in Pente●osten gaudemus which makes both alike Which words if any thinke too short to reach the point he tels us in another place that all the Festivals of the Gentiles contained not so many dayes as did that one De Id● c. 14. Excerpe singulas solennitates nationum in ordinem texe Pentecosten implere non poterunt The like he hath also in his booke adv Psychicos the like Saint Hierom. ad Lucinum the like Saint Ambrose or Maximus Taurinens which of the two soever it was that made those Sermons Serm. 60. 61. In which last it is said expresly of those fifty daies that
libertie not to be tyed to dayes and times in matters which concerne Gods service and that the Apostles made it manifest by their example Singulis diebus vel quocunque die That every day or any day may by the Church be set apart for religious exercises 〈◊〉 qu. 103. §. 2. ●nd as for Vrsine he makes this difference betweene the Lords day and the Sabbath that it was utterly unlawfull to the Iewes either to neglect or change the Sabbath without expresse Commandement from God himselfe as being a ceremoniall part of divine worship but for the Christian Church that may designe the first or second or any other day to Gods publicke service Eccl●sia vero Christiana primum vel al●um diem trib●it ●inisterio salva s●a libertate sine opinione cultus vel necessitatis 〈◊〉 17 post Tr●●it as his words there are To these adde Dietericus a Lutheran Divine who though he makes the keeping of one day in seven to be the morall part of the fourth Commandement yet for that day it may be dies Sabbati or dies Solis or quicunque alius Sunday or Saturday or any other be it one in seven And so Hospinian is perswaded D●minicum diem mutare in alium transferre licet That if the occasions of the Church do so require the Lords day may be changed unto any other provided it be one of seven and that the change be so transacted that it produce no scandall or confusion in the Church of God Nay by the doctrine of the Helvetian Churches if I conceive their meaning rightly every particular Church may destinate what day they please to religious meetings and every day may be a Lords day or a Sabbath For so they give it up in their C●nfession 〈…〉 Deligit ergo qu●vis Ecclesia sibi certum tempus ad preces publicas Evangelii praedicati●ne● nec n●n sacramentorum celebrationem though for their parts they kept that day which had beene set apart for those holy uses even from the time of the Apostles yet so that they conceived it free to keepe the Lords day or the Sabbath Sed Dominicum non Sabbatum libera observatione celebra●us Some Sectaries since the Reformation have gone further yet and would have had all dayes alike as unto their use all equally to be regarded and reckoned that the Lords day as the Church continued it was a Iewish ordinance thwarting the doctrine of Saint Paul who seemed to them to abrogate that difference of dayes which the Church retained This was the fancie or the frenzie rather of the Anabaptist taking the hint perhaps from something which had beene formerly delivered by some wiser men and after them of the Swinckfeildian and the Familist as in the times before of the Petro-Brusians and if Waldensis wrong him not of Wiclef also 9 Such being the doctrine of those Churches the Protestant and those of Rome it is not to be thought but that their practise is according Both make the Lords day onely an Ecclesiasticall constitution and therefore keepe it so farre forth as by the Canons of their Churches they are enjoyned These what they are at Rome and those of her obedience we have seene already and little hath beene added since It hath not beene of late a time to make new restraints rather to mitigate the old to lay downe such which were most burdensome and grievous to be borne withall And so it seemes they do Azorius the Iesuite being more remisse in stating and determining the restraints imposed on the Lords day and the other holy dayes then Tostatus was who lived in safer times by farre then these now present nor is their discipline so severe as their Canon neither So that the Lords day there for ought I could observe when I was amongst them is solemnized much after the same manner as with us in England repairing to the Church both at Masse and Vespers ryding abroad to take the ayre or otherwise to refresh themselues and following their honest pleasures at such leasure times as are not destinate to the publicke meetings the people not being barred from travelling about their lawfull businesse as occasion is so they reserve some time for their devotions in the publicke Which is indeed agreeable to the most antient and most laudable custome in the Church of God Now for the Protestant Churches the Lutherans do not differ much from that which we have said before of the Church of Rome and therefore there is nothing to be said of them But for the rest which follow Calvin think themselves the only orthodox and reformed Churches w● will consider them in ●h●ee severall circumstances first in the exercise of religious d●ties secondly in restraint from labours and 〈◊〉 in permission of recreations And first for the exercise of religious duties they use it in the morning onely the afternoone being left at large for ●ny and for every man to dispose thereof as to him seemes fitting So is it in the Churches of high Germany those of the Palatinate and all the others of that mould For I have heard from Gent. of good repute that at the first reception of the Ladie Elizabeth into that Countrey on Sunday after dinner the Coaches and the horses were brought forth and all the Pri●ces Court betooke themselves unto their pleasures hunting or hawking as the season of the yeare was fit for either Which when it seemed strange at first to those English Lords and Gentlemen which did attend the Princesse thither answer was made it was their custome so to do and that they had no Eve●ing-service but ended all the duties of the day with the Morning Sermon Nor is this custome onely and no more but so There is a Canon for it in some places it must be no otherwise A●t 46. For in the first Councell of Dort Ann. 1574 it was decreed Publicae vespertinae preces non sunt introducendae ubi non sunt introductae ubi sunt tollantur that in such Churches where publicke Evening Prayer had not beene admitted it should continu● as it was and where they were admitted they should bee put downe So Doctor Smith relates the Canon if so irregular a decree may deserve that name in his Collat. doctr Cathol protest cap. 68. Art 1. And so it stood till the last Synod of Dort Ann. 1618. what time to raise the reputation of the Palatine Catechisme Sess. 14 being not long after to be admitted into their Canon it was concluded that Catechisme-lectures should be read each Sunday in the afternoone nor to be layed aside propter auditorum infrequentiam for want of Auditors Now to allure the people thither being before staved off by a former Synod it was provided that their M●nisters should reade howsoever Coram paucis auditoribus immo vel coram suis famulis tantum Though few were present or none but their domesticke servants in hope by little and little to attract the people