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A65408 The practical Sabbatarian, or, Sabbath-holiness crowned with superlative happiness by John Wells ... Wells, John, 1623-1676. 1668 (1668) Wing W1293; ESTC R39030 769,668 823

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Acts 12. 23. can unpin the wheels and break the Axletree of the whole Luke 12. 5. Creation with a word he can infatuate the counsels of the Jer. 39. 9. deepest Politians tear in pieces the strongest adversaries Psal Job 26. 7. 59. 22. blast the designs of the loftiest Courtiers speed the Job 9. 6. death of the proudest Princes and fire Nations out of their Heb. 10 31. Cities and tye them up with a tedious Captivity he can throw sinners soul and body into hell Mat. 10. 28. In a Mat. 10. 28. word Gods Power is commensurate to his will and the Isa 52. 10. strength of his hand can effect whatsoever is in the purpose of his heart If he make bare his arme Isa 52. 10. his naked arme can execute wonders nor need he any weapons to accomplish his atchievements Let us meditate on the omnisciency of God His eye is alwayes upon us he hath a window into our hearts our very Psal 139. 1. Psal 44. 21. Jer. 17. 10. Rev. 2 23. Psal 139. 12. thoughts are unvailed to him he sees every sin he searcheth every soul he trys every rein Clouds do not darken his view Curtains do not hinder his sight and doors do not shut out his prospect Light and darkness are all one to him he sees the fine and curiously spun agitations of the mind before Dei intellectus est vitae suae actus quo Deus videt omnia seipsum scil et extrase universa quae esse possunt quae esse vult autipse facit aut à creaturis fieri vult aut permittit cognoscit eas res quae sunt et earum causas modos et circumstantias praesentia praeterita fatu●a magna et parva quibus scientia divina non vi escit et animi recessus dicta con●tus facta Leid Pr. they are fledged and fly out into action It was an excellent speech of Augustine Deus totus oculus est minima videt God is all eye and sees the most minute things the very imaginations of our hearts 1 Chron. 28. 9. our thoughts in the first ●bullition the very embryoes of our working minds God saw Achans wedge although it was buried under ground and can tell Joshuah where it lay Josh 7. 11. Christ saw the Scribes reasonings when they were onely agitated in the conclave of their hearts Mark 2. 6 8. He knows the proud afar of Psal 138. 6. before they draw near to lift up the heel against him Every motion of our minds every sound of our tongue every action of our lives lye plain before him Omnia videt c. He sees all things from Eternity to eternity with one and the same view as School-men speak David could not fly from his presence though he made the greatest speed to avoid it and took the wings of the morning to hasten his flight Psal 139. 9. he weighs the dust in the ballance Isa 40. 14. takes notice of those things which are as small and contemptible as the dust Let us meditate on the Holiness of God This blessed Attribute is an orient pearle in Gods Crown Holiness is the very Glory of the God-head The Lord is glorious in holiness Ter sanctitatem deo acclamant animalia sive Trinitatem in deo innuentia sive infinit●m 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 iterationem significantia est enim deus ter sanctus sanctissimus sanctitas ips● Beatos Angelos et homines sanctificans Par. Exod. 15. 11. The Scriptures call the Father a holy God Psal 22. 3. the Son a spotless Lamb 1 Pet. 1. 19. the Spirit the Holy Ghost John 14. 26. The Holiness of God is the triumphant song of heaven both in the Vision of the Prophet Isa 6. 3. and in the Revelation of the Apostle Rev. 4. 8. The Holiness of God is the wonder of Angels those glorious spirits admire Gods beauty which is his holiness the holiness of the Lord is the pattern and exemplar of Saints for them to imitate and write after Lev. 20. 7. Holiness is primarily and originally in God as light in the Sun derivatively onely in the Saints As God is pleased to draw Man fair by the pencil of his spirit to cast and shed a beauty and sweetness upon him Ezek. 16. 6. Christ issuing Sanctitas tribuitur deo non solum quia purus est ab omni inquinamento sed maxime quia nulla non solum moralis sed etiam et naturalis non potest in eo esse imperfectio Riv. forth from his fulness some beautifying drops cleansing from sin and watering with grace and so poor man arises supernaturally lovely from amidst his natural deformity and loathsomness Holiness is so intrinsical and grateful to God that he will have Holiness to the Lord engraven on the plate of Gold which Aaron the High Priest must wear upon his breast Exod. 28. 36. God sits in the Throne of his holiness saith the Psalmist Psal 47. 8. He is praised in the mountain of his holiness saith the Prophet Psal 48. 1. Holiness attends upon his Throne and holiness besets his Mountain Holiness is mixed with his words Psal 60. 6. Exod. 28. 36. Psal 47. 8. Psal 48. 1. Psal 60. 6. Psal 93. 5. Isa 63. 15. Isa 62. 9. Zach. 14. 20. Exod. 25. 31. Holiness becomes his house Psal 93. 5. Holiness fills his habitation Isa 63. 15. and replenisheth his Court Isa 62. 9. Nay holiness is so much Gods nature that holiness to the Lord must be written on the very Bells of the horses and the pots of the Sanctuary and they shall be like the bowles of the Altar which were of pure Gold Exod. 25. 31. typifying weight and worth the Characters of true holiness Let us meditate on the wisdome of God He sits at the helm and guides all things regularly and harmoniously he Tim. 1. 17. brings light out of darkness and can make use of the injustice Judi●ia d●i sunt ●●●ventibilia 〈…〉 2. 3. of men to do that which is just he is infinitely wise in him all treasures of wisdome dwell he can break us by afflictions and upon those broken pieces of the ship bring 〈◊〉 omnia 〈◊〉 seipsum 〈…〉 per 〈…〉 〈…〉 us safe to shore The traces mazes and labyrinths of divine wisdom are so arduous and inextricable that holy Paul was struck with amazement in the observation of them and is even swallowed up with extasie and amazement Rom. 11. 33. There is a learned man observes how many ways the wisdom and knowledge of God transcends and surpasseth the wisdom of man 1 Cor. 13 12. Quanta est altitudo scientiae divinae transrendit omnem Gods wisdom surpasses mans in the object of it God by his wisdom and knowledge understands all things past present and to come all things which have a possibility of being and he understands himself who is an Ocean of perfections And this Man falls infinitely short of God is
et gaudiorum percipiu●t corda eorum vix possunt capere divinam illam dulcedinem quid ergò de futura coeli dulcedine censeamus quando non primitias tan●ùm c. we shall love God and our blessed Saviour better then our selves and Christ shall love us better then we can love our selves or one another O how many joyes shall he possess who shall keep an eternal Jubilee in the enjoyment of so many and so great beatitudes and felicities of others as truly as of his own The Jewish Doctors call the pleasures of our heavenly Sabbath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 everlasting breathings our delight stirring up our desires and our desires feeding upon our delight The joyes above shall not onely be transcendent but universal filling all the faculties of our souls refreshing and ravishing all the parts of our bodies they shall be continued not interrupted most sweet most sincere elevated to the highest degree of pleasure extensively reaching to all eternity intensively wound up to the highest peg of satisfaction and delight Psal 36. 9. And the fountane of divine sweetness shall not distill or drop upon the glorified Saints as Gums from the Tree or Rose-water from the Still or Chymical drops from the Alymbeck but streams of delight shall gently dash upon them to fill them with joy unspeakable and full of Glory Rev. 22. 1. We may conjecture at the body of the Sun by the brightness of the beam so may we guess what those extasies of joy shall be which shall sweeten our eternal Sabbath by those fore-tasts and prelibations of joy which the Saints here sometimes feel 1 Pet. 1. 8. The first fruits of this joy how do they transport the believer and carry him even above the world Insomuch that he scarce knows whether he be in the body or out of the body 2 Cor. 12. 2. His sences and faculties are wrapt up to drench in unusual pleasures Now if the present clusters yield such generous wine what will the over-flowings of the Vintage yield What fruits shall we gather from an everlasting harvest This made Augustine Aug. de Civit dei lib. 22. Cap. 30. Quest Supr Exod. Quest 173. call our Sabbath above Sabbatum maximum our greatest Sabbath Plenitudinem Sabbati The fulness of a Sabbath Nay Sabbatum Sabbatorum The Sabbath of Sabbaths Indeed the sweets of our future Sabbath here they may be admired but they cannot be comprehended hereafter we may be filled with them but we shall not dive to the bottome of them The two Sabbaths differ in this the one is the representation of the other Our Sabbath upon Earth doth onely adumbrate Fuit illud Sabbatum typus aeterni illius sabbati in coelis in quo electi an●mâ et corpore a peccatis calamitatibus et miseriis hujus vitae requiescent Ger. and shadow out our Sabbath in Heaven On our Sabbath below the body rests from labour in our heavenly Sabbath both body and soul shall rest from sin calamity and misery and God shall rest in us and we shall rest in him In the legal Sabbath there was no Manna fell on that day Exod. 16. 27. In the Sabbath above there shall be no ministry that usefull and necessary ordinance shall wholly and for ever cease In our Sabbath below we leave the world and the affairs of it while we go up into the Mount and converse with Jesus Christ In our Sabbath above we shall Dies dominica est imago futuri seculi Bas get above the world and with Elijah let fall our mantle our loose garment of mortality and put it on no more but converse with God eternally on the Mount of joy and delight There are indeed many rare types and representations 2 Kings 2. 13. of our heavenly Sabbath Paradise which was a promptuary of beauty pleasure delight especially when mans innocency did accent the Paradisus univers● sensibilis venustati● inte●ligentiam excedit Damasc lib. 2. de Orthod fid cap. 11. sweetness of it How fresh the trees how sweet the flowers how musical the birds how lushious the fruits of this transcendent place till Adams fall folded up this land-skip and turned himself out of this Garden of God that he might dress it no more and since it is over-grown insomuch that the remains of it are not known to the most curious searchers after them But before this breach the pleasures of Paradise were so transcendent that the delights of our supernal Sabbath are called Paradise Rev. 2. 7. 2 Cor. 12. 4. Onely the Paradise of the Second Adam where he met with August Epist 112. Cap. 13. the saved Thief Luke 23. 43. transcendently surpasses the Paradise of the First Adam In that the presence of God is Clem. 5 Stromat Ansel Thom. Aquin. secunda secundae quest 175. Art 5. immediately in the Paradise above which inhanceth all enjoyments to the supreamest height And therefore Augustine Clemens Alexandrinus Anselme and Aquin as affirm that Paul when he was rapt up into the heavenly Paradise he saw the Divine Being entring the place of the blessed who eternally see God face to face So that when we 1 Cor. 13 12. mention or contemplate on the Coelestial Paradise we must cast a shade on Adams Paradise his pleasant Seat as falling short below all degrees of comparison Secondly It might be added that the fruits and delights of Adams Paradise were more calculated to please the sence and refresh the outward man But the delights of the upper Paradise are more refined and principally influence the soul mans better part The Tabernacle doth sweetly resemble our Sabbath above Psal 84. 1. Luke 16. 9. Psal 15. 1. Rev. 21. 3. especially Tabernaculum Mosaicum propter pelles hyacynthinas ipsam co●perientes coelum è long inquo aspicientibus representabat Joseph lib. 3. Antiq. Cap. 7. if we look upon the furniture of it First There was the Ark of the Testimony Exod. 40. 21. which as a learned man concludes denotes the blessed Trinity whose sight is our happiness above In the Ark there were the two Tables of the Law Deut. 10. 12. The golden Pot of Manna and Aarons blossoming Rod Heb. 9. 4. In our heavenly Sabbath the Father will govern us with most holy Laws which answers to the two Tables The Son shall be bread of life to us to feed upon John 6. 33. which answers to the pot of Manna The Holy Ghost shall Numb 10 33 eternally fill us with fresh and flourishing graces which answers Charitas ibi erit lex Filius dei erit rex et modus erit aeternitas to Aarons blossoming Rod. Secondly Over the Ark was the Mercy-Seat Exod. 25. 21 22. which expresses our dear Redeemer who hath promerited not onely grace but glory for us And from the Rom. 3. 25. Numb 7 89. Mercy-Seat answers were given which signifies that blessed familiarity which the Saints shall enjoy with the Lord in Glory Exod.
second person in the Trinity who is the messenger of the Covenant Mal. 3. 1. and this party is called God Gen. 32. 30. It was such an Angel as blessed Jacob which was a work proper to God But now if it be demanded what it is to pray in the holy Ghost Answ It may be answered First The spirit helps us in prayer in a way of gifts Alludit Paulus ad illud Psal Psal 46. 8. Psallite sapienter pro quo hebraicè est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut intelligentio quod septuaginta vertunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut nimirum intelligatur quod canitur et quod precatur that the heart may not be bound up and that we may have necessary words to give vent for our affections It is the spirit which bestows the gift of prayer that we may enlarge our selves to God on all occasions 1 Cor. 14 15. But this gift is much bettered by Industry Hearing Meditation Reading Conference nay by prayer it self such holy exercises may be auxiliary to this excellent gift for the spirit worketh by means as the Sun shineth in the air in which it maketh its glittering ascents Secondly There is the gracious assistance of the spirit which is either habitual or actual First Habitual grace is necessary to prayer Zach. 12. 10. where there is grace there will be supplications as soon as the Child is born it falls on crying Acts 9. 11. Prayer is the Zach. 12. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gratia et supplicatio in uno comprehenduntur kindly duty of the New Creature the regenerate person is easily drawn into Gods presence when once we are renewed by the Holy Ghost we shall certainly and sweetly pray in the Holy Ghost we shall offer up spiritual devotions acceptable to God by Jesus Christ Secondly There is the actual assistance which we have from the spirit when a man is regenerate yet he cannot pray as he ought unless he be still moved and assisted by the blessed spirit Now these actual motions do either concern First The matter of prayer which is suggested by the spirit Jam. 1. 17. of promise for let a man alone and he will soon run into Eph. 1. 13. a temptation and cry for that which is inconvenient and it would be severity in God to grant it and therefore the direction of the Holy Ghost is necessary that we may not aske Rom. 8. 27. a Scorpion instead of a Fish a stone instead of bread We take counsel of lusts and interests when we are left to our private spirit now the Holy Ghost teacheth us to ask not onely what is lawfull but what is expedient for us so that the will of God may take place before our own inclinations Or Secondly These actual motions of the spirit concern the manner of our prayers now in prayer we have immediately Quid resert gemere Suspiria confusa ad deum mittere fortè evanes●unt in aere sed interpel●atio spiritus certò exauditur ● de● Par. to do with God and therefore we should take great heed in what manner we come to him The right manner is when we come with affection with confidence with reverence First With affection Rom. 8. 26. It is the holy Ghost sets us on groaning words are but the out-side of prayer sighs and groans are the language which God will understand we learn to mourn from the Turtle from him who descended in the form of a Dove Mat. 3. 16. He draws sighs from the heart tears from the eyes and moans from the soul Parts may furnish us with eloquence but the spirit inflames us with love that earnest reaching forth of the soul after God and the things of God That holy importunity that spiritual violence which is often used in holy prayer comes onely from the spirit Many a prayer is neatly ordered musically delivered and gravely pronounced but all these artifices they are the curiosities of man and savour nothing of the holy spirit then it speaketh the spirit to be in a prayer when there is life and power and the poor suppliant sets himself to wrestle with God as if he would overcome him in his own strength Secondly With confidence In Prayer we must come as Children and cry Abba Father Rom. 8. 16. usually we do Suprema essentia spiritus dei qui orare facit orantibus promittit promissum largitur testimonium nobis intus perhibet quisnam dubitationi locus Chrysost not mind this part of the spirits help in prayer we look to gifts and enlargements but not to this Child-like confidence that we may be able to call God Father without reproach or hypocrisie not seriously considering it is the language of a Child which will onely prevail upon the affections of a Father Thirdly With Reverence That we may be serious and awfull God is best seen in the light of his spirit the Heathens could say We need light from God when we speak of or to God That sense of the Lords greatness and those fresh Non loquendum d● deo sine lumine and awful thoughts that we have of his Majesty in prayer are stirred up by the Holy Ghost He uniteth and gathereth our hearts together that they may not be unravelled and Devotio et pius in deum affectus debet semper viam aperire ad particulares nostras petitiones sive pro alii● petimus necessaria sive pro nobis Daven scattered abroad in vain and impertinent thoughts Eph. 6. 18. And therefore to wind up this particular which hath been more copiously handled then usual when we go to pray at any time and so consequently in our Closets or Families on the morning of the Sabbath let us cast our selves upon the Holy Ghost as appointed by the Father and purchased by the Son to help us in this sweet and serviceable duty Rom. 8. 26. We are often tugging and labouring at it and can make no work of it but the spirit cometh and contributes his assistance and then we launch forth and our sails are filled and we go on prosperously in that omniprevalent duty A good Expositour gives this gloss on Rev. 1. 10. John was Arch. in lo● in the spirit on the Lords day i. e. he was in prayer upon the Lords day the spirit mightily assisting us in prayer makes strange and glorious impressions upon us As it is reported Greg. Orat. de Laud. Basil of Basil That when the Emperour Valens came in upon him while he was in Prayer he saw such lustre in his face as struck the Emperour with terrour and he fell backwards Prayer can make a great change in us and work Luke 9. 29. great things for us and therefore the management of this duty must be dispatched with the greatest care and exactness We must not onely take our opportunities for prayer on the morning of a Sabbath and see to the qualifications of Psal 5. 3. of that duty to
tamenillam agnoscunt valde infirmam lanquidam et obscuratam propter perpetuam illam pugnam rebellionem carnis Daven wing and was upon the flight from him Psal 51. 11. The Apostle saith Col. 3. 3. Our life is hid with Christ both in point of security and in point of secresie with Christ as in the spring with Christ as in the root and principle and the root we know is under ground and no eye of the passenger observes it with the several threads of it Let one thing more come within our view This work of grace is often under a mask and faces are not discovered under a mask there is a continual combat between the flesh and the spirit and the poor Saint stands as a spectatour he waits and cannot tell which of the two combatants will go away with Gal. 5. 17. flying colours Let us meditate on the beautifullness of the work of Grace The Scripture best depaints this lovely work Sometimes it Nova creat●ra spiritualis effecta novam gratiae vit●m fortua est ut de●●●ceps in novitate vitae ambulet is called Regeneration Joh. 3. 5. Sometimes it is called a new Creation Gal. 6. 15. With what flourish and glory did the world look when God did first create it and it first put on its comly dress and attire how pleasant was the Earth in its first spring Sometimes the work of grace is called Gods workmanship Eph. 2. 10. and this work must be good Gen. 1. 31. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because it is his All things he made were very good Gen. 1. 31. Nay sometimes this work is called our coming to our selves Luke 15. 17. And when lunatick persons are reduced to their wits what a comly and a lovely sight is it Indeed holiness is an attribute of God it is the loveliness of Angels it is the beauty of Saints this makes them excellent Psal 16. Psal 16. 3. Prov. 12. 26. Prov. 17. 27. Ezek. 16. 7. Phil. 1. 10. 3. nay more excellent then their neighbours Prov. 12. 26. The habits of grace are excellent ornaments Ezek. 16. 7. The wayes of grace are excellent wayes Phil. 1. 10. The work of grace it sheds light into the understanding makes it day there the beginnings of grace are day break in the soul Grace it shapes the will and brings it into form it sublimates Col. 3. 1 2. the affections and raises them from the dung-hill and makes them as it was said of the Bereans Acts 17. 11. more noble it softens the heart and makes it pliable to the tenders of the Gospel it cleanses the conscience from its filth and nastiness Acts 15. 9. it composes the conversation 1 Cor. 15 58 59 it adorns the life and bespangles it with good works those beautiful issues of a work of grace Let us meditate on the beneficialness of the work of grace Grace is glory initiated the dawning of future glory and glory is the noon-tide of grace There is a connection between grace and glory Psal 84. 11. They are clasped together by an eternal decree Gods everlasting purpose of love hath espoused grace to glory The work of grace foreruns Deus dedit nobis pignus futurae haereditatis gratiam quâ nos unxit ●t signavit in filios dei discrevitque à filiis diaboli the wages of glory Grace is onely glory in its infancy and glory is grace in its full growth Grace and glory differ in degree not in kind The spirits work is onely the first Scene of heaven here the spirit is a refining above it will be a ravishing spirit Death blows the bud of grace into the flower of glory 2 Cor. 1. 22. Eph. 1. 14. Grace onely ushers in glory it is onely the greener fruit of heaven and in Oecum future blessedness it comes to its full maturation In a word 2 Cor. 1. 22. the work of grace is the beginning of heaven in the soul and Eph. 1. 14. Christ in the heart doth fully assure us we shall see Christ Eph. 3. 17. in the Throne Let us meditate in the morning of a Sabbath on the works of glory How should we contemplate on heavenly things Psal 36. 8. Heb 4. 9. Rev. 3. 21. 2 Tim. 4. 8. 1 Cor. 2. 9. O ineffabile gaudium in sanctis glorificatis qui ad dextram Christi sistent ut subditi serenissimo suo principi ut filii benignissimo suo patri ut regale sacerdotium gratiosissimo suo pontifici Glass on Gods heavenly day what those chambers of rest what those rivers of pleasure what those crowns of righteousness what those thrones of glory are which God hath prepared for his believing and beloved ones who have rejoyced in his holy day here and made it their seraphical delight From the mount of meditation as from mount Nebo we may take a prospect of the land of Promise which Christ hath taken the possession of in the name of all believers Heb. 6. 20. Heaven must needs be a glorious City which hath God both for its builder and inhabitant it must needs be the extract and quintessence of all blessedness On Gods day in the morning let meditation listen to the musicks of the Bride-chamber take a tast of our Masters joy peep within the vail and take a glance of the face of God and make an essay how well a crown of righteousness becomes the believers head And surely we cannot meditate on these things but we Quanta erit illa felicitas ubi nullum erit malum nullum latebit bonum vacabitur dei laudibus qui erit omnia in omnibus Aug. must rejoyce in hope What prisoner shackled with the chains of temptation and fettered with the irons of his own corruption being in the dark prison of the world can meditate on the time when all these restraints shall be filed off and he enjoy the pleasant light and glorious liberty of the Sons of God Rom. 8. 21. but he will be transported with joy and exultation Meditation brings down heaven to us and we travel in the view of things superlative and ineffable In Glory we shall see the King in his beauty Isa 33. 17. There John 14. 2. Psal 16. 11. God shall be all in all 1 Cor. 15. 28. There shall be beauty Rev. 3. 21. to the eye musick to the ear joy to the heart light to the mind perfection to the soul plenary and absolute satisfaction to the Saint Glory is meditations upper-loft it is its highest gallery to walk in it is its pleasing nest among the stars Meditation may take a view of the pompous Theater 2 Cor. 1. 3. Mat. 1. 21. Heb. 7. 25. of glory where there are the three persons in the God-head The Father of our mercies Jesus Christ the Saviour of our souls the Holy Ghost the Healer of our natures the Father who hears our prayers the Son who is our intercessour above us and the
souls benighted by darkness by the appearing of the true morning star Rev. 22. 16. are lead out of this darkness into his marvellous light 1 Pet. 2. 9. and being fettered before are loosned and enfranchised into the glorious liberty of the Sons 1 Pet. 2. 9. Rom. 8. 21. of God Rom. 8. 21. The rich and rare benefit which we commemorate on our Sabbath is Christs rising from the grave when he conquered death pinnion'd Satan locked Necte natus est Christus nocte captus et sole obtenebrato mortuus est sed illucescent die resurrexit ut ostenderet quòd gloriosâ suâ resurrectione c. up the gates of Hell perfumed the grave and became the powerfull cause and great exemplar of our resurrection I cannot let slip the Elegance of a learned man who takes notice That Christ was born in the night apprehended in the night died when the Sun was darkned and wrapt up in Cypress and Sables but rose at day break when the light began to appear to intimate that the dark shadows of our sins were put to flight by his glorious resurrection and eternal light of righteousness did compass us as with a garment The Jewish Sabbath and the Christian agree in this That holiness to the Lord is written upon the breast-plate of Exod. 28. 36. both both must be inviolably and spiritually observed to God Purity and sanctification is the beauty and comliness the end and answer of b●●h There was a time when the Jews were so exact in the observation of the Sabbath Ex Rabbinis refertur quod in die Sabbati non licet pomum admovere carboni aut vinum super sinapi pulverem mittere aut allium quod edere velit decorticare c. Munster that they screwed up the pag ●oo high and the string broke into superstition their own Ra●bins aver that to put an Apple to the fire to take a Flea which was skipping from one part of the body to another to peele Garlick to eat to climb a tree to break down a bough c. was reputed amongst them altogether unlawfull nay such minute trifles which the learned man gravely asserts are more foolish then the toyes and jests of Sicily Indeed these over-zealous Rabbins thinking to make the Sabbath more specious made it more ridiculous and put black spots upon it instead of making it more beautifull yet thus much we may learn that the over-plus of Ceremonies implied their exact observation and their niceness and superstition did strongly imply there was much religious devotion as the guilding of the frame speaks the choiceness of the picture However we may confidently conclude that the Jewish Sabbath was encompassed with a hedge of thorns that neither secular labour nor sensual pleasure nor sinfull practice was to break in to prophane Ter paenam capitalem infligendam violatoribus Sabbatum exprimit deus per Mosen Riv. it And God was very zealous of his Sabbath that it might not be polluted when the transgressour was to be punished with no less penalty then death Exod. 31. 14 15. And which is observable not riot but work on the Sabbath not lust but sweat was punishable with the loss of life Nay God did see the least wrinkles in the face of the Sabbath Nec est quod quis de supplici● gravitate conqueri debuerit quia contemptus dei nunquam potest nimis gravi supplicio vindicari Riv. and took notice of the least defilements if it was but the gathering of a few sticks Num. 15. 32. And this example was in terrorem for greater dread and terrour to others And Rivet animadverts That eternal death in the Scripture mentioned is threatned to obstinate sinners But to slide down to Gospel times Holiness doth not less become the Christian Sabbath we may hear by the thunder and see by the lightning of Gods judgements upon Sabbath breakers how jealous God is still of his own day the change of the day from the seventh to the first opens no gap to looseness gives no dispensation to sin or sensuality The day is changed but the bonds are not broken our tie is as strong as that of the Jews to the strict and holy observation of Gods blessed Sabbath If the Sabbath was to be kept holy in the times of the Law much more in Gospel-times The fourth Commandment binds us as forcibly as them and it is our Obstinatis autem ut in omnibus peccatis eternam mortem fuisse denunciatam non inficias imus Riv. glasse as well as their directory our chain as well as their bond it is still Remember to keep holy the Sabbath day Exod. 20. 8. whether it be the seventh day or the first Gospel light may make sin more shameful not more venial more hateful and not more excusable And if Sabbath-pollution was matter of complaint heretofore in legal times Ezek. Ezek. 20. 13. 20. 13. To act the same sin under Gospel-grace is a more prodigious crime Purity certainly is the decency of the Lords day The love of Christ in rising for our justification Rom. 8. 34. should in no wise make us more wanton but Rom. 8. 34. more obedient And as the Jewish Sabbath agrees with the Christian in many particulars so in several things we may discern a difference First They differ in this There was a multitude of appendices and impositions which did clog the Jewish Sabbath Exod. 16. 22 27. Exod. 35. 3. Numb 15. 32. Exod. 16. 29. Acts 1. 12. all which are taken off from the Christian to make the yoak more easie and lightsome to the bearer The Jews on their Sabbath were not to gather Manna nor to pick a few sticks or to kindle a fire nay they were not to stir out of their places And in after times they were only indulged to travel a Sabbath days journy which some learned Expositors Buxtorf lib. 3. p. 100. confine to a mile and others stretch it out only to two Thus God was pleased to pinnion and streighten the Jews Sabbath with a multitude of burdensome circumstances and Communio nostra est cum Patre Filie ejus In Patre in Christo sunt omnia vera Caelestia bona Zanch. a failure in any one of them was very prejudicial to the offendor But Christ rising from the dead did not only loosen the bonds of the grave but of the Sabbath too Those circumstances which did load the Sabbath of the Jews are now like knots plained off like darker shades which are now blown away And the Lords day is freed from those fruitless ceremonies and is wholly to be spent in sweet communion with the Father and his Son Jesus Christ John 1. John 1. 1 3. 1. 3. Our Christian Sabbath hath not its fetters on but holy liberty is its character and Shibboleth Our stages are not laid how far we shall go on the Sabbath if pure Ordinances are our errand Holy Christians went many
world the Sun which he created he now causeth to rise every day the waters which he created he now either restrains to calmness or leaves to rage Man whom he created still he forms him in his Mothers womb Psal 139. 16. And in this we must imitate God who is not onely the Legislatour to command but the pattern to exemplifie Sabbath Rest we must be still working we must on that holy day work out Phil. 2. 12. our salvation with fear and trembling and this is our greatest providence the great work of Government for us to subject 2 Cor. 10. 5. our souls to the obedience of Christ 2. Idleness on Gods holy day swerves not onely from the pattern of the Father but likewise from the example of the Son Jesus Christ was as the School-men speak upon another John 5. 8. account purissimus actus all activity upon the Sabbath Luke 13. 12. then the wrought his wonders then he made his cures then Luke 14. 4. he preached his holy and heavenly doctrines then he enriched Luke 4. 32. the world with his heavenly discourses then he went up and Luke 14. 16. down doing good The Sabbath was the sphear of his love Acts 10. 38. the orb of his light the testimony of his power and the Mat. 12. 13. stage of his most glorious actions It is observable Christ Luke 4. 3● enriched the Sabbath with all variety of good then he taught the soul then he cured the body then he healed men of their sicknesses and women of their infirmities then he cured patients of spiritual maladies then he cast devils out of them these embroydered robes of love and power Christ cloathed the Sabbath with and canst thou sinner eye Christ and slide over a Sabbath either doing nothing of that which is worse then nothing Canst thou melt a Sabbath into dross by idleness Shall the head be so vivacious Fug tiniquitatis est signaculum gratiae Alap and thou who pretendest to be a member be in a Lethargy in a Swoon be crampt with sloth and laziless on Gods holy day Either name not the name of Christ or depart from this iniquity Study to draw Christ upon a Sabbath 2 Tim. 2. 19. and this will be as Aristotles iron ball in his hand which when he fell asleep fell into a brass bason and so awakened him this will keep thee active and vigilant say Christ and this this will put thee upon work and service Idleness on a Sabbath is neglecting great salvation the idle sinner on this day loseth great opportunities of life great Heb. 2. 3. condescentions of love great advantages for the soul How many have been delivered from the womb of a Sabbath new 1 Pet. 2. 2. born babes in the Church when God hath said to the loins of an Ordinance give forth and to a spiritual opportunity keep not in When the wind blows strongly the waterman Quid prodest Christum sequi si non contingat consequi sic currite ut comprehendatis Bern. sets up his sail rnd plies at the Ore more industriously Sabbath opportunities are our good wind for heaven now we must set up our sail by diligent attention and sweat at the Oar by earnest devotion now we must row hard towards the shore of rest and happiness we must not be as the Drone but as the Bee sucking honey from the flower of every Duty and every Ordinance Indeed sloth is one of the blackest spots in the feast of a Sabbath And yet how many are sitting 2 Pet. 2. 13. idly at the doors of their houses when they should be Jud. v. 12. knocking at the door of heaven and enquiring for the way of salvation they are talking frivolously when they should Luke 16. 17. be speaking to God in holy Orisons and Supplications they are throwing away time when they should be laying up treasures Luke 12. 33. even treasures in heaven I may say to such foolish sluggards in the same language which the Mariners spake to Jonah Jon. 1. 6. What mean ye sleepers why do not ye gather your clusters in the vintage of a Sabbath why do not Mat. 20. 6. ye reap your advantages in the harvest of a Sabbath why do Omnes sine vocatione dei sunt otiosi nec sibi nec aliis utiles Par. ye not follow the suit of your eternal souls in the term-time of a Sabbath Pearls are not found in every Rock Gums do not drop from every Tree Mines are not sprung in every field nor is Manna for the soul to be gathered on every day The careful traveller will not spend his day in sleeping in an Inn. And let us consider the Sabbath is a day of diversion but not impertinency CHAP. XL. Some incident cases proposed to satisfie Conscience in Sabbath-observation THe Lords holy day as it is enriched with many sweets Sicut mercatoves per cancellos vimineos transeuntibus merces è domo ostentant non propè et distinctè sed procul sic deus se nobis ostentat in hac vitâ Alap so it is encompassed with some scruples not as if there was any obscurity in the command or cloud in the day but man in this life knows onely in part 1 Cor. 13. 12. And a twi-light knowledge engenders doubts hesitations and scruples and as in other things so in Sabbath observation And therefore this Chapter shall be spent in directing conscience least it lose it self in by wayes and irregular ranges which a faint light may subject it to Several cases may serve us instead of several lights to guide us in the way of peace and security on Gods blessed day Case 1 What we must do in the non-performance or in the maleperformance of Sabbath duties Many in the close of a Sabbath Psal 137. 2. are ready to hang their harps upon the willows and to shed a shower of tears when they look back and think they have been in the Wine-cellar of Christ but they have not refreshed their souls they have sat with Christ in his banqueting house but they have enjoyed no divine or spiritual Cant. 2. 4. delight many duties they have neglected more they have formally passed over the Sabbath is run out scarce any stoopings left and yet they have not quenched the thirst of their souls the term time is gone and their cause is as it was or rather is further off then before they are very sensible though they have not filled up the spaces of a Divine Mat. 5 5 Sabbath they have dropped into the vials of divine displeasure This is their case and this is their moan and let it not Lamen 1 12. be nothing to all those who pass by Now therefore to satisfie Revel 16. 1. this case Those who have been either short or superficial in the duties of Gods blessed Sabbath Let them lie in the dust Sabbath sin should cause seri us
keep this divine rellish upon our hearts we are apt to catch cold after Cùm malum committitur bonum amittitur the greatest heats Let us look to our selves that we do not lose the things which we have wrought and after close and sweet communion with God grow lax and remisse Sweet water is as easily spilt as ordinary water The rarest Cordials 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are put into glasses which are easily broken there may be a rejoycing which is onely for a season John 5. 35. the Greek reads it for an hour If thy heart hath been wound up towards heaven on a Sabbath a little carelesnesse will let it down again If thou hast spent the Sabbath comfortably Heb. 12. 14. be faithful to thy soul and interest and spend the Ephes 4. 30. week holily Purity will keep peace it is sin grieves the spirit Spiritus sanctus cùm agimus aut loquimur turpia aut mala offenditur Alap who is the Comforter Joh. 14. 16. Our inward joy is onely chased away by trespasse which is a thron in the breast of this Nightingale To be unloosend on the Sabbath from week-day bonds is comfortable but in the week-time to unloose the Lords dayes bonds is abominable To be fruitful Comfortable Sabbaths call for conscionable lives Soft showres make fruitful fields If on the Sabbath we have enjoyed the comforts of the Lord it is but meet we John 15. 5. should alwayes abound in the work of the Lord. Our week-day 1 Cor. 15 58. carriage should be the springing up of the Sabbath days seed our whole lives must be a walking in the strength of our Sabbaths Divers of the Ancients are very copious and pathetical in perswading men so to practice Piety and pursue sanctity as to perpetuate a Sabbath We should mingle the Sabbath with the week but not the week with the Sabbath as we should be in the spirit on the Lords day so Tertul com in Jud. 4. Orig. in Numer Hom. 23. Chrysost in Mat tract 29. Aug. de Civit dei lib. 12. cap. 30. Buc. in Mat. 12. 11. we should walk in the spirit on the week day Gal. 5. 25. It is a remarkable speech of Bucer Have we served the Lord on his own day let our manners shew it let our works prove it let the holiness of our lives abundantly declare it A pious Conversation is the onely evidence we have been with Jesus we should be in such a frame every Lords day as if that was the first Sabbath that ever we spent and as if that was the last day that ever we should live or as if the weight of all our work lay upon that single Sabbath for which we were sent into the world nay as if our eternal being was to be determined hereby and yet after the day is over we must endeavour as much to be doing as if nothing was done on the Sabbath and all that we had done was to be abated on the account Sabbath comforts are not to be dews but showres not suddenly to be dryed up but to soak into our future lives J●hn the Evangelist after he had been Rev. 1. 10. in the Spirit on the Lords day writes the Revelation the worlds Chronicle within a Veil Moses when he had been Exod. 32. 22. on the Mount with God was filled with holy zeal and Sinai did not flame more then his heart Heavenly sweets are 1 John 1. 3. onely incentives to holy services and the tasts of divine communion are the genuine bribes to an holy conversation Case 3 How we must keep the Sabbath alone in the deprival of Christian and comfortable society There are many cases may befall a Christian which may render him solitary upon the Psalm 63. 2. Lords day and for the present enforce him to be an exile Psalm 96. 6. from the publick Assemblies 1. As in the case of travelling we may meet with an Inne when we cannot meet with a Sanctuary Isa 16. 12. 2. So in the case of imprisonment we may be confined to Psalm 102. 7. the darkness of a dungeon and want the glorious liberty of Psal 84. 3. the people of God the freedom they enjoy in the house of Prayer 3. So likewise in case of sickness we may be chained to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our beds and not enjoy the freedome of publick Ordinances And Mr. Perkins instances in the disease of the dead Palsie so that now Aristotles definition of Man to be a sociable Creature will not comport with our present condition Isa 16. 12. 4. And it may be instanced in case of hard service and slavery when our groans are ready to drown the musick of Israelitae ita affligebantur animi maerore et durâ servitute quâ spiritu qu●si intercludebantur ut non attenderent verbis Moyses de deo serviendo Riu. a Sabbath and we are necessitated to lye down in silence and solitariness We do not read that the Jews kept any publick Sabbath in their Aegyptian bondage their tasks jarred their triumphs and they did not onely make brick without straw but they passed over Sabbaths without any visible observation but yet no case can wholly incapacitate us from conversing with God on his own day we are never so lonely but we may enjoy communion with the Father and his Son Jesus Christ 1 John 1. 3. 1. If we are travelling we may likewise travel towards Exod. 6. 9. Canaan Holy duties will turn an Inne into a Sanctuary Psalm 134. 2. Paul prayed by the Rivers side Acts 16. 13. Peter preached in a private house Acts 10. 34. and Christ administers the Gen. 24. 63. Sacrament in an upper room Luke 22. 12. Now we may meditate in every Field and pray in every Chamber To Dan. 6. 10. Christians saith Dr. John Reynolds No Land is strange no ground unholy every Coast is Jewry every Town is Hierusalem every house is Sion every faithful body is a Temple to serve G●d in And to think otherwise is to savour of Judaisme as Hospinian observes 2. Suppose thy self in prison on the Lords day If an Angel can break a prison door Acts 12. 7. surely Christ can and give thee the meeting on his own blessed day VVhen thou art in fetters of iron he can draw thee with the cords of a man Hos 11. 4. If we must visit our brethren surely he will visit his Saints in prison Prison doors are no obstruction Mat. 25. 36. to the divine illapses of the good spirit and Prison-straights are no confinement to the enlargements of a Saints heart a fervent prayer can pierce the roof of the closest dungeon and flies as high as Heaven Paul and Silas sang Acts 16. 25. Psalmes one duty of a Sabbath when they were fettered in their Chains and inclosed in their Goal 3. Put case thou art confined to a sick bed Jacob worshipped Gen. 49 18.
prayer or any other duty their thoughts look back as Lots wife did upon Sodom and so that duty is as it were turned into a pillar of salt a monument Duo contrarii amores in eodem corde locum non habent nec habere possunt Zanch. of shame And so in hearing the Word they bring the cares of the world with them and they are thorns which choak the blessed Seed of the Word Mat. 13. 22. and it becomes altogether unfruitful And again worldly thoughts do very unseasonably mix with heavenly duties we do ill to be in the vale when we should be on the mount Exod. 24. 18. with God to be supping up the dregs of the world when we should feed on the marrow Psal 63. 5. and drink of the Isa 25. 6. wine well refined in blessed Ordinances this is to powre contempt upon the provisions of the Sanctuary To say our communion is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ on a Sabbath when yet our hearts are fluttering over the John 1. 1. 3. world this is to delude not to satisfie the Soul But be it we can taste no sweetness in Sabbath duties yet we are bound to continue our diligence we must observe our duty though presently we receive not the mercy It is Job 1. 9. the badge of Mercenaries to plead no Recompence no Obedience Indeed the recompence of reward may be in our eye though it be not our end In the work we do we may have a love to the reward though the meer love of the reward doth not attract us to do the work God is our great Lord and Master and though it is not servile obedience yet it is the obedience of Servants we ow him continually and much more upon his own day Cassian observes That he Cassian l 4. c. 24. knew a young man who meerly in obedience to his Superiors command for a whole year together went two miles every day only to pour water on a withered stick We ought every Lords Angeli quomodo discurrunt medii inter deum nos Bern. day to come under Gospel waterings though our hearts remain withered and dry though we feel no softnings or comforting it is enough we have a command the duty is ours the day is Christs who is over all God above all blessed for ever It is a favour God will employ us though he Rom. 9. 5. should never reward us The Angels rejoyce that God will engage them in his business though they receive no new recompence they are chearful to increase the duty though they do not enlarge their glory The Angels saith the Apostle are Bernardus solitus est dicere Angelos secum cooperari unoquoque die dominico all ministring spirits sent forth to minister c. Heb. 1. 14. This is their property they think themselves happy in that God thinks them worthy to do his work in the world And so must we esteem our selves honoured in conversing with God in Ordinances though we do not hear the spouts run Hab. 3. 17 18. with the waters of life and though the fingers of Christ do not drop Myrrh Cant. 5. 5. nor do we taste the honey-comb in them Cant. 5. 1. For Ordinances in themselves are Jude 14. 8. as Sampsons Lion with the swarm and the honey in them they are in their own nature pots of perfume more reviving then the smoaks of incense and though our resentments be not so quick yet we must follow the scent It is a good observation Hos 6. 3. of Chrysostom As fountains saith he send out water though no pitcher be brought to fetch from them so Pastors must preach and Auditors must hear though no fruit be received For as to keep Sabbaths is indispensable for men so to bless them is arbitrary with God But if God shine not forth from between the Cherubims of holy Ordinances Psal 80. 1. yet it is incumbent upon us to wait at the door of the Sanctuary alwayes remembring that subjection is ours but benediction is his and he will have mercy on whom he will have Rom. 9. 18. mercy Suppose Sabbaths are not successful to us what peace or profit can we expect if we lay them aside Upon the same account all other times of holy duty and the exercise of Religion may be waved and left off and then what can there be but a fearful expectation of judgment Hierom upon Heb. 10. 27. that place of the Apostle Rom. 9. 16. It is not of him that willeth nor of him that runneth but of God that sheweth Hieron in Psal 107. mercy Sure then saith he It is not of him who sleepeth nor of him that idleth nor of him who neglects duty for on such the Lord will have no mercy And Chrysostom well observes upon that speech of our Saviour Mat. 16. 24. If any will Chrysost in Matth. homil 56. come after me let him deny himself c. Christ saith not as this Father observes If any man stand still or sit down for the Kingdom of God is not given to standers or to idlers but to walkers and to workers So it may be concluded the comforts of God are not given to any person who upon any pretence whatsoever shall omit or neglect his duty especially Iter monstrat Apost quo fiat ut semper gaudeamus Per orationem nimirum quae non cessat gratiarum actionem Theoph. Non erit glo riosa victoria nisi ubi fuerint laboriosa certamina Ambros upon the Lords day For any to pretend they have performed duties and waited on Ordinances and yet fail of success what good success can they expect upon the ceasing of those duties The Apostle bids us pray without ceasing 1 Thes 5. 17. So then we must pray though the blessing do not presently come we must obey the command though we do not receive the reward If men may use the means and yet miss the end surely such must miss the end who will not use the means let none think to better their souls condition by laying aside Sabbath transactions When Christians have performed Sabbath duties and do not find such comfortable and desired success in their Gospel communion Let them smite upon the thigh and reflect upon themselves The word is fire and why am I cold The Psal 6. 6. word is quickning and why am I dead Ordinances are the means of grace and why have I no grace or comfort by the Psal 43 5. means Some are at Sermons and Sacraments with their Psal 42. 4. hearts leaping and go away with their faces shining and Christi●ne fige tui cursus profectusque me tam ubi Christus posuit suam Bern. those who see them see they have been with Jesus but why go I mourning all the day Thus we should put our selves upon the search and scrutiny Skilful Physicians search into the cause of distempers and so should
likewise of this day is of no less excellency then the Fathers blessing of the seventh day Nay how many wayes did Jesus Christ bless his own day By his Glorious Resurrecti●n when the Sun of Righteousness di● ri●e wi●h healing in his wings to visit and make Mal. 4. 2. Rom. 13. 12. happy the world and to make it day among the Sons of Men. By his several apparitions on this day when Christ did exhilarate and revive his sadned and disconsolat● Disciples St. Aug. de C●vit dei lib. 22. cap. 30. with the bright intervals of his pellucid and salvifical presence But of this more hereafter By his heavenly instructions on this day Luke 24. 25. when as Elijah now he was going to heaven he dropt his Mantle and shewed his Disciples his mind by revelation 2 Kings 2. 13. before he shewed them his face in glory By illuminating the minds and opening the understandings ings of his Disciples more eminently on this day Luke 24. John 20. 22. John 20. 28. Rev. 22. 16. 45. On this day not only the morning star arose in the World of inhabitants but in the hearts of the Disciples and he opened not only the curtains of the grave but of the minds of his Apostles by his redoubted and omnipotent operation By breathing the Holy Ghost upon his Disciples John 20. 22. as on this day When Christ did that by his breath which the Minister cannot do by his Zeal the Scholar by his Art the Friend by his love nay Nature it self by its force Aug. Serm. 15. de verb. Apost viz. inspire the heart with holy principles and the head with holy knowledge and spiritual understanding By the installation of his Apostles into their supream jurisdiction giving them power to bind and to loose in heaven and in earth John 20. 21 22 23. On this day the Apostles received not their Miter but their Mission and the emblem of their dignity was no ceremonial vesture but a supereminent power All which blessings Christ scattered on this solemne day our Christian Sabbath and on this day as an essay of converting power Christ by the Ministry of Peter turned three thousand to his own Divine self Now all these blessings which Christ heaped on this day Acts. 2. 41. what are they but so many acts of consecration They are only the pouring out of the oyl to anoint it to be far above its fellows and to be the Christians solemn and weekly festival And thus Ignatius calls our Sabbath the Highest and Psal 45. 7. Queen of dayes The argument then is very forcible à pari if the Fathers blessing a day made it a Sabbath to the world before and in the times of the Law then the Sons blessing a day must needs make it a Sabbath to the world in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Ignat. John 5. 23. times of the Gospel And this is the more to be taken notice of because Christ saith expresly John 5. 23. That all men shall honour the Son even as they honour the Father Reas 3 Christs Faithfulness in his Church proclaims him the institutor of his own day God the Father when he had ordained Expendendum est quod non solùm ritus et ceremonias populo suo dedit deus quibus ad fidem charitatem gratiarum actionem observantiam dei imbuerentur sed et certa tempora praescripsit in quibus vigore legis praescriptas Ceremonias exercerent Haud permisit illis libertatem ut ferias quas et quando vellent pro suo libero arbitrio figerent out refigerent mutarent tollerent multiplicarent minuorent sed ferias servandas tradid it ex quibus est Sabbati sanctificatio Muscul his worship leaves it not to Moses nor to the people of Israel to appoint a set and solemn day for it but he himself first ordains it in paradise Gen. 2. 3. and then revives and renews it on Mount Sinai Exod. 20. 8. Nay when the Idolaters among the people of Israel did invent a worship they who invented it instituted a day for it Exod. 32. 5. Jeroboam when he devised a worship he likewise ordained a day for it 1 Kings 12. 32 33. So Nebuchadnezzar when he set up an Idol and appointed a worship for it he set apart a day for the performance of this worship Dan. 3. 2. The miscreant Prophet Mahomet as he gave laws to his Proselytes and prescribed a form of worship so he himself instituted his solemn day viz. Every Fryday And he did not leave it to the arbitrary will and pleasure of his worshippers to ordain or solemnize what day they pleased Therefore from all this we may conclude unless Christ should fall short of the example of his Father Nay of the very Idolaters he must be the institutor of his own day for it cannot be proved that at any time or in any age that any publick worship was ever invented to be observed but the Author and institutor of it was also the institutor of the day for that worship not leaving it to others will to appoint the same for him Now Christ is the great Law-giver of his Church the glorious founder of Gospel-worship the Sacraments were ordained by him Prayers must be made in his name Discipline is of his institution the Ministry of his calling and sending and shall our blessed Mediator be only excluded from the appointment of a day for weekly Mark 16. 16. Luke 22. 19 20. John 20. 22. Mat. 21. 22. James 4. 12. Mat. 28. 19. Mat. 26. 26. John 14. 15. Mat. 18. 18. Rom. 1. 1. Cant. 2. 16. H●g 2. 7. Rev. 15. 3. Eph. 1. 22. Mat. 18. 20. Psal 89. 7. Heb. 12. 2. and solemn worship Shall that cursed caitiff Mahomet as was hinted constitute and appoint a weekly day for his worshippers to observe to himself and read that system of Vanities that miscellany of lying inventions the Alchoran and shall not our beloved the desire of Nations the King and Soveraign of his people the Head of his Church not only influential but authoritative shall not he be invested with a power to set apart a weekly Sabbath for his people wherein they may meet in his name and assemble in his fear and congregate to hear his glorious Gospel and to participate of those blessings which attend his salvifical presence Or did Christ forget his main import when he ascended to his Father his approaching joy swallowing up his thoughts of and care for his poor Church which he left behind Surely we must make Christ the institutor of his own blessed day or inveniencies too many will arise which no salves will be able to smoother or suppress Should Christ have left it to his Church to appoint a day what end would be of the discord and disagreements which unavoidably follow When should the whole Church meet to enact such a constitution Or shall one part of the Church being as is
pulchre opponit Pharisaeorum accusationibus vos malletis quasi diceret propter sanctificationem sabbati discipulos meos esurientes potius affligi quam spicas aliquas discerpere item malletis hominem perire quam Sabbatis sanari atqui hoc directè pugnat cum Deut. 5. 14. Sabbatum propter hominem c. sensus igitur est Nec cum noxâ nec cum exitio aut damno homi●i●●●●genda e●t ●xterna obs●●vatio Sabbati Sicut in exemplo Davidis est manifestissimum Chemnit John 8. 36. Psal 119. 164. Psal 27. 4. Psal 84. 10. Libertines would fasten upon it 1. They say the Sabbath was made for man because man was created before its institution and therefore this festival was ordained for his entertainment in the world for his profit and advantage but not for his play sports and recreations This institution of the Sabbath ●yed man now newly created and made Gods Viceroy upon earth 2. The Sabbath was made for man that is for his corporal good that on this day he might rest from the toyls of the world Deut. 5. 14. In the Commandement for the Sabbath God consulted mans weakness but not his wantonness he studied his frame but not his fancy God appointed the Sabbath that man should not over-bend the Bow but relax and remit his painful labours and so be more composed and at leisure for spiritual service and worship so the Sabbath was made for man for the good of his body 3. The Sabbath was made for man viz. for his spiritual good that man on that holy day might be built up in his most holy faith and that he might enjoy sweet communion with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ 1 John 1. 3. How often is the Sabbath the Souls nuptial day wherein it is esponsed and married to Christ it is a day of divine support of refection and recruit to Grace and often of the execution and mortification of lust and corruption The Sabbath is the Souls banquetting day a fit season for strengthning and repast while it travels upon the Mountains of prey and feeds with the flocks of Christ at noon Cant. 1. 7. Psal 76. 4. However they who shall torture this Text to the utmost and put it upon the strictest wrack shall force it to speak no more then thus much That man must not run the hazard or peril of life for the outward observation of a Sabbath man must observe it but not with an apparent danger of himself if it cannot be observed without harm and certain damage the external observation must be suspended and mans life and good must not be impaired and our Saviour instanceth in Davids eating of Shewbread an extraordinary and unjustifiable action yet it may be apologized for and maintained in a case of necessity and so the Disciples of Christ plucking the ears of Corn it was for support and necessary satisfaction And so mans life is more considerable than the outward observance of a day especially considering that the Sabbath was calculated for mans good in its first original and institution and the whole man both Soul and body was taken into consideration when it was first set on foot in the world Now this fair and candid construction of the Text detests all carnal liberty and all swinges of pleasure and sensual delight upon Gods sacred and solenm day In a word it is no ways suitable to a gracious spirit to be importunate for carnal liberty on Gods holy day The sensual delights of this life they are the clog not the comfort of a Saint their fetters rather then their freedom A believer is never more himself then when he travels over spiritual objects in holy meditation and freely vents himself in holy prayer and supplication He complains not of being clogged unless when he is bird-limed with a temptation or staked down by a malepert corruption that he cannot rise and fly up to God in holy devotion he knows not any liberty but the liberty of Ordinances and he is then only free who is manumitted by Gods good spirit his confinement is the transiency not the length of a Sabbath and he is dismissed from an Ordinance with a sigh Fleshly ease pleaseth not him on a Sabbath because it keeps him from his beloved nor dare he exchange duty for recreation He thinks it a poor and incontemptible thing to be running after a bowl on the Lords day when he should be running his race and pressing forward towards the Mark Phil. 3. 14. Nor can he mind a sport when he is to look after a prize The Saint thinks recreations on a Sabbath are not only the loss of time and an empty Parenthesis but they are Dalilahs to rock him asleep that so he may lose Praetereà arbitrium nostrum voluntatem nostram Christus in aliquam partem libertatis ponit dum donat nos spiritu sancto cujus gratiâ corrapta nostra natura instaurata spontaneo est ut juxta prae ceptum dei benè agamus pietati studere incipiamus prompto Matth. 19. 8. spiritu nam ubi spiritus est ibi est libertas Chemnit Eccl. 9. 10. 2 Cor. 3. 17. his spiritual strength Whatever he doth on a Sabbath he doth it with all his might and he knows there is no more work nor device in a recreation then in the grave And truly it too much savours of a carnal heart either to be an Advocate to plead for or to be an Actor to engage in sensual delights on Gods Holy day from the beginning from holy David from zealous Nehemiah it was not so CHAP. XLVIII The first Decad of Arguments to perswade conscience to an holy observation of the Lords day THe design of pressing conscience to a due observance of Gods blessed day is already begun and the rise hath been taken from the sometimes solemn and accurate carriage of the Jews upon their Sabbath And shall a Vagabond Jew out-vy us shall that branch which is cut off be Rom. 11. 19. more fresh and flourishing in Sabbath-observation then the branch which is engraffed and implanted in its room Shall In die dominico tantùm deo tantum divinis cultibus vacandum est Aug. the slave be more obsequious then the Son The vassal more obediential then the Heir The Jews still though blasted with a Curse yet they at least some of them keep their Sabbath with great zeal and devotion And shall not Christians who lie under dews of divine blessing and live under Sun-shines of Gospel heat and light be more frugal of the time and more spiritual in the duties of the Lords day Let not a disinherited Jew rise up in judgment against us But of this already But now further to press conscience to a holy keeping of the Lords day Arg. 1 Let us consider how much folly is bound up in prophaning Gods day We put away from us all those golden promises Jer. 17. 24 25. which God hath entailed upon a
satisfaction not our burden but our blessing the sinner must not Psal 27. 4. Mat. 18. 20. take that pleasure in the dalliances of the world as we should do in the duties of a Sabbath This is the day of divine loves and spiritual complacencies between Christ and Cant. 2. 3. Delitias tum tuas tum Domini Alap the soul when Christ and the Soul meet together in the Garden of the Ordinances where they begin that communication which shall last to Eternity then the believer sits under the shadow of Christ with great delight As God makes the Sabbath his rest so he would have it to be ours The Sabbath must not be our toyle but our triumph the Sanctuary must be our banqueting house Duty our delight Psal 42. 3. 4. It must be the joy of our souls to associate with Christ to pour out our requests in prayer to entertain the discourses of divine will and to enjoy spiritual love which is better then wine The Sabbath in the primitive times was called Cant. 1. 2. Nos in primâ die perfecti Sabbathi festivitate laetamur Hilar. in Prol. in Psalm the feast of the Sabbath and feasts are not usually times of tediousness but pleasantness such times pass away with gratefull delight and surely it must needs soyle the character of a Christian to let those wheels drive heavily which are in the Chariots of Aminadah Doth it not very much unbecome us to be weary of that day which God hath appointed Cant. 6. 12. for fellowship with himself and for the transacting of the great affairs of Eternity There is a Command for Reverence So the Text the holy of the Lord. Si colueris Sabbathum quasi diem sanctum gloriae glorificationi Domini consecratum If Psal 2. 12. thou observe the Sabbath as a holy day consecrated and set apart to the glory and glorifying of God as he well glosses upon it There are two holy passions adorne a Sabbath Joy and Fear the one for the benefits of God the Psal 2. 11. Discamus die Dominico non quaerere gloriam nostram pompose incedendo et splendidé nos vestiend● sed Dei gloriam quaeramus hoc nobis erit gloriosum quod gloria dei per ros alios celebretur Isa 66. 2. other for the presence of God the one for his goodness and the other for his greatness Upon a Sabbath we must as the Psalmist speaks rejoyce with trembling It was the saying of a Learned man Vpon the day of a Sabbath let us not promote our own Glory by stately walking rich attire and pompous appearances but let us exalt Gods Glory by holy duties and this will be more glorious and honourable to us Upon the Sabbath let us tremble at Gods Word as the Lord speaks by the Prophet Isa 66 2. Let us lye at Gods feet let us be awfull of Gods presence let us exalt Gods Name and this is to sanctifie a Sabbath Humble hearts and not fine cloaths the bowing of the soul not the plaiting of the hair or the ordering of the Dress speaks the Sabbath Glorious The Lord calls for high estimations of the Sabbath So the Text Honourable The Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Machhid in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Original signifies that which is Glorious and that which is Ponderous Every Sabbath is a price put into our hands Luke 19. 42. a good wind for Heaven the souls term time that a●tionius Psal 118. 24. temporis that juncture of time which the soul hath to cla● up for Eternity On this day more especially the Scepter of Grace is held out to lay hold upon One observes our Esth 5. 2. Sabbath is called the Lords day not onely because it is the Commemoration of our Lords Resurrection but because of the benefits we receive from the Lord that day and the duties we perform to the Lord that day and therefore if we will practice the Text we must prize the Sabbath we must call it honourable and indeed it is so in a manifold respect If we look upward This is the day in which more especially we sing the praises of the Lord we recount his hohour wherein our hearts bubble forth in holy thanksgivings and therefore the Psalm whose inscription calls it a Psalm for the Sabbath is wholly Laudatory It is a song Psal 92. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the Sabbath day so is the very title And indeed what is the Lords day but primitiae Coeli the dawning of Glory the beginnings of Heaven the tuning of the musick which shall last for ever to every true believer On the Lords day the Saint makes it his grand affaire to advance the Lords Honour If we look downward the Sabbath still is honourable Then the Lord crowns us with his graces honours us with his presence meets us in his ordinances puts all marks and characters Mat. 18. 20. of honour on his people then the King sits at his Cant. 1. 12. Table and sends forth his Spicknard with the sweet smell of it The Holy Sabbath is the blessed time when the Lord Sponsa contactu sponst sui planè divinam suavitatem acquisivit Del. Rio. 1 John 1. 3. Mat. 18. 20. bows the Heavens and comes down and vouchsafes his people fellowship with himself sweet and salvifical communion in a word then the Father drops his grace then the Son promises his presence then the Spirit pursues his work in the assemblies of his Saints If we look outward if we cast our eyes upon other days the other six days of worldly toyle and labour The very gleanings of a Sabbath are better then the Vintage of the Judges 8. 2. week In other dayes we onely reap the curse of the first Adam to eat our bread in the sweat of our brows on the Gen. 3. 19. holy Sabbath we reap the blessing of the second Adam we gather the fruits of his glorious purchase we enjoy the ordinances of his grace lye under the impressions of his spirit and inherit the sweets of his presence and therefore compare the Sabbath with other dayes and what is the dross of a week to the gold of a Sabbath This day is nothing but the souls weekly Jubilee If we look forward towards eternity the Sabbath in this regard is honourable it is the special day for the soul to dress and trim it self in to meet its Bridegroom this is our peculiar Fuit illud Sabbathum Gen. 2. 3. Typus aeterni illius Sabbathi in ●ae●is in quo electi animâ et corpore à peccatis calomitatibus et miseriis hujus vitae requiescent Deus in illis et ipsi in Deo Gen. 66. 23. Vltra hunc mundum est veri Sabbathi observatio Orig. Prov. 34. 2 Cor. 10. 4. 2 Cor. 4. 7. In Sabbatho totus Deo deique voluntati cognoscendae annuntiandae et edimplendae vaces Alap time to prepare for eternity The
scarecly supplyed which lye undiscovered Let us therefore the evening or day before the Sabbath withdraw our selves from the noyse of the world and so quietly call our selves to an account concerning our progresse or regresse in Religion the foregoing week Let us further prepare for the Sabbath by stirring up in our selves holy affections It is fit the soul should be on the wing upon the Lords day First we should long for the day of God as the Psalmist saith Psal 42. 1 2. My soul thirsteth for the living God O when shall I come and appear before God! And as she said Psal 42. 1 2. Judges 5. 28. Why are thy Charriots so long in coming and Judges 5. 28. why tarry the wheels of thy Charriot So O when will the Sabbath come that we may sell all and buy the pearl of price O when will the day come that we may have communion with God Father Son and Holy Ghost Secondly And we should long for God on his holy day Indeed there is nothing in God but what may set us on longing his Glory his Bounty his Purity c. Christ is altogether Cant. 5. 16. lovely and loveliness inticeth affection Beauty will attract love rich Pearls draw every eye so let us entertain Quisquis diligit deum s●gitta haec in corde ejus haeret et s●gittarius tam fugit tam sequitur ambo m●nent cum amante Del. Rio. in our thoughts whatsoever may ingratiate God and his Ordinances and let us kindle the fire on the day before the Sabbath that it may fl●me forth and burn bright on that holy day A good man on Saturday evening going to bed leaped and cryed out It is but one night more and I shall be in the house of God upon his holy day and meet God himself in the use of holy things Let us before hand fall sick of Love and then how gratefull will the appearances of Cant. 2. 5. our Beloved be upon his own blessed day The fifth Duty preparatory to the Sabbath is earnest and fervent prayer Indeed prayer is the omniprevalent Engine which can do wonderfull things things above expectation among others it can admirably fit the soul for the Sabbath First For the Prayer of Faith can prevail with God for the pardon and forgiveness of sin and pardon'd sin will prepare ●randus est deus ut nihi● l●nguoris in nobis et ruinae pristinae relinquat ne rurs●● mali seminis pullalent rediviva plantaria Hierom. the soul for Sabbath-mercy those who are clogg'd with sin will quickly be tyred in duty Now the Sabbath is onely the Mart and spiritual Fair of duties The unpardoned sinner may spend not keep a Sabbath may pass away the time of it not enjoy the benefit of it Prayer I say can prevail for pardon The Lord directs us to this very means to procure forgiveness so Hos 14. 2. Take unto thee words and turn unto the Lord and say take away all iniquity and receive us graciously God will give pardon but prayer must Jam. 5. 15. importune the gift David he prayes for forgiveness and Dum oratur deus ut omnem auserat iniquitatem ut non solùm peccata sed eti●m omnes peccatorum sibras evellat Hier. he obtains it On the Eve of a Sabbath let us be earnest for the pardon of the sins of our lives of the sins of the past week let the week be cleared before we adventure upon a Sabbath A sense of pardon will sweeten every service of a Sabbath make Duty delight and Pains a paradise Ordinances shall be our incomes not our incumberances Be earnest for pardon and the Sabbath shall not only piously but pleasingly be observed Psal 51. 11. Omnem aufer iniquitatem est prima petitio quae alias omnes meritò praecedit Riv. Prayer can obtain the spirit The donation of the spirit is promised to Holy Prayer Now our hearts are the spirit's Luke 11. 13. work-houses The spirit can chain up corruptions draw out grace blow away the froth and vanity of the soul open Spiritualia bona licet corporalia longissimo intervallo post serelinquat tamen sine conditione petere audem●● certum est Christum ea nobis impetrasse et patrem propter ipsum nobis d●turum esse Chemn 2 Cor. 3. 17. Eph. 1. 13. Mal. 3. 2. the heart for the entertainment of Gospel-messages every way put us into a sweet and Sabbath disposition The spirit is a spirit of sanctity to make the heart gracious the spirit is a spirit of liberty to make the heart free and enlarged the spirit is a spirit of purity it is fullers sope and a refiners fire to purge and cleanse the soul and so adaequately prepare the Christian for the divine duties of the Sabbath Prayer layes the foundation of Sabbath blessings the prayer of faith keeps the Key of Gods treasury door Blessings indeed which are really so are the fruits of prayer Prayer it can open the womb Hannah prayes and the obtains 1 Sam. 1. 27. a Samuel It can melt the Heavens it can open the prison Jam. 5. 16. 18. doors it can avail very much and prayer can turn a Sabbath into the souls blessed harvest it can open the heart procure Acts 12. 7. a blessing upon Ordinances engage Christs presence Lutherus ait utinam eodem ardore orare possum tum dabatur responsum fi●t quod velis Lutr. 2 Cor. 6. 2. make duties fruitfull and spiritual Manna nourishing Prayer can make the Sabbath a time of grace an opportunity of life a day of salvation a term of love It hath been the manner of some Christians the day before the Sabbath to meet and spend some time in seeking God by prayer and quickning one another this fervently performed would lay a great ground of a good day indeed to follow and therefore let us Pray pray pray beforehand that divine Ordinances may be accompanied with divine benedictions that sins may Mat. 24. 20. be discharged that our souls may be enlarged and hearts may be upon the wheele Our Saviour saith Pray that your flight be not on the Sabbath day but let us pray that our flight may be upon the Sabbath our flight towards Heaven when the soul is upon the wing and the heart upon its speed towards Jesus Christ A believer on a Sabbath should make haste to enjoy the embraces of his beloved which are as the Faeminae Christum secutae pridie Sabbati id circò ad futuram corporis Christi condituram omnia praeparabant ut Sabbatho secundumlegem quiescerent Wal. Espousals forerunning an Eternal wedding day The Eve before the Sabbath we should spend more time then usually in family duties Our preparation must not only be the work of the Closet but the work of the Family Then we should read the Scriptures refresh one another with holy discourses be more solemn in our addresses to God
the dawning of the morning and cryed I hoped in thy word Morning g●aces like morning stars shine brightest David used to cast anchor upon divine truth in the morning he did not onely meditate on it but act his hope and confidence in it and this was Davids work in the earliest part of the day and this is a rare Copy for us How should we prevent the dawning of a Sabbath in our flights to God in our longings after Christ in beginning our Sabbath-work Judg. 21 4. Love to God and his Ordinances should tear the curtains open disdain the softness of the pillow and betimes 1 Joh. 1. 3. break open our closet doors to enjoy fellowship with Pers r●m Rex unum habebat cubi u●arem qui idoffi ii habebu ut manè ingressus regi diceret Surge ô Rex etque ea cura quae te curare voluit Mosoromisdes Plutarch the Father and his Son Jesus Christ But to conclude this particular Plutarch reports That the Persian King had one of the Servants of his Chamber every morning to come to him and to cry to him Rise O King and follow those cares which thy good genius will have thee to pursue Let us onely invert the phrase and instead of thy good genius say Gods good spirit and it will be applicable to our selves Let us especially early on Gods day resolve we will follow the traces in which the holy spirit shall lead us Let us seriously preponderate the weight and multiplicity of a Sabbath-days work The Traveller who is to ride many miles gets up early in the morning and so sets upon Judg 19. 8. his Journey The soul hath a great way to travel upon the Lords day its task is great and therefore its time must not run wast There are many duties to perform First Secret duties On the Sabbath there are some duties which must onely be acted between God and the devout soul A gracious heart will have private intercourse with God Jesus Christ went into a Mountane apart to pray Mat. 14. 23. and he was there alone The Saint some times turns the Closet into a Sanctuary and never more fitly then on a Lords day Our dear Lord bids us go some times into our Chambers Mat. 6. 6. and shut the doors upon us The Saints are Gods hidden ones in point of worship they serve God in their recluses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quem vis locum occulium notat Par. and private retirements and this is an evidence of their uprightness The Spouse sometimes meets her beloved and none shall be spectators of their holy fellowship Nunquam minus solus quàm cum solus and upon Gods holy day let the gracious soul set upon these several duties First The reading of Gods word The Eunuch was reading the Prophet Isaiah in his Charriot not onely because he would lose no time but because he would be more serious Acts 8. 28. in this secret duty David compares the Word to an honey comb Psal 19. 10. and honey combs are usually in the private gardens The same Psalmist saith The Law was Psal 1. 2. his Meditation in the night and then surely he had few witnesses to view his devotion The closet door may keep out not onely other people but other thoughts and then we are fittest to converse with Gods Word when we are most intent Secondly Another secret duty for the Lords day Is holy Prayer to God and praising of God Indeed prayer is a duty 1 Thes 5. 17. accommodated for all places for all times and all cases but closet prayer on the morning of a Sabbath is like a morning star which portends a fair day We read of our Saviour Mark 1. 35. that in the morning rising up a great while Mark 1. 35. before day he went out and departed into a solitary place Acts 10. 9. and there prayed let us go and do so likewise And holy Peter in this confessed that the Disciple was not greater then his Master for he pursued the same practice Acts 10. 9. Peter went up upon the house to pray about the sixth hour And as we must pray to God so we must sing the praises of God in secret sometimes our closets must not only be our Oratories to poure out our prayers in but our Mount Olivets to sing Hymns of praise to the Divine Majesty Mat. 26. 30. We must begin the works of Heaven in secret which we shall be doing to eternity in blessed Society Thus David praised God seven times a day and certainly he had not every time witnesses of his Divine Exaltation Psal 119. 164. Thirdly A third secret duty is Holy Meditation When the mind that Spiritual Bee is working and seeking honey out of every flower and this piece of service is calculated Gen. 24. ●● onely for privacy Company untravelling whatsoever meditation works but of this more largely hereafter Fourthly The last duty to be acted in secret upon the holy Sabbath is Self-Examination when Conscience is both Judge Witness and Tribunal And in the acting of this duty there needs no Sessions-house but a mans own breast David saith when we commune with our hearts we must Psal 4. 4. 1 Cor. 11. 28. be still There wants no noise from the world nor from the company of others These two last duties viz. Meditation and Self-Examination are most proper for the most secret and retired places fitter for the Closet then the Church the secret Chamber then the open Sanctuary they are as one saith actions of the mind and so concern a Dr. Gouge mans own self in particular And these secret duties of piety should especially be performed in the morning of a Sabbath that the Lords day may begin with them and then we shall be in a good preparation for other duties The beginning with God thus in the morning may influence the whole Sabbath like the tuning of an Instrument which makes the whole Lesson's melody the sweeter and indeed pure Religion and undefiled which the Apostle speaks of Jam. 1. 27. never look's so comly as on a Sabbath day the day Jam. 1. 27. inhances the duty as the lovely dress doth outward beauty Thus we see there are secret duties to be acted on a Sabbath Secondly Private Duties On Gods holy day we must not lock up our selves and our services above in the Chamber but we must come down into the Family and there the morning stars must sing together to allude to that of Job Job 38. 7. Consort makes the musick The stars shine brightest in a constellation Jesus Christ would not be transfigured alone but he took some to be witnesses of his Glory when he would Mat. 17. 1 2. Luke 9. 18. Mat. 13. 36. pray his Disciples were with him and when he would open the blessed mysteries of the Gospel he takes his Disciples to him In our closets there is indeed a meeting of thoughts
must meet with Christ at a Sacrament A contrite heart is the fittest company for a Crucified Saviour Eph. 5. 19. In singing of Psalms there must be holy joy we must make August in lib. confes Deplorat dolet q●●d concentibus musi●is plus attentionis adhibuit quàm quae sub ill●s prof●reb●ntur Zanch. melody in our hearts Holy affection must make the reading of the Word savoury and saving to us The Sabbath then without we act our Graces on God on Christ on the Word and in the Ordinances is onely a day of theatrical shews and spiritual pegeantries which when it is over leaves the soul empty of any purchase or satisfaction And if so many graces must be drawn out into act we had need take the wings of the morning and speed to our Sabbath employments which are so numerous and important There are many faculties and parts to employ on the Sabbath All that is within us and all that is without us must serve and praise the Lord every part of our bodies and Psal 109. 30. every faculty of our souls the whole man is but a reasonable Rom. 12. 1. sacrifice to be offered this holy festival First Our outward man the tongue must be employed in prayer the ear in attention the heart in devotion the eye in speculation the knee in submission And Secondly Our inward man the understanding must be improved to drink in truth the will to entertain truth the Recta ratio dictat deum mag●● interna fide spe pietate amore et puritate mentis quàm externis corporis ceremoniis colendum esse Alap memory to retain and record truth and our affections have a three-fold office First To espouse the Word by receiving it in the love thereof 2 Thes 2. 10. A careful attention opens the door to 2 Thes 2. 10. the word but a lively affection opens the heart to the word The preaching of the Gospel layes a treble injunction upon us 1. To receive it 2. To love it 3. To live in it But the Second office of our affections is to heat our prayers it is love makes that sacrifice to smoak and flame And James 5. 16. Thirdly To scale Heaven in longing for a better Sabbath more durable more sweet more full and superlative Psal 63. 1. There are many persons to converse withall on the Lords day First We must converse with God The Sabbath is called the Lords day not onely as it is the commemoration of Rev. 1. 10. his glorious resurrection and his appointment and institution but likewise because our business is with him on that day then more especially our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ Our praying on a Sabbath 1 Joh. 1. 3. is the pouring out of our souls into Gods bosome our In Patrea et in Christo sunt omnia verae ecclesiae bona Zanch. hearing is onely receiving and being acquainted with Gods mind in Ordinances we wait upon God in the Sacrament we feed upon Christ in our Services we do homage to God in our Praises we pay tribute to God The Sabbath is the souls meeting day with God its spiritual Mart in which it traficks and drives its trade with Heaven Take away God from a Sabbath and the Ordinances are dry and parcht duties are heartless and unprofitable the Sanctuary is filled with emptiness the people and professors hunt after a Isa 55. 2. shadow and at last shall catch that which is not bread All our addresses on this holy day are to God our delights are in God our expectations are from God our fellowship and sweet communion is with God and therefore holy David Psal 63. 2. speaks of Gods Power and Glory in the Sanctu●ry and makes its only request to behold the beauty of the Lord in the Temple Psal 27. 4. and magnifies a dayes opportunity in Gods house The Psal 84. 10. Spouse enquires where Christ feedeth and where he makes his Can. 1. 7. flock to rest at noon Our great and principal business is with God on the Sabbath Secondly We must converse with the Ministers of God they are on this day the stars to guide us Rev. 1. 10. they Rev. 1. 10. are the Stewards to provide for us and give us our meat in due season Luk. 12. 42. 1 Cor. 4. 1. 1 Pet. 4. 10. they Luke 12. 42. are the salt to season us Mat. 5. 13. they are the wise Duo docet Apostolus unum communionem cum Apostolis ideòq eorum Doctrinam eô spectare ut omnes unum fiamus cum Christo ejus Patre Zanch. 1 Cor. 3. 10. Mal. 2. 7. builders to edifie us in the increases of God their lips preserve knowledge their feet appear beautifull in bringing the glad-tidings of Peace their voice is sweet to the hungry soul On the Sabbath we must wait on the Ministry of Gods faithfull Ambassadors Thirdly We must converse with the Saints of God on his holy day then Gods people must gather together and pursue Rom. 10. 15. a joynt interest Publick Assemblies adorn the Sabbath Cant. 2. 14. Grapes are best in clusters There are many strings to the 2 Cor. 5. 20. Lute which is the sweetest Instrument Flocks are most pleasant when gathered together in one company and Armies most puissant when kept in a body their dissipation is both their rout and ruine Christs sheep must flock together Suggerit Apost constantiae adm●nicula Primò Vtament et diligenter frequentent caetus Ecclesiasticos Secundò Vt se mutuò ad veritatem tuendam cohortationibus excitent maxime qui firmiores sunt infirmiores juvent confirment et hortentur ad constantiam in fide Deus enim publicis presentiam suam et eruditionem promisit In Ecclesiae congressi●us doctrina fidei reperitur et declaratur ad singulorum aedificationem et preces pro constantid publicè funduntur ad deum quas juxta promissionem exaudit Par. on Christs holy day Paraeus gives us four solid Reasons for it which I shall mention for their substantial worth First The Congregating of Gods people especially on the Lords day is the soder of unity like many stones so artificially laid that they appear all but one stone Every Congregation is a little body whereof Christ is the head Vnity is the strength and beauty of the Saints nothing so preserves it as frequent and holy Assemblings Secondly It is the preservative of love Many sticks put together kindle a flame and make a ●laze Frequent visits multiply friendships In Heaven where all the glorified Saints meet together how ardent is their love Absence and seldome associations beget strangeness as between God and us so between one another To meet to worship the same God is the best way to attain to the same heart like the Primitive Saints who were all of one company and all of one mind Acts 2. 46. Acts 2.
and rule of all Laws and Laws are so far just good and equal as they accord with the Divine A primâ veritate quae est deus dependent omnes veritates Law So every thing is true as it is consentaneous and conformable to the Counsels and Will of God to that truth which is in the mind of God As Ambrose observes No man can call Jesus Lord but in and by the Holy Ghost because whatsoever is true by whomsoever it is spoken it is from the holy spirit All truth flows from the spirit as all lies are from Satan he is the Father of them God is immutably and unchangeably true Man runs often from truth to errour deceiving and being deceived we often leave the plain way of truth and go into the by-wayes Pulcherrima est veritas per quam immutata quae sunt quae fuerunt et quae futura sunt dicuntur Cic. of errour and mistake The Church in all ages hath had its Pests as well as its Pillars and hath been plagued with an Arrius as well as blessed with an Athanasius Simon Magus hath crept in among the fold of Christ as well as Simon Peter hath had the charge of the flock of Christ And besides truth in us is sometimes more clear sometimes more clouded Our understanding is different and graduate in Amos 3. 6. Jer. 10. 10. Joh. 17. 3. the apprehensions of it But the Lord is alwayes unchangeable in his truth because he is so in his being in his will in his wisdom and other attributes God is not subject either to misapprehensions or recollections God is true in all his works Whither we consider his spiritual operations whom he justifies he not onely freely but truly justifies not onely reprieves but pardons suspends Isa 46. 10. Rom. 11. 29. his execution but makes him heir of life and salvation If God call us he doth it truly and effectually not by Rom. 8. 30. a pretended invitation but by a powerfull and successfull vocation The Apostle links predestination and vocation together in the same chain Whom God regenerates he doth truly convert to himself giveth them true faith and the blessed graces of his holy spirit And so in the works of his hands Angels are glorious and real spirits Man is a noble and a true creature resembling the God of truth and bearing his image he is no fantasm no spectrum as some Gen. 1. 26. hereticks in the primitive times asserted of the body of Christ God made all things very good Gen. 1. 31. and so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 no mixture of false semblance embased their worth The Creatures are real according to their appearances The world is no dream or fantastick landskip God is true in his words He is true in the incarnate word Christ is the true Son of God not suppositious not the Son of Joseph but the Son of God He was truly 1 Joh. 1. Joh. 7. 40. Heb. 5. 10. Joh. 12. 15. Col. 2. 9. Psal 19. 8. God and truly Man a true Prophet a true Priest a true King 1 Joh. 5. 20. And Christ calls himself the truth Joh. 14. 6. God is likewise true in every word which the Prophets or Apostles have pronounced or laid down for Joh. 18. 31. Joh 18 37. Mat. 5. 18. Rom. 3. 4. our advice and instruction truth is an indelible character of the Scriptures In his Word God is true in every particle of it in every tittle of it Mat. 5. 18. And therefore as the Apostle saith Let God be true and every man a lyar Rom. 3. 4. Christ asserts he spoke nothing but the words of truth and he left heaven to converse with the Sons of men to bear testimony to the truth Joh. 8. 40. Joh. 8. 40. God is true in his donations He gives us true happiness true grace puts in us a principle of truth God writes us true Eph. 4. 30. Mundi bona sunt fugacia et falsa sed Christus robis confert spiritualia et aeterna spiritum sanctum et vitam aeternam Ger. pardons seals us by a spirit of truth to the day of redemption give us true knowledge fills us with true joy and sweetens our souls with real and true consolations He enriches us with true riches Luke 16. 11. The profers of the world are false and evanid false shews and counterfeit satisfaction But all true complacencies and delights are to be found in Christ and are treasured up in God God is true in his promises Those breasts which yield better liquor then wine those flowers which smell sweeter then Promissiones habent ubera verè vino meliora et magis fragrantia unguentis optimis Bern. the choycest oyntments as Bernard saith sweeter then the flowers of Paradise All the promises in Christ are Yea and Amen 2 Cor. 1. 20. They are all established in him as a str●●●ure built upon a sure founda●ion Indeed the Lord is abundant in truth Exod. 34. 6. He is encompassed with truth as with a girdle Isa 11. 5 6. He is plenteous in 2 Cor. 1. 20. Exod. 34. 6. Isa 11. 5 6. Psal 86. 15. Psal 100. 5. Psal 91. 4. Psal 117. 2. Psal 146. 6. truth Psal 86. 15. Ready to write truth in our inward parts He is eternal in truth he is holy and true in this generation and so he will be in the next Psal 100. 5. He is preservative in his truth his truth is both shield and buckler Psal 91. 4. So that truth is not onely Gods glorious attribute but mans sure defence We must meditate on the Love of God This is that influential attribute which sets God on work His love sets his eye on pittying his head on contriving his hand on acting his heart on melting God out of love sent his Son Joh. 3. 16. Joh. 3. 19. out of his bosome scatters his Gospel in the world that light which is more glorious then the Sun In love God saith Ezek. 16. 6. to the sinner live Ezek. 16. 6. seeketh after enemies for reconciliation 2 Cor. 5. 19. and makes clods of earth and 2 Cor. 5. 19. poor worms heirs of salvation Heb. 1. 14. But for the further Heb. 1. 14. discovery of this sweet attribute we must search for it in its properties it may be discerned in its characters though not in its cause Now there are divers explanatory characters of divine love The love of God is eternal love Gods love to poor man had no beginning there never was any time when the heart 2 Tim. 1. 9. Jer 31. 3. Hos 11. 9. Apostolus tempora secularia vult quae simul cum seculo et mundo fluere et volui caeperunt sed ante tempora secularia quod ante mundi constitutionem ante temporis et mundi originē est Ansel of God was not set upon a Saint He loved him in his futurition when the believer was to be a child of God
Man when he breaks Gods Commands Omnia deus quidem nectit ad suos trahit effectus Boeth he fullfills Gods Decrees and when he runs counter to what God imposes he keeps pace with what God determines That alwayes comes to pass which God who exerciseth an universal providence over the world hath appointed to fall out and come to pass Those who crucified Christ acted a Acts 2. 23. great sin yet they fulfill a certain decree for the Lamb was slain before the foundation of the world Rev. 13. 8. The divine purpose and determination is the center to which the lines of occurrences and affairs are drawn There was a medley and miscellanious contrivance to bring Christ to the Cross There was Judas his treachery the Pharisees enmity the peoples inconstancy Pilates desire to make himself popular and the Souldiers cruelty but all these different interests meet in the execution of Gods designed purpose as Peter most excellently Acts 2. 23. Him being delivered by the determinate counsel and fore-knowledge of God ye have taken Acts 2. 23. Exod. 2. 24. Exod. 7 22. and by wicked hands have crucified and slain And thus Pharaoh not onely burdens Gods people but hardens his own heart both which carry on Gods end which he had 1 Sam. 6. 6. determined viz. The delivery of the poor Jewes and the drowning of Pharoah and his wretched Aegyptians So Mat. 2. 15. Gods end and purpose is atchieved in every undertaking Herod in his rage enforces Joseph to carry Christ in his infancy Hos 11. 1. into Aegypt but Christs going into Aegypt did not so Verba haec ad Christum referenda sunt quamvis judaeorum interpretationes ab hoc scopo l●ngè abeant Riv. much decline Herods fury as accomplish a divine prophesie Hos 11. 1. Herod unwillingly fulfils what God wisely had foretold The Gospel is the sweetest means of salvation yet it is a savour of death unto death to the reprobate world They suck poyson out of these flowers because they shall dash upon their designed ruine The Gospel of life shall be a means to accomplish their determined death All things arrive at Sicut fragrantia unguenti columbam vegetat scarabaeum necat et sicut lumen solis oculos sanos recreat debiles offend●t sic Christus malis in ruinam est bonis in resurrectionem gloriosam Theoph. 2 Cor. 2. 16. 2 Cor. 4. 3 4. that end which God hath set them Christ himself is for the ruine of sinners which are appointed to misery for the joyous salvation of Saints who are determined to glory So the same fire purges the Gold and consumes the stubble In a word the works of providence First Sometimes how strange are they and misteriously intricate as in the case of Joseph through how many mazes and maeanders did that holy man pass to his appointed principality Secondly Sometimes how terrible are they and tremendous as in the case of Pharoah his fatal and final destruction being ushered in by ten preceding Judgements Thirdly Sometimes how worthy and glorious are they as in the case of Hester who was advanced by unexpected Est 7. 3 4. means to her soveraignty for the preservation of the Isa 44. 28. Church from ruine Isa 45. 1. Fourthly And sometimes how good and gracious as in the case of Cyrus who was raised by God for the returne of Israel to their beloved Country and Home CHAP. XX. God is most gracious in the transcendent work of mans Redemption LEt us meditate likewise upon the great work of our Redemption This glorious work is the Master-piece of divine Christus est dei sapientia tum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quia est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aeterm patris tum revelata quia in Christi cognitione salutaris sapientia sita est Par. wisdom The Angels desire to look into it 1 Pet. 1. 12. but though they excell in wisdom yet they cannot see to the bottom of it there are so many small threads of curious contrivance in it that no eye of the creature can possibly discern them It is worth our notice that Christ who carties on this work is not onely called the power of God but the wisdom of God 1 Cor. 1. 24. to evidence the traces of infinite contrivance which are in this blessed undertaking And therefore how should we on the morning of a Sabbath contemplate on this rare design of mans redemption by our dear Jesus the holy Son of God How should we ponder 1 Pet. 1. 19 20. Gen. 3. 15. it deeply get lively and strong apprehensions of it that it might leave deep and lasting impressions upon our souls Let Eph. 1. 4. us view over the several passages and transactions of this Non-such of Gods works First Let us view it in the plat-form how gloriously was this laid in the eternal purposes of Gods love Eph. 1. 4. Yea in the eternal promise past between the Father and the Son Eph. 3. 8. Christus est agnus macta●us ab origine mundi 1. Aeternâ dei praeordinatione 2. Promissione de semine mulicris contrituro caput serpentis 3. Fide Patrum quae sui 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rerum sperandarum 4. In vict●m●● patrum quae erant ipse agnus sacramentaliter 5. In membris suis quibus patientibus ipse patiebatur Par. Tit. 1. 2. O the everlastingness infiniteness and unsearchableness of this love of God! That the everlasting God the Majesty of Heaven and Earth should take care of us before the world was that he should buisie himself and his Son about poor worthless and wretched worms O let us adore this first love admire this free love of God and Christ Secondly Let us see in the next place the early discovery and shining forth of this mistery in the very morning of the world No sooner man was fallen but a promise of Christ our Redeemer is reached forth unto him Gen. 3. 15. And after many ages God sends his blessed Son out of his bosome to fulfill this promise Gal. 4. 4. We could not come up to Heaven to Christ and therefore he comes down upon Earth to us O let us see the King of glory stooping bowing the Heavens to come down and dwell in a dungeon and lodge among prisoners and pitch his tent in the Rebels camp Let us think how the holy Angels wondered to see the King of Heaven stepping down from his throne to sit on his footstool Occisio Abelis innocentis suit figura occisionis agni Lyra. yea putting off the robes of a Prince to put on the livery of a Servant Phil. 2. 7 8. and that after treason had been stampt upon it nay taking our nature after it had been in armes against God not that Christ took the sin of our nature upon him Heb. 4. 15. but he took the shame of it after it had been under a cloud under a blot before God and Angels nay God
of sin cannot over-rule the spot of sin cannot so unbeautifie him as to render him repudiate in the sight of his beloved sin may bring the Saint to the bar of conscience to be arraigned their but never to the bar of God to be condemned 1 Joh. 29. Jer. 31. 34. Heb. 9. 14. Isa 43. 25. Isa 44. 22. 1 Joh. 1. 9. there Christ hath satisfied for the sins of his people and divine justice will not require a double satisfaction The Apostle saith 1 Joh. 1. 9. If we confess our sins much more if Christ die for them God is just to forgive our sins Christ hath redeemed us from the killing power of death The Saints death is his alteration not his execution his Job 14. 14. Phil. 1. 23. Mors non est interitus sed introitus change but not his curse His priviledge and not his penalty Our death by the death of Christ is become a desireable thing the bitterness of Christs death hath put a sweetness and loveliness upon ours When the Saints die they only go to their Fathers house Death sees them safe home it Joh. 14 2 unites the body to the Earth their Mother and the soul to Tempus diversionis est te●● reversionis et regressionis ad Deu● Tertul. the Lord their Father who in the Resurrection will conjoyn these dissever'd pieces of Man and glorify them both for ever Tertullian calls the time of dying the time of return to God after the years of absence here below Cyprian calls death the time of a Saints assumption and conveyance to his Augustinus in 1 Tim. 4 7. Exultantis magis sunt verba ad mort●● praesentiam et ad cor●●●m ●● helantis quàm timentis et seipsum cruciantis Aug. Kingdom And it is recorded when the same holy Martyr heard of a sentence of death passed upon him by the Emperour Valerian he answered I thank God who is pleased to loosen the chains of my body that at last I may truly be at liberty Christs death indeed hath sweetned and perfumed ours the spices which were thrown into Christs grave are now taken up and thrown into ours Life to a believer is but an unkind Wall which parteth the Saint from his Beloved death throwes down this Wall and brings him into Luc. 24. 1. Joh. 19. 40. the same Heaven with Jesus Christ Death convey'd Lazarus from the comfortless gate of the rich man to the refreshing Luc. 16. 23. Heb. 9. 27. bosom of blessed because believing Abraham Christ hath redeemed us from the sting though not from the stroak of death from its hurt though not from its hold A Saint Rev. 14 13. 1 Thes 4. 14 16. now dies in Christ and though he die in his bed yet he sleeps in Jesus Death is only his ceasing to be any longer in a valley of tears and a wilderness of snares But a little farther to dilate on this point The Attributes resplendent in the work of Redemption In the great work of our Redemption all the Divine Attributes manifest themselves in their greatest lustre and splendor in this beautiful Orb they shine the brightest The Justice of God that if the sinner did not die the Son must One must die if the sinner be not cast into hell the Saviour must go out of his Fathers bosom Here was infinite 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 delectatus est Deus voluit et ejus beneplacito profectus est quòd infirmitatibus subjecerit filium su●m eumque afflictionibus contuderit Alioquin nihil actum esset si existimaremus illud accidisse vel nolente deo vel otiosè spectante Riv. justice here justice had a Selah put upon it That Text of Scripture is most remarkable in Isa 53. 10. It pleased the Father to bruise him he hath put him to grief c. God took a delight in bruising his own Son because in those bruises justice rid triumphant Innocency must bleed that the sinner may escape and that justice may be displayed Lycurgus once made a Law that Adultery should be punished with the loss of both the eyes his own Son being found guilty that justice might not be waved he puts out one of his Sons eyes and one of his own So the wages of sin is death Rom. 6. 23. That Law is unalterable now sin is committed there is an accursed thing in the Camp Iosh 7. 11. Either the sinner or the Saviour must die If the Principal cannot pay the Debt the surety must Divine Justice is so inexorable that the sinner escaping the Cup of Divine Rom. 6. 23. Heb. 7. 22. wrath must be put into the hand of an only Son Thus justice is eminent in the work of Mans Redemption The faithfulness of God God from eternity made a compact with his Son the Copy of which is laid up in that Ad successum mortis de quod attinet Rectè exprimitur videndi et saturandi verbis quibus omni moda fruitio rei conquisitae laboribus significatur et accipitur pro foelici et ubere sanctarum animarum messe Christus ad mortis suae tempus esuriebat grandi charitatis aestu c. Joh. 17. 4 5 6. Text Isa 53. 10 11. And one iota of this agreement must not pass away The substance of this compact is comprised in this main Article If Christ will make his soul an offering for sin he shall see the travel of his soul and be satisfied If Christ will die his Spouse his Church shall live his Cross shall make way for their Crown Now in the fulness of time Gal. 4. 4. Christ attempts and accomplisheth this stupendous undertaking he becomes incarnate and dies for his people and so his people live by his death the Father altogether comporting with this glorious agreement and not only gives his Son to redeem sinners Ioh. 3. 16. but likewises gives redeemed sinners to his Son Ioh. 17. 4 5 6. And thus Divine faithfulness gloriously breaks forth in the blessed work of our Redemption Every Article is made good and Christ meets with no disappointment not a soul miscarries for which he laid down a price and a ransom The Love of God did most transcendently appear in the work of M●ns Redemp●ion There was rich love on the Fathers part Ioh. 3. 16. Unspeakable bowels did the Father express to part with a Son a holy Son the Son of the bosom the Son from Eternity the very Character of his Father Heb. 1. 3. An only Son a begotten Son Psal 2. 7. to die Gen. 22. 12. for sinners Though Isaac was on the Altar yet he was rescued but our dear Jesus was on the Cross and he must die Christ begs his life of the Father Mat. 26. 39. But Non solum confi●mat Christus se discipulos suos dilexisse sed dilectionis suae magnitudinem exaggerat quod summo amorisgradu eos dilexerit Ger. the Father will not hear Great love was manifested in the
Son too He takes upon him the rags of our flesh and they are farther torn by sorrows and afflictions and at last dipt in bloud How Christ glosses upon his own love Joh. 15. 13. and sheweth us that death was the most sincere testimony and the most superlative Character of entire love his wounds dropt more love than bloud his arms spread upon the Cross were stretched out for amicable and Cùm inimici essemus reconcil●ati sumus deo per sanguinem filii sui et Christus mortuus es● pro ●●●cis et si nondum q●i●●m amantibu● sed tam●n jam amatis Bern. amiable embraces There was a threefold Inscription upon the Cross of Christ I will only a little invert it let it be this The wisdom of the Father the love of the Son and the Salvation of sinners Christs heart was full of love Joh. 10. 15. He lays down his life it is not forced from him Ioh. 10. 18. he deposits it as the pawn of his affection Christ dies for his friends saith Bernard happily not yet loving him yet already beloved by him The mercy of God did most illustriously shine in the glorious work of Mans Redemption The Apostle Rom. 5. 10. Rom. 5. 8. assures us that Christ died to reconcile enemies to his Father and what would have been the issue of enemies how bitter Coristus ex charitate suâ et Patris pro ●ohn injustis et malefactoribus peccatoribusque mori voluit Christus ergo longe omnem omnium hominum charitatem superat et transcendit Alap in Rom. Ezek. 16. 6. their portion how full of wrath their Cup how sure their slaughter Luke 19. 27. But Christ comes to die for us in this low and lost condition Ezek. 16. 6. when we were ready to receive the reward of enemies when we were falling by the hand of Justice as so many enemies How sweet and seasonable was this pity and compassion we had all the Characters of misery upon us which are fastned upon the Church of Laodicea Rev. 3. 17. we were blind miserable poor and naked both helpless and hopeless then Christ redeemed this dying Captive crew by the ransom of his bloud and as the price of his death Our Messiah must die for us when nothing else can help us and his wounds must bleed to stanch ours his bloud must be our balsam his Corrosives our Cordials his fresh wounds must cure our festred ones Heart-breaking pity and mercy brings our beloved to the slaughter when mankind was ready to drop into the flames Alapide observes There was more charity Gen. 42. 25. ●en 44. 1. and pity in one Christ dying for sinners then there can be bowels in all mankind Joseph in pity preserves his Family from famine Christ in softer bowels preserves his people from raine The wisdom of God was greatly seen in the work of mans Redemption in this work there was apparent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 3. 9 10. the manifold wisdom of God as the Apostle speaks all the embroydery and artifices of rare contrivance and wisdom Omnes illae ●ultae variae e●p●gnantes inter s●r●tiones quibus us●s ●●t deus in redimendis elect●s Christo conjungendis omnes haerationes ab aeterno definitae fuerunt in divino consilio admirabilem vere 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fuisse aeternam Dei sapientiam Zanch. in Eph. Zanchy observes that many seeming contrarieti●s and contradictions were reconciled in the Redemption of mankind Jew and Gentile dissevered in Name Nature and Priviledge are copulated in the same Gospel with the joyful news of our Redemption by Christ God and Man at an infinite distance united in the same person of Christ who is our blessed Redeemer Justice and Mercy in a mutual antipathy one to the other meet and kiss each other in the same work of our Redemption What an efflux of wisdom was this that the Son of God should die to free the Sons of men that so the Sons of men should become the Sons of God what rare contrivance of divine wisdom That justice should be executed and yet mercy no way impaired that justice should over-take the surety but mercy should be displayed to the sinner that our pardons should be written in anothers bloud our favours should lie in anothers smiles our persons clothed with anothers robe of spotless righteousness Rom 13. 14. 2 Cor. 5. 19 20 Heb. 7. 25. Rev. 1. 5. Christus jam vivit non sibi sed nobis nostram causam agens in conspectu dei that our Prayers should be heard upon the account of anothers intercession Heb. 7. 25. That our souls should be cleansed in the bath of anothers bleeding Rev. 1. 5. All these methods of interwoven wisdom may be both our wonder and meditation Christ is the wisdom of his Father 1 Cor. 1. 24. not only as he was his Son and his Character but as he was our All-sufficient Redeemer The power of God did eminently appear in the work of our Redemption Love brought Christ to the grave but power Heb 9. 14. brought him out of the grave Justice laid the weight of sin upon Christ but power sustained him under that burden Simplicius est res postulat de ipsâ Christi divinitate intelligere hunc phrasm aeternum scil spiritum quae nisi aeternam fragantiam humanae Christi victimae ospirasset utique satisfactoria pro mundi peccatis aeternaeque justitiae meritoria esse non po●●isset Par. which would have crushed men and Angels into nothing It was nothing but Almighty power which supported Christ and carryed him effectually and gloriously through the work of mans Redemption which must necessarily be exerted to sustain Christ under those effusions and chataracts of divine wrath which were poured out upon him and to raise him from that grave where he lay breathless for an appointed time What but omnipotency could break the bonds of death and petarre the Sepulchre to make way for the Resurrection of a glorious Redeemer CHAP. XXI God exceedingly to be praised in his works of Grace and Glory LEt us meditate on the morning of Gods holy day upon the works of grace Now divine grace may be taken in a Rom. 8. 28. Rom. 9. 11. Eph. 1. 11. Eph. 3. 11. double sense First Either for grace the cause which is nothing but the favour and good-will of the Lord his rich grace and mercy folded up in purposes of eternal love and therefore the Apostle 2 Tim. 1. 9. joyns Gods purpose and his grace together Gratia ab aeterno data in decreto scil Dei praedestinatione et haec donandi voluntas absoluta est et irrevocabilis Alap to evidence his gracious purposes of favour which he had from eternity towards his dear Saints These methods of grace are various and admirable The rejection of the Jews and the calling in of the Gentiles the different dispensations used in the Church before the Law under the
spirit who is our intercessour within us And in correspondence to this blessed Trinity there Rom. 8. 26 27. are three species of beings who enjoy glory the glorious God the holy Angels the glorified Saints and thus meditation may tune the morning of a Sabbath and the musick may sound all the ensuing day CHAP. XXII God is most illustrious in his Bounty and Presence WE must meditate on the morning of a Sabbath not onely on the nature of God on the attributes of God and on the works of God but likewise on the bounty of God and his indulgence in giving us his Sabbath Our very work on this day is our reward our spiritual duties are our greatest dignities O what an honour what a favour what a happiness doth God vouchsafe us in giving us this golden season David though a King and the Head of the Psal 84. 10. Psal 42. 2. best people in the world esteemed it an honour to be the lowest Officer in Gods house Psal 84. 10. The ordinances Psal 63. 2. of God are called our appearing before God Psal 42. 2. The fruition of them is as the seeing of his face Capernaum Deut. 4. 7. because of them was lifted up to heaven Mat. 11. 23. Who can tell what honour it is to appear in the presence of this King Or what happiness to see his lovely countenance In the ordinances of God the Christian hath sweet communion with ravishing delight in and enflamed affection to the blessed God if in them he tasts God to be gracious and hath the first fruits of his glorious and eternal harvest Well might the Protestants of France call the place of their publick meeting on Gods holy day Paradise Ordinances are heaven in a Glass and the Londs day is heaven in a Map O the bounty of God in giving us this blessed day This day is to be valued at a high rate therein we enjoy fellowship with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ we have tasts of the Spirit and feel the influential impressions of his grace we are going up the stairs till we come to the highest loft of 1 Joh. 1. 3. Psal 34. 8. glory The Jewes call the week dayes prophane dayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but the Sabbath a holy and precious day The Greeks call week days working dayes but the Sabbath is a day of sweet rest Other dayes are common and ordinary dayes but this holy Sabbath is the chief of dayes Many daughters have done vertuously but thou excellest them all Many dayes as Lecture Prov. 31. 25. dayes Fast dayes Thanksgiving dayes have done vertuously but thou O Sabbath excellest them all Well might the good soul run to meet thee in the morning and salute thee with a Come my sweet spouse thee have I loved for thee have I longed and thou art my dearest delight How far then Honos ne sit onus nec verba spiritus verbera carnis should we be from accounting the Sabbath our burden and our attendance on Ordinances upon that blessed day our task or bondage O let us not esteem spiritual opportunities our fetters but our freedom Think what the Phaenix is among the birds the Lyon among the beasts the Fire among the elements the Prince among the Subjects that is the Lords day among other dayes Wax in the shop is worth something but wax put to some Deeds is worth thousands Ordinary dayes are wax in the shop but the Lords day is wax put to the deeds Upon this day Christ carries the soul into his wine-Cellar and his banner over him Cant. 2. 4. is love Can. 2. 4 5. Upon other dayes Christ feeds his members but on this day he feasts them on other dayes they have their ordinary dyet but on the Sabbath they have their exceedings on this day Christ brings forth his living waters Gen. 43. 34. his best wine Joh. 2. 10. His finest bread his Benjamins Haec visio non est personalis et Jacobi solummodò consolatio sed commune piorum solamen ut de praesentiâ et divino auxilio dubitemus Par mess On the Lords day Christ pitches his Tabernacle among us we are as it were taken up into the mount with God there to be transfigured before him Mat. 17. 2. When the Lord appeared unto Jacob in a vision by night he saw a Ladder erected between Heaven and Earth and the Lord on the top of it the Angels ascending and descending by it and when he awoke How dreadfull saith he is this place the Lord was here and I was not aware surely it is no other Gen. 28. 16 17. then the house of God and this is the gate of heaven Are not Hos 11. 9. our places of assembling the very gates of heaven In our Deut. 33. 3. solemn assemblies is there not a ladder erected between earth and heaven and is not the Lord at the top of it The gracious Sicut deus sanctus est sic etiam populum sonctificat et servat et in medio eorum est et apparet Riv. instructions which we receive are they not so many Angels descending The gracious motions which arise in our hearts upon meditation on Gods word upon thanksgiving to God or rejoycing in him or else sorrowing for our sins are they not as so many Angels ascending And have we not then great cause to be filled with admiration and holy gratulations to God for Sabbath indulgence for his rich bounty in the donation of his blessed day On the morning of the Sabbath let us meditate on the presence of God Many miscarriages are acted by man and many miseries do seize upon man for the neglect of this ever Deus totus oculus est et minima videt August seasonable meditation A solemn consideration of Gods presence would restrain us from sin would quicken us in duty would draw out our graces would compose our spirits and cast a holy awe upon us which things would be inductive of much fruitfulness and piety When we sin we forget Gods eye is upon us when we flag in duty we do not think God is nigh to us when we trifle away Sabbath we do not remember Gods hand will certainly be against us Now there is a two-fold presence of God There is a more general presence and God is present every where Deus presens est 1. Per Essentiam Psal 139. 12. 1 Chron. 28. 9. First By his Essence and so he fills all things 1 Kings 8. 27. and thus he fills heaven with his glory Earth with his goodness and Hell it self with his power and justice Secondly God is present every where by his knowledge so he beholds all things 2 Chron. 16. 9. Light and darkness 2 Per Cognitionem night and day are all one to him Psal 139. 12. He seeth the very imaginations of our hearts His eyes behold and his eye lids try the children of men Psal 11. 4.
a two-edged sword to divide between sin and Heb. 4. 12. the soul Ordinances are kindly Physick and work the cure sweetly and effectually if this Physick be given by the hand of the Spirit if the third Person in the Trinity be our Physician how then should the necessity of the spirits assistance inflame our importunity to sue out that precious John 15. 5. Promise for the attainment of it recorded in Luke 11. 13. In Ordinances without the Spirit we can do noth●ng Christ 1 Cor. 9. 26. must work by his Spirit or else in all our holy duties we onely beat the ayr to use the Apostles phrase Let us study to be under the impressions of the Spirit on Gods holy day The earth stands not in so much need of the beams of the Sun as the soul doth of the influences of the Spirit The Spirit is a Spirit of Truth to guide the Understanding John 15. 26. It is a Spirit of Counsel to enrich the mind Isa 11. 2. and fill it with knowledge How naked Eph. 5. 18. is mans understanding if it be not covered with the covering John 14. 17. of Gods Spirit Isa 30. 1. 1 Cor. 12. 8. The Spirit is a good Spirit Neh. 9. 10. to sanctifie the will It is a holy Spirit Ephes 1. 13. in relation to its effects and productions it cures the will of its pertinacy and Rom. 1. 4. stubbornness and melts mans will into Gods We may take 1 Cor. 12. 9. an instance in Paul Acts 9. 6. The Spirit is a Spirit of Grace Zach. 12. 10. to beautifie the heart and fructifie it with all the sweet fruits of Righteousness It is more then the Sun to the Garden It not 2 Thes 2. 13. Phil. 1. 11. onely blows the flower but it plants The graces of the Spirit are those stars which shine in the firmament of the heart 2 Thes 2. 17. those vigorous principles which carry out the soul to every good word and work It is the spirit of Glory 1 Pet. 4. 14. to sublimate the affections and raise them as high as heaven Col. 3. 2. The spirit discovers glorious things to us shews the soul its treasury 1 Cor. 2. 12. Eph 3. 8. 2 Cor. 5 21. Rev. 1. 6. Cant. 7. 8. 13. Col. 3. 11. 1 Pet. 2. 7. where its riches lie It opens Christ to a believer who is the Wardrob of our Robes the Exchequor of our wealth the fountain of our honour the paradise of our delight or to speak in the Apostles language who is all and in all to the believing soul It is a spirit of life to quicken the whole man Rom. 8. 2. God breaths into man and so he becomes a living soul the Spirit breaths into man and so he becomes a living Saint Gen. 2. 7. Nay God works all his works upon us and in us in Christ by the spirit it is the spirit makes us upright and sincere 1 Cor. 6. 11. and so rectifies our obliquities Psal 51. 10. It is the spirit snuffs the understanding which is the candle of the Lord Eph. 1. 17. Prov. 20. 27. and so enlightens our darknesses It is the spirit 2 Thes 2. 1● fixes and establisheth us and so settles our inconstancies Psal 78. 8. It is the spirit softens and suples us Isa 32. Sapientia hominis est quâ res difficillimas scrutatur et pervestigare conatur Cartwr 15. and turns our barren hearts into a fruitfull field and so fills our vacuities It is the spirit conducts us in our straights John 16. 13. and so prevents our miscarriages It is the spirit takes us up Ezek. 3. 12. nay lifts us up Ezek. 3. 14. and so cures us of our pedantick and dreggish succumbencies for Man is the worm Jacob Isa 41. 14. and will naturally grovel on and immure himself in the Earth The spirit of God is an excellent spirit Dan. 5. 12. and will create in the 1. Cor. 12. 11. believer those excellencies which will make him more excellent then his neighbour Prov. 12. 26. The irrigations and pouring forth of the spirit Isa 44. 3. will make the soul fresh 1 Cor. 12. 13. Corroborari in interiore homine est intellectu voluntate caeterisque animae partibus suffulciri and green and be in a spring of grace which is most pleasant to the eye of God and Man This holy spirit upon us Isa 59. 21. is not so much our covering as our Crown our strength to encounter every temptation Eph. 3. 16. Let us then not as Sadduces mis-believe the spirit Acts 23. 8. But cry out Lord evermore give us of this spirit And to set our selves under these various and rare impressions We must purifie our selves The spirit is a holy spirit which will dwell onely in a clean heart flesh and spirit are combatants and not cohabitants they oppose one another Gal. 5. 17. then grace triumphs when flesh is subdued and chased out of the field We must supplicate our God The spirit is given to the Petitioner and not to the professor How much more shall your heavenly father give the holy spirit to them that ask him Isa 63. 11. Eph. 4. 30. 1 Thes 4 8. 1 Cor. 6. 19. saith our Saviour Luke 11. 13. Earnest prayer is the means to obtain the good spirit whose works are so many and so marvellous and whose operations are so secret and so soveraign But secondly as this duty must look upwards for the assistances and the impressions of the spirit So this duty must look inwards we have not onely to do with heaven on the Lords day and to look up to Gods spirit but we have to do with our own hearts too and seek the spirit to proportionate Prov. 4. 23. them to the holy services of the Sabbath and here our duty is two-fold 1. We must be in the graces of the spirit and that too in a double sense We must be in grace habitual We must come as Saints to the duties of a Sabbath That of the Apostle is highly observable Our communion is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ 1 Joh. 1. 3. Observe the terms of Relation Sancti est in spiritu vivere i. e. internam habere vitam et animum gratiâ spiritu etjustitiâ imbutum sancti est in spiritu ambulare i. e. secundum spiritus et gratiae dictamen ductumque incedere conversari agere operari et Graecum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 significat certo ordine serie et normâ incedere Alap the term Father speaks us to be Children It is not our communion is with God but with the Father and his Son Saints properly are the guests of the Sanctuary Christ in us is not onely the hope of our glory hereafter Col. 1. 27. but our hope of acceptance here We must bring Benjamin we must bring Christ if we will ever see the face of God in Ordinances wicked
lanching nor scornfull sinners the reproof Our hearts are never so treacherous as Jer. 17. 9. on this day then they are prodigal of time sluggards in Homines sunt fallaces et insidiosi et putant de●m ipsum posse decipi et illi meros fumos obsiciunt Calv. duty enemies to the faithfull preaching of the Word then they poure out their swarms of vam and impertinent thoughts and catch at any diversion to give them breath from close communion with God and then slight and formal Christians wind up the clock of the tongue and that strikes nothing but vanity Indeed naturally there is an open opposition in our hearts to strict religion and particularly to the precise observation of Gods day and this opposition like rivers which are damm'd up breaks forth then most violently As we know Snakes will get into the greenest grass and Spiders into the fairest houses so our corruptions beset us most and besiege us most closely in holy duties and the most spiritual converses and therefore let us most strictly eye these Serpents in the bosome observe their first motions Venienti occurrite morbo and strangle them in their birth Young twigs are easily plucked up weeds when low they onely soften the walk but when grown higher they deform and unbeautifie the garden Let us let out the water of the first blisters of corruption If thou art proud then say did Christ come out of a Grave this day and shall I come out as a Bridegroome out of a Bride Chamber If thou art worldly say Christ Isa 61. 10. Joel 2. 16. rose this day in order to his ascention to heaven and shall sublunary vanities entangle my soul this day If thou art sluggish and unactive say the Sun of righteousness rose this Mal. 4. 2. day whose motion of all motions is the swiftest and shall I be clogged with unseemly dulness and hebetude If thou art sad and despondent say Christ rose this day to fill up the joyes of his people to consummate and finish his victories 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cantus fuit Christiano rum sibimetipsis oc●urrentium in primord●● Ecclesiae which by holy faith become the Saints conquest and shall my spirit be down and sink on this triumphant day If thy heart wander this day say the glorious Morning Star this day appeared in the worlds Horizon after a three dayes cloud and what more blessed object to fix my heart upon Rev. 22. 16. That still the risings of thy corrupt heart which way soever it wind it self may be kept down and stopt from Sabbath defilement Now a little care may prevent a great deal of sin We must therefore 1. Eye and observe 2. Bitterly bemoan 3. Pray against 4. Forcibly check and keep down these unnatural productions of the unregenerate part and suppressed corruptions Exod. 14 30. are like slain Aegyptians they will not disturb the Israelites travelling towards Canaan So they will be the spectacle of our joy not the obstacle of our duties and we may with a Psal 119. 32. pleasing liberty run the wayes of Gods Commandments upon his own holy day CHAP. XXXVIII Some necessary cautions for the preventing of Sabbath Pollution Caut. 1 FOr the more holy observation of Gods blessed day some rocks are to be avoided as well as some rules to be observed The carefull Mariner studies to escape the sands that he be not swallowed up as well as observes the wind that he be not becalmed and so put upon unnecessary stayes in the watery element So there are difficulties to run through as well as duties to discharge on Gods holy day and therefore Care is as necessary as Zeal and a watchfull eye as requisite as an affectionate heart we must equally take care that we do not offend as that we do obtain Let us take heed of wearisomness in duties It is very sad when the Sabbath is lookt on as our burden and not our priviledge and our attendance upon Ordinances our task and not our triumph our bondage and not our blessedness Surely religious duties should not be our fetters but our freedome This was the black character of the wanton Israelites they cryed out When will the New Moon be gone that we may sell Corn and the Sabbath be over that we may set forth Wheat Amos 8. 5. What should weary us on a Sabbath Is it because on that day Christ carries the soul into his Wine Cellar Malus fructus immò malus morsus quo Adam per Evam vitam perdidit Bonus fructus quo genus humanum per Christi mortem mortem perdidit et vitam invenit Del. Rio. and his banner over it is love Cant. 2. 4. Is it because Christ on this day brings his living waters and his best wine and makes his feast of fat things and gives his sweetest bread Do the delicacies of a Sabbath cloy us Do the rarities of it nauseate us How shall we digest heaven where such dainties sublimated shall be our eternal fare What hearts have we that we can petrifie Gods Ordinances and make them empty and unsatisfying that they shall yield no taste or nourishment Surely it must needs be the reproach of a Christian to grow weary of Communion with God and to surfet on the provisions of the Sanctuary Indeed to be cloyed at our tables is more usual then sinfull but shall we rise from the table of Christ without an appetite Shall we say of the bread which came from heaven is there nothing but this Manna Upon the Sabbath John 6. 55. Christ takes the soul as once the Eunuch did Philip into Numb 11. 6. the chariot of his Ordmances with him and there discourses of the affairs of eternity and shall this familiarity tire the soul Acts 8. 21. which is posting to eternity The Sabbath is the souls jubilee a mellifluous and blessed season how many thousands souls have known it the day of their new birth And how willing have Gods people been in this day of Gods power in Psal 110. 3. the beauties of holiness from the womb of the morning Blessed is this day among dayes from henceforth all generations Luke 1. 48. shall call thee happy blessed be the Father which made thee blessed be the Son who purchased thee blessed be the Spirit who sanctifies thee and blessed are they who prize and improve thee and think the Sun on this day posts away too fast and makes too much hast towards a setting Indeed it must argue very little holiness if the blessing of the Sabbath be accounted the burden of the Soul and it must speak the dregs of corrupt nature to tire upon Mountains of Spices to be weary of walking in the Garden where the Rose of Sharon is David saith Psal 119. 24 77. The testimonies of God are his delight and he rejoyced more in them Cant. 2. 1. then in all manner of riches and yet truly some covetous
skilful Christians the wound is searched before cured and the tent is put in before the balsam If Ordinances have lost their taste to us the soul is sick of some distemper If we can not be triumphant let us be inquisitive if we are not filled with comfort let us presently feel our pulse But however we should set upon amending of duties but be never prevailed with for the omitting of duties we should be as Fishermen when they have caught nothing then they fall to mending their nets let us not throw away our nets in discontent If the Archer shoots short he shoots again and directs his arrow more level and draws his bow with more strength that if it be possible he may hit the mark So if we Psal 19. 10. in discharge of Sabbath duties do miss of desired mercies let us draw the bow with more strength stir up our selves put more life into duty and quicken our selves with more Cant 3. 4. care that at last we may meet with our beloved and say with the Spouse Cant. 3. 4. we have found him whom our souls love In a word we must not conclude through humane frailties we will do this dayes work no further but we must resolve through divine assistance to do the work of the day better Let this reply answer the whole case The Sabbath-performances of soul-afflicted Saints though they are not sensibly good yet they are certainly good and acceptable to God God seeth that in their aimings they cannot see themselves in their actings that which they cannot see in John 1. 1 3. their work God can see in their will God knows after what the soul reacheth surely not after a bare duty or being Vident mulieres juvenem ut c●rnerent nostrae resurrectionis aetatem vident juvenem quia nescit resurrectio senectutem neque aetates rec●●it aeterna perfectio Chrys in service but therein after a clearer beholding of God a closer communion with Christ to keep a divine intercourse with Father Son and Holy Ghost The gracious soul looks not so much after the Ordinances of God as God in the Ordinances I know whom ye seek saith the Angel to the Woemen Mat. 28. 5. Jesus of Nazareth who was Crucified there they saw the Sepulcher wherein Christ was laid and there they saw the linnen cloaths wherein Christ was wrapt but all will not satisfie it was not the Sepulcher of Christ but Christ who had been in the Sepulcher they sought for So it is not so much the Sabbath of Christ as Christ in the Sabbath not so much the Gospel of Christ as Christ in the Gospel the people of God groan after They cry out almost in the language of Bernard Lord unless I give thee my self it is not all my duties on the Sabbath will satisfie thee and except thou givest me thy self it is not all the priviledges of the Sabbath will satisfie me And all this the eye of God sees and so accepts the sacrifices of his humble people Psal 139. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psal 51. 17. though they do not smoak with incense to delight them who sacrifice Philosophers observe That fire which smoaks in the Chimney is most clear in the Element of it And so those duties may have a smile from God above who receives them when happily they give no sweet gust to man below who performs them In a word if God accept let not us with Jonah fret because we do not taste them Our services may be a pearl in Gods eye when they are a stone of emptiness Jon. 4. 3. in ours and it is not much material if we sense them to be dross if God look on them as gold And thus much for this fifth and last case CHAP. XLI A Charge drawn up against prophane Persons who live down the Sabbath by loose and vicious Practices WHen God on Mount Sinai gave the two Tables wherein the Decalogue was written the text tells us Exod. 19. 18. The mountain burnt with fire and the smoak thereof ascended as the smoak of a furuace and Deut. 4. 11. Exod. 19. 18. the whole mount quaked greatly And all this was to cast an aw upon the Jews that they might serve God with fear and Ignis est signaculum aptum divinae regiae Majestatis sic terrebant quae in Sinai fiebant Riv. trembling in keeping those Commandments which were then delivered and among others in the holy observation of the blessed Sabbath And it were well for the world if still some burning Sinai some tremendous prospect was exhibited to affect and over-aw the hearts of the people to a due and reverend observation of Gods holy day In nothing Cavendom est ne festis abutamur ad atium luxuriam voluptates turpes Christianis omnimodò indignas Dav. more mans heart had need to be shackled it being so prerient and propense to break the hedge of that sacred inclosure Some make bold with the name of God in words of prophaneness and some with the day of God in acts of prophaneness Many turn the Sabbath into a Market day of Satan and like the foolish Israelites they love to have it so Jer. 5. 31. How many spend much of the Sabbath in the methods of Pride in consulting the glass in fitting the dress in plaiting the hair when yet the crookedness of the Prov. 5. 20. heart is discerned in the curles of the hair nay in patching the face and fashioning the garb as if they went to the Sanctuary to meet with some amorous lover Some spend their Sabbath as the Prodigal did his Estate Luke 15. 30. with harlots and curtezans and study more their lust then their Christ the sinful embraces of the strange woman then holy communion with the beloved Cant. 2. 16. Nay others defile the Sabbath with riots and excesses Riotous company is their Congregation healths are their Ordinances idle Prov. 23. 29. Songs are their Psalms their eyes are filled with fire for their redness and not with water for their tears and they Isa 5. 11. are inflamed with commessation and not devotion These Ebrietas est daemon voluntarius Malitiae mater omnibus virtutibus inimica Basil justly demerit that reproach which the Jews unjustly cast upon the Apostles Acts 2. 13. They are filled with new wine Plutarch a heathen Philosopher believed that Sabbatum the Sabbath was derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to be riotous and drunken and the occasion of this derivation of his was the Jews loose and debauched manners on the Sabbath day It is strange impiety to sin against the light of nature and as strange to be loose on a day of grace To follow vile practices on a precious Sabbath what is it but to throw dung upon Roses The Apostle saith that they who are drunk are drunk in the night 1 Thes 5. 7. It is too shameful a sin for the day to behold
the Apostles with an unusual elegance ●f speech to captivate their auditours to the obedience of the Gospel and to prognosticate these rare gifts which being heated with the fire of divine zeal should fecundate and sublimate the succeeding Church but when was this unusual illapse and descent of the holy spirit Why it was on the first day of the week to put a fairer print upon the seal of our Christian Sabbath A blessed bargain was here made between Heaven and Earth 3. Scientiae lumen est et author spiritualis intelligentiae Bern. To triumphing Saints was given the corporal presence of Christ to militant Saints was sent the visible efflux of the spirit surely that cannot hut be a holy day wherein the holy Ghost came down And this is another indelible mark of honour which Christ hath fixed on the first day of the week Concludimus ergo diem hunc primum septimanae ab Apostolis Sabbatho fuisse institutum et ecclesiae commendatum non tantùm potestate ordinariâ qualem omnes pastores habent sed potestate singulari tanquam ab iis qui in universam Christi ecclesiam irspectionem habuerunt et quibus tanquam extraordinar●is ministris Christi concreditum est ut fideles essent Wal. our Christian Sabbath this was his royal gift when he came to heaven such a princely largess such a glorious donation as was never given before but when God gave his own Son God so loved the world that he gave his Son John 3. 16. And Christ so loved the world that he gave his Spirit And as Christ was given according to the fullness of the Promise so was the holy Ghost given And Christs resurrection and the spirits descention were both upon the first day of the week On this day then the Church was visited from on high the promise of the Father was sent Acts 1. 4. The blessed spirit came the Disciples were assembled thousands were converted as a hansel of the spirits power and a fruit of the spirits descent and why was the Church assembled on that day why the holy Ghost descended why preaching why conversion and administration of Sacraments why the promise of Christ accomplished and all on this very day But still to declare the will and ordinance of Christ blessing and sanctifying this day to the Church and so marking it out for solemn and weekly worship as a day in all its prerogatives superlative to all other dayes the day of our Saviours resurrection by which we are justified the day of the holy Ghosts descention by which we are sanctified The learned Twisse observes That Dies dominicus est Traditio vere Divina et ab Apostolis spiritu dictante instituta Beza as at the first the holy Ghost descended on the Apostles upon our Sabbath day so stili the same spirit descends ordinarily on the same day upon his faithful Ministers in the dispensation of the Word and administration of the Sacraments and in the puting up of prayers to the most high for the sanctifying and edifying the body of Christ even the Church of God The day of Christs Ascension he departed from the Apostles as touching his presence corporal but on the day of Pentecost Christ came down upon them as touching his presence spiritual and so be doth still in our Sabbath exercises though not in an extraordinary manner yet no less effectually to the edification and sanctification of our souls And here I cannot omit a rare speech of the incomparable Bishop of Armagh At the time of the Passe●●e● saith he Christ our Passeover was sacrificed for us 1 Cor. 5. 7. and lay in his grave the whole Sabbath following so on the morrow after the Sabbath when the sheaf of the Bishop Vsher in his Learned Letter to Dr. Twisse p. 91 92. first fruits was offered to God Christ arose from the dead and became the first fruits of them wh● slept many dead bodies of the Saints who s●ept arising likewise after him from whence was the count taken of the seven Sabbaths or fifty dayes and u●●n the m●rr●w after the seventh Sabbath which was our L●rds d●y was that fam●us feast of weeks the day of Pentecost Numb 28. 2. spoken ●f Acts 2. 1. Vpon which day the Apostles having Exod. 34. 22. themselves re●eived the first fruits of the spirit beg●t three Jam. 1. 18. thousand s●uls by the word of Truth and presented them as Rev. 4. 14. the first fruits of the Christian Church to God and unto the 1 Cor. 15. 20. Lamb And from that time forward doth Waldensis note Mat. 27. 52 53. That the Lords day was observed in the Christian Church and was su●stituted in the place of the Jews Sabbath Thus far Sicut pascha typus e●●t Christi sic pan●s ●●●mi sunt typus Christianorum eorum scil innocentiae p●r●tatis Alap the famous Vsher And to wind up this particular the Holy Ghost being sent down among the Disciples in an eminent manner was the special benediction of this day to such solemn ass●mblies to teach them and the succeeding Church when and on what day they should more especially expect the sweet illapses and effectual descents of Gods holy and most blessed spirit The Lords day was kept and sanctified by the practice of the h●ly Apostles Now the blessed Apostles were men intimately Praecipua regiminis ecclesiastici cura Apostolis deputata est quorum unus quisque 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Deinde speciali authoritate ad ecclesiam cujus f●ndamenta jacere Apostolicae dignitatis est ex pr●misc●â omni● g●nti●m multitudi●● 〈◊〉 Christus e●s misit 〈…〉 sp s gratiâ ab●nd●nte ad ministerium sibi à domino commendatum erant instructissimi ut 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 veritatem Evangelii praedicarent acquainted w th the secrets of Christ being most of them trained up in his School and personally conversant with him after his Resurrection besides they had immediate inspiration from him and auth●ritative mission to manage the publick affairs of the Church Our Saviour gave them their credentials to preach in his name and to act as his substitutes as if he himself had been personally present John 20. 21. Luke 10. 16. Mat. 28. 19 20. 2 Cor. 5. 19 20. Neither doth this extend only to verbal preaching but to visible preaching also I mean their practice at least in things Evangelical Moral and of general and perpetual concernm●nt to the Churches of Christ otherwise why is their practice propounded as a pattern Phil. 3. 17. Phil. 4. 19. 1 Cor. 11. 2. 1 Thes 2. 14. Now these blessed Apostles met for solemn worship on this day our Christian Sabbath so Acts 20. 7. And upon the first day of the week when as the Disciples came together to break bread Paul preached unto them ready to depart on the morrow and continued his speech until midnight Now the full discussion and ventilation of this solemn text will give
hearts by the light of Nature but this only was given by outward Ordinance and Institution and we are more apt to forget Instructions then Inclinations 2. Because this Commandment more restrains natural liberty then all the rest the other Commandments restrain only things sinful but this prohibits things lawful at any other time nay it restrains our very words Isa 58. 13. and our very thoughts our lawfull works and secular employments must be laid aside on this day we must not think or discourse of the world and the things of it on this blessed day 3. Because of the multitude of our affairs on the six days which had need to be remembred to be finished seasonably or else they will breed distractions on the Lords day nor is it so facil and easie to keep off their impressions and intrusions when we are to converse with God on his own day 4. Because the Devil will assuredly prompt us to forget this Commandment so to quench the memory both of the Creation and the work of our Redemption that he may the more readily draw us to despair by forgetting the salvifical work of our Redemption or else to Atheisme by forgetting the stupendous work of the Creation for as the work of Creation first give us a Sabbath so the work of Redemption afterwards gave us our Sabbath Now to prevent these mischicvous inconveniencies we are alarm'd and quickned with a Memento to keep this Commandment as a means to preserve the memory both of Father and Son and so to keep on foot holy and divine worship This Commandment of the Sabbath is of most weight to be remembred for the observance of all the rest of the Commandments depend much upon the keeping of this Let us cast our eye upon the Conversion of sinners where one hath been converted on the week day many have been brought home to God on his own day God doth delight to dispence his graces on his own day so that in keeping this day we preserve an opportunity when God doth confer his graces on the Sons of men and in a careless observing of this day we put from us an opportunity of getting and obtaining the grace of God So then keep this day and we keep all neglect this day and we neglect all the proper means for life and salvation This is the season when the Angel comes down to stir the waters and then is our time to step in and be healed John 5. 4. This indeed is the fundamental command on which the superstructure of piety and religion is fastened and built On this day God draws nigh to his people and they to him nay the way to lay hold on Gods Covenant is to keep his Sabbath there is some hopes of a mans salvation when he makes conscience of keeping this holy day 7. The reason why this Commandment is of so much weight to be remembred is because in it we are made more 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 spiritually minded it frames our spirits to be more fit and adequate to every good word and work we are as not of this world the Apostle saith Heb. 4. 9. Verily there remains a Rest for the people of God Implying that the Saints in Heaven keep a Sabbath-Rest meditating divine things singing praises and minding only the things of Heaven Nothing more fits and accommodates our spirits to the supreme good Vis in die quem dicunt solis solem colitis sicut nos in eundem dominicum non solem sed resarrectionem domini veneramur then a holy observation of the Sabbath it is the beginning of heaven here our hearts then work up more and more to their centre to their God to their Christ 8. We must remember this Commandment In keeping the Sabbath we keep in mind Gods chiefest mercies the benefit of our Creation and of our Redemption the first giving us our beings the second our well beings the first being the Aug. Contr. Faust Manich Lib. 10. fountain of Nature the second being the spring of Grace And whereas there are Three most glorious persons shewing themselves in their several works tending to mans good the due observation of the Sabbath puts us in the remembrance of them all Of the Father who created us and then gave the Gen. 2. 3. world a Sabbath of the Son who redeemed us and on this day ascended from the Grave of the Holy Ghost who inspires Acts 2. 1 2 3. us and sheds a beauty upon us who as on this day descended from heaven in a miraculous flame upon the blessed Apostles which was an infallible earnest of those plenteous effusions of the spirit which should be poured forth upon the Church in all ages Thus upon weighty reasons a Memento Dan 5. 6. is affixed to the fourth and only to the fourth Commandment which if it be not a note of observance to point out our Sanctificatio Sabbati est diem à deo anteà sanctificatum pro sancto habere et exercit●is religionis et fidei exercendae sedulo in●umbere Atque ita sanctificationem dei haudquaquam prophanare sed illibatam conservare Muscul great concernment in the holy keeping of it it will be an hand-writing on the wall to make us tremble to all everlasting A learned man observes That God should preface this Commandment with a Memento it implies that some serious thing is commanded something of the highest importance which upon our peril must not be neglected or forgotten This command is a treasure committed to us with a great charge And it is observable it is not said Remember that thou keep the Sabbath day but remember the Sabbath to keep it holy Exod. 20. 8. God stops not at Sabbath day but adds to keep it holy evidently implying that to set apart the time of a Sabbath is not considerable but to spend that time in holy duties and in the holy exercises of faith and religion this is the fulfilling of the Commandment When Gods sanctifying of Sabbatum non est merè quies Leid Prof. the day as Musculus speaks is not prophaned by us but kept pure and unspotted The Memento then in this Commandment is only the usher of holiness Gods loud call to strictness and sanctity on his own day the significant harbinger to tell us Christ is coming and on this day he must lodge in our hearts Arg. 7 No Command is sweetned with more equity then that of the Sabbath There is that which Aristotle calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in it a Facillimum est et aequissimum ei cujus toti sumus unum diem è septem conservare qui sex alios nostris laboribus concessit cùm tamen potuisset jure suo plures illis servandos judicare Riv. just and moderate Imposition there is not so much voluntas imperantis the will of him who commands as ratio impe●andi the reason of the command it self In this command God rather exercises jus Patris
very act of their abominations when they were most busied in their sports in their worldly employments or in their vain and frothy pleasures But for the better discovery of diviné justice in the pursuits of it upon Sabbath-breakers 1. I shall search the Scriptures of God 2. I shall trace the Providences of God And in both these glasses we may easily discern the severities of the Almighty upon the violatours of his holy day Judgement hath not slumbered but hath awakened and taken hold on them Let us cast our eye on sacred Writ and we shall see God executing temporal judgements upon those who have prophaned his day If a poor man gather but a few sticks upon the Sabbath he must die for it Numb 15. 33 34 35 36. he must be stoned into his grave stones must be his death but not his tomb and this not by a suddain heat and passion of the people but by an express command of God himself Object But and if it be objected this was under the rigour of the Law Answ It is answered God forgets not his judgements against Sabbath-breakers in the times of the Gospel Eutichus sleeps at a Sermon on a Lords day and he dies for it Acts 20. 9 10. and it was a miracle he ever came to life again Indeed much may be said to extenuate his crime He was a young Profanatio sabbati iram intulit non tantùm in domum sed in civitatem immò in Israelem dei populum man and a younger Christian it was late in the night the proper time of sleep and rest Paul had preached very long and had extended his discourse to an unusual enlargement and though the spirit is willing the flesh is weak Mat. 26. 41. yet notwithstanding all this Eutichus falls down dead By this example we may feel the heat of divine displeasure against the prophanation of Gods holy day Both in the times of the Law and of the Gospel we may discern the revenges of God against this sin It is Sabbath-breaking can devour Palaces Places of honour Jer. 17. 27. the beauty and the Neh. 13 17 18 19. ornaments of the most flourishing City or Kingdom Palaces they are the pride of Architecture the extrinsique glory of a Nation they are the habitations of the most Renowned Princes the Court and Council-house of Kings and yet Sabbath-breaking can turn all these into a flame Nay this sin can kindle a fire in the Gates places of Power wherein the safety and strength of a City doth consist Jer. 17. 27. the Gates where justice is done the constant bull-works of the place whereunto they are fastned the chief guard of the town This sin of defiling Gods day can petar those gates and not only open but consume them But the Citizen will still have some relief if the gates be burnt yet the shops are remaining though safety be lost yet trade continues therefore God saith he will lay waste Cities Levit. 26. 2 31. He will destroy Gates and Shops and all But the Professours replyes though our Cities are consumed our Sanctuaries still remain and though we have lost our Pallaces which are the glory of the Prince and our Cities are waste which are the dwelling of the people yet we have our sanctuaries which are the delight of the Saint and we can yet drive a spiritual trade No saith God Sabbath-pollution shall lay the Cities waste and shall bring their sanctuaries into desolation Levit. 26. 2 31. This sin shall destroy Cities Shops as well as Gates Sanctuaries as well as Palaces Necessaries as well as Accessories it shall lay all waste and depopulate In the same Holy Writ we meet with God executing spiritual judgements upon Sabbath-breakers In the 8th of Amos vers 5. we find the Jews weary of Gods Sabbath that was their disgust which should have been their delight Isa 58. 13. and how doth God chastise them for this transgression We may read Amos 8. 11 12. He will send a famine of the Word among them God will cure the surfet of his Sabbath with a famine of his precious Word And of all judgements this is the sorest A famine of the Word is the loss of the best food the bread of life a starving of the best part the soul of man a loss which can never be compensated not with the treasures Job 23. 12. of Gold and Silver a loss which can never be terminated it Israelitae in Assyriorum potestatem erunt tradendi inter quos cessare debuit quicquid ipsis reliquum erat publici cultus externi et illud merebantur quia nihil praeter externam pompam retinuerunt Rivet may and will be bemoaned to all eternity Wo wo wo saith Luther Where there is a Church and no Preaching Minister none to break the bread of life By such a judgement Great Cities become like dark dens and the most lovely Goshen is turned into a bruitish Aegypt Where there is a famine of the Word the Sun sets at noon day and the most magnisicent Courts are transformed into the most loathsome dungeons Prov. 29. 18. Now when men cease from Sabbaths the holy and due observation of them then it is just with the Almighty that Sabbaths should cease from men men sinfully forget Gods Sabbaths and God judicially causeth Sabbaths to be forgotten Lam. 2. 6. And when the Sabbath of God leaves a Nation the God of the Sabbath goes a way too And woe to that Nation when God departs from it Hos 9. 12. The sin of prophaning Gods Day can wear out the very prints of Christ and write Lo-Ammi upon a Kingdome Mal. 4. 2. and Lo Ruhamah upon a City or a Family The wise man Necessitas praedicationis ver bi ex absentiae ejus incommodo arguitur populi scil nuditate quae nuditas potest esse ex indumentorum aut armorum carentiâ Cartw. saith Where there is no vision the people perish Prov. 29. 18. And to this perishing condition Sabbath-prophanation brings a people It can chase Christ out of a Family City or Kingdome and when the Sun leaves us we are all in the dark There goes a story of Nazianzene that being about to leave a place where he preached for some time a good man cries out O Nazianzene wilt thou go away and carry the Holy Trinity with thee Sure it is Father Son and Holy Ghost forsake such as are violatours of his Holy Day and what then is left to the unhappy sinner the absence of God strips the soul of its Ornaments nay of its Ordinances of its beauty nay of its breasts and carries away divine truth which is both its Guardian and its Nurse Nay God punisheth the breaches of his Sabbath with eternal judgements The great day of Gods general judgement Erit tunc sine f●uctu poeni●●●tiae dolor poenae inanis gloriatio et ineffi●ax deprecatio Cypr. is now approaching and hastening with a speedy flight when as such who sin
Indeed it is the property of a natural Son not only to mind the word but to imitate the example of his good Father Slaves must have commands but Sons study Patterns as the ingenuous Scholar minds the Copy more then the passionate word or the Ferula of his Master One of Gods rich promises carries this treasure in it I will guide thee by mine eye Psal 32. 8. Thou shalt look on me and so walk ho●ily before me Not only Gods will but his eye shall be our conduct So then Gods example re-inforces our obligation for Sabbath-holiness Cumque deus ita quiescat die septimo ut tamen non cesset ob omni opere sed rerum universitatem conservet et gubernet Ita quoque Sabbati sanctificatio non consistit in ignavo otio s●d ut ea operemur quae ad dei gloriam faciant Ger. In this affair we have all ties of obedience not only the force of a righteous command but we may see our selves in the Chrystal glass of divine example And it is well observed by Gerard God saith he did not so rest on the Sabbath from all work but still on that day he preserved and governed all things So our sanctification of the Sabbath doth not consist in a slothful idleness but in working th●se things which make to the glory of God So let us thus imitate God on his own day Indeed Gods patte●n is the Archetype of all our actions the surest glass for us to dress our selves by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He hath said it is the rule of all truth and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath done it is the rule of all practice wherein the blessed Jehovah is imitable It was the Apostles glory that he followed Christ and so far he would have all Christians Omnis actio Dei nobis pietatis virtutis est regula Basil follow him 1 Cor. 11. 1. It is an excellent saying of Basil Every action of God is to us a Rule of all vertue and piety And if in all other things so in keeping the Sabbath in holy Rest Philo the Jew could say Follow 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Phil. Jud. God in resting on the Sabbath you have his Example you have his Prescript and therefore spend that day in holy contemplations God in this momentous concernment of the Sabbath seems to speak as in the Prophet Malachi Mal. 1. 6. A son honcureth his father and a servant his master If I be a father where is my honour if I be a master where is my fear And if I have rested upon the Sabbath why do you disturb it by secular works hy sensual delights by prophane actions or by unseemly carriages so unbecoming a holy Sabbath In prophaning Gods day we break through a double bar of precept and presidency and so dye our sin in a double dye Arg. 4 The light of Nature leads us to a Sabbath let the light of Scripture lead us to a holy observation of it The Law of Habet venerationem justam quicquid excellit Cicer. de Nat. Deorum Nature instilleth this notion into us That God paramount who is Superlative in all Excellencies and Perfections is to be worshipped That to the performance of this worship certain times are to be deputed that none is so fit to depute that time as that Deity whose worship it is And therefore to keep this day which God hath appointed holy to the same Lord to sanctifie it in holy Rest and spiritual worship which Brerewood saith Is the Body and the Soul of the Sabbath All this is nothing but an obsequious following of the guidance and conduct of Nature Aquinas here gives us a good Rule Seeing saith he that the moral Precepts Aquin 2da 2dae quaest 122. Artic. 4. are of those things which agree to humane reason as they appertain to good manners the judgment whereof is derived some way from natural Reason it must needs Breerw part 2. pag. 67. be that those things pertain to the Law of Nature And is there any thing more accommodate to right reason more conducing to good manners then to dedicate some time to the honour of God especially that time which is of his own appointment If we have Souls to look after must there not be seasons for that purpose And who shall better Mark 2. 28. Aquin. 1mae adae quaest 10. Artic. 1. 3. appoint that season than the Saviour of the Soul Again the Sabbath was made for man Mark 2. 27. was it not for the better part of man that piece of Eternity which he carries in his bosom And how can we better consult our Souls good than in duties of Divine worship Thus the very dictates of natural reason command the holy observation of the Sabbath And therefore the observation of the seventh day which was the Sabbath till the coming of Christ was no strange thing among those who know nothing above the light of Nature Homer an Heathen Poet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Alex. tells us That the seventh day is holy Callimachus an Heathen Author informs us That the seventh day is the Birth-day chief and perfect And Eusebius affirms That almost all as well Philosophers as Poets know the seventh day to be most sacred And shall these Pagans who had onely glimpses of natural light smatch and rellish Quis Diem illum sanctissimum non honorat unaquaquehebdomadâ recurrentem Phil. honour and venerate the day of the Sabbath and shall we turn Heathens on that day or fall some degrees below them I shall say with the Apostle Rom. 6. 2. God forbid The learned Andrews observes That sufficient is found in the heart of the Gentiles to their condemnation who shall dare to break the Law of the fourth Commandement The very light of Nature shall rise up in judgment Rom. 6. 2. against Sabbath-breakers and it shall be more tollerable for Hesiod a Heathen Poet who pronounced the seventh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hesiod day holy and Alexander Severus a heathen Prince who on that day frequented the Temple as formerly hath been hinted then for this Generation It was a rare saying of Seneca a sage Heathen who reckoning the Sabbath a Festival for Religion condemned the then manner of observing of it and saith he Let us forbid the lighting of a Candle upon a Sabbath for neither do the Gods want light and men themselves are not delighted with smoke he worshippeth God who knows him This golden Quoniam rerum humanarum varii● malti● occupationibus curis distracti praepedimur ita ut non facilè officia pietatis praestemus saying how will it condemn many drossie Christians who set fire on their lusts on Gods holy Sabbath It is a good Notion of Azorius Man saith he is so hurried and distracted with the affairs of the world that he is impeded in and unfit for the worship of God But God therefore hath appointed