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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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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
Father before we go to the Psal 119. 27. publick Ordinances on the blessed Sabbath Rev. 3. 18. Secondly As we must pray that God would take away the scales from our eyes so likewise that he would remove the caul from our hearts that he would open our hearts to receive the word Judgment discerns truth but affection embraceth it Indeed the understanding takes a view of Gods word and finds it to be holy just and good Rom. 7. 12. But the heart entertains it and lays it up as its choicest Luke 2. 19. treasure A poor man goes by a Goldsmiths shop and seeth Mandata dei sancta sunt quia praescribunt quomodo deus sanctè col● debet justa quia praescribunt ut proximum non laedas sed ei quo● suum est tribuns bona quia praescribunt e● quibus quisque in se bonus est Alap Nisi Sp. s cordi sit audientis otiosus est Sermo Doctoris Greg. Money Jewels and Plate but he is not enriched by this wealth and a traveller in his journey takes a view of pleasant Lands delicate Mountains and amiable Prospects but his own Tenure is not amplified by all that he seeth So our judgment views truth and is convinced of its beauty and excellency but the heart only espouses the blessed truths of God and makes them his own to all intents and purposes Gospel discoveries are no riches till they are locked up in the heart and therefore God must be intreated for this thing for he that opens the eye must open the heart or else when the Sermon is done all the Prospect is over and we are not at all the better Lydia's attending was unavailable untill God opened her heart Arts 16. 14. The Apostle speaks of receiving truth in the love thereof 2 Thes 2. 10. Truth is pleasant to the Understanding but profitable to the Will Then the Gospel advantageth us when the Doctrine of it is not only the guide of our eye but the good of our heart It is love and affection which squeezeth the Grapes of truth and maketh it generous wine to the soul Where Acts 2. 37. the word Preached by Peter wrought upon the Jews it Christimors morita sacramenta praecepta promissa licet incredulis pudorism● et risui tamen nobis virtus dei et potentia pricked them to the heart Acts. 2. 37. If we buy the truth as Solomon adviseth us Prov. 23. 23. the heart must be the Chapman If we taste the word 1 Pet. 2. 1 2. the heart must be the Palate we then rellish truth when we affect it If we delight in truth Psal 119. 47. It is the joy and the rejoycing of the heart as Jeremy speaks Jer. 15. 16. A learned man observes It is the love of truth which is one of those graces which accompany Salvation Therefore on the morning of a Sabbath let us importune the Lord to engage our hearts in the service of truth and for the entertainment of it he who searches must draw the heart Rom. 1. 16. Thirdly Let us wrestle with God for the strengthning of our memories that he would make them pillars of Marble to write divine truth on It is very sad when heavenly Doctrines are written in sand or dust and after our hearing of them they run out again as the sands in the hour glass sad it is that truth which cost so dear should be lost so soon If God is so gracious to keep a book of remembrance for our discourses Mal. 3. 16. how serious should we be to keep a book of remembrance for Gospel discoveries It is most reasonable that those truths which were bought with Christs bloud should be wrought on our hearts Indeed in this case Jonah 2. 8. to forget our mercies is to forsake them How earnest was the Apostle Peter that the Saints might not forget those Doctrines which he ●ad preached how doth he reduplicate his care and their duty 2 Pet. 1. 12 13. Wherefore I will not be negligent to put you always in remembrance of 2 Pet. 1. 12 13 15. these things yea I think it meet as long as I am in this Tabernacle to stir you up by putting you in remembrance And so in the fifth verse Moreover I will endeavour that you may be able after my decease to have these things always in remembrance Thus this blessed Apostle again and again stirs up and urges their mindfulness and remembrance of those Gospel truths he had discovered to them and presses that the Gospel might not die with them when he was dead and gone Our memories are naturally sieves of vanity and therefore need divine assistance to close up the chinks and stop the holes that the waters of life run not out in waste Indeed mans memory is never so usefull as in the time of Ordinances it is then a sacred Register and a holy repository like 1 Cor. 4. 17. the Ark where the two Tables in which the Decalogue was written were put and lodged After a good heart and 2 Tim. 2. 14. a good life nothing more conduceth to mans happiness then a good memory Forgetfulness is the grave of Gods truth 1 Tim. 4. 6. and mans treasure what I forget I can neither dwell upon by meditation nor feed upon by love and affection nor live upon in a holy and fruitful conversation Forgotten promises cannot support my faith forgotten commands cannot regulate my life forgotten truths cannot enrich my mind Forgetfulness is never happy but when injury is the object when we bury our injuries in that silent sepulchre One glorious office of the spirit is to bring things divine to our remembrance John 16. 26. and to fasten truth upon the Spiritus sanctus non solùm ut sciamus Author est sed ut verè sapiamus Doctor est ut beati simus intimae suavitatis largitor est Aug. soul we should therefore be earnest with God on the morning of a Sabbath to cause his spirit to execute this blessed office For though in preaching of the word the Mysteries of the Gospel are propounded to us yet it is the spirit must open our minds to understand the word else it will be a book sealed as the Prophet speaks Isa 29. 11. It is the spirit must give us wisdom to apply the word Eph. 1. 17 18. It is the spirit must support our memory to retain the word A learned man observes The Holy Ghost performs his office Isa 29. 11. not only by revealing truth to us but by imprinting it upon us Else the sounding of the Gospel will be like the sounding of Eph. 1. 18. a Clock after it hath struck a little noise there is for the present but it ceases by degrees and at last no sound at all is heard In a word forgetful hearers go from Ordinances Spiritus Sanctus apud nos officium suum peragit non solùm docendo sed et suggerendo just
Psal 4. 4 The second Duty preparatory to the Sabbath is holy Meditation We must meditate on those things which may quicken grace in our hearts First As chiefly upon the greatness holiness and infinite Majesty of the Lord before whom we are to appear Sit et nobis parasceue non tantùm q●ae domos sed quae animos ad sacra festa peragenda praeparet Musc Gen. 41. 14 the approaching Sabbath and to present our selves when the light of the day cometh this will certainly move and stir up spiritual devotion and affection as we see by experience in worldly things how carefull we are to trimme and fit our selves when we are to go to an earthly King or some great Nobles And in the next place let us meditate what holiness and purity especially of heart and soul is required in using the Lev. 20. 7. 1 Pet. 1. 15 16. holy Ordinanoes of God and in approaching near to him And that Holiness which becomes the blessed Sabbath and the Ordinances of it is the putting on humility mercy Humilitas primum medium ultimum in Scholâ Christi Alap meekness and all other affections and departing from all iniquity 2 Tim. 2. 19. It is the Image of Christ in the New Creature which is created after God in Righteousness and Holiness Eph. 4. 24. This is the embroydery we are to Eph. 4. 24. wear when we meet with the King of Saints on his own day Rev. 15. 3. We are to meditate on those Scriptures which require holy preparation as Eccles 5. 1. which shews Gods anger against such who approach his presence in an unprepared frame Eccles 5. 1. Mat. 22. 12. The wise Virgins trimmed their lamps before they entered the Bride-Chamber and we must trimme our Mat. 22. 12. selves before we enter the Presence-Chamber upon the solemn day of his appearance God disgusts mans regardlesness Mat. 25. 7. and a curious plaiting of the soul pleases our Beloved The harder our labour is to fit our selves for Gods presence the sweeter will our wages be in the influences of that presence Let us meditate on that whereof the Sabbath is a signe and a pledge viz. Our resurrection to Eternal Life and to the Eternal Rest of Glory in Heaven in the fight and fruition of God whom none can see without holiness And Tertiam requiem notat Atostolus Heb. 4. 7. quae per duas praecedentes scil per requiem Sabbati et requiem in Canaan anagogicè fuerit significata quam nobis praestat Jesus Christus Heb. 12. 14. Heb. 12. 2. this will be most powerfull to stir up spiritual affection and to quicken Grace in our hearts Our life should be a continual preparation for our Eternal Sabbath and some time should be granted for a temporary preparation for our weekly Sabbath we should be very active in this work and despise the toyle and trouble looking to the joy that is set before us whereof the weekly Sabbath is to every Saint a happy Harbinger Thirdly Our third Duty which must precede the holy observation of the Sabbath is self examination and this is two fold First External We must reflect back upon the past week and review our Erratas sin before must be found out least we come to Sabbath-work with week-day guilt On the Saturday in the Evening we must cast up our spiritual accounts and when we have found the Jonah cast him over-board Jon. 1. 15. by holy faith and serious repentance It is very unseemly to keep a Sabbath with our filthy Garments with Zach. 3. 4. unwashen hearts with untuned tongues with untamenting eyes with unrepented sins When Joseph was to come into Gen. 41. 14. the presence of Pharaoh he shaved himself and changed his rayment and came in to Pharaoh And shall not we throw off our sinfull incumberances and put off our prison clothes our noysome irregularities by diligent search and holy repentance when the day draws on and we are to come into the Effunde cortuum sicut aqu●m coram facie Domini extolle ad eum manus tuas pro remedio peccatorum tuorum accipe igitur lamentum Hier. presence of the great God Our memories should be the surveyours to view and our consciences the secretaries to set down our hearts the mourners to lament the sins of the week that Christ would bring his spunge to blot them out before Gods holy day comes upon us It is observable those herbs rise high in the Summer time that in the Winter shrink lowest in the ground and those hearts that in the week-time are laid lowest they rise highest upon the Sabbath day There must be soul-humblings for the daily trespasses of the week else the day of Gods service comes but we cannot comfortably and confidently serve God on that day especially if any fouler spot hath deformed any day of Josh 24. 19. the week Secondly But there must be an inward examination as well as an outward a search into our thoughts our desires our delights our dispositions what they have been the foregoing week we must examine the passages of our souls how it hath fared with the inward man The Psalmist commands heart communion a serious discourse concerning the Psal 4. 4. behaviours of the heart As the Shop-keeper casts up his Ex corde vita et actio procedit accounts not onely concerning his debts abroad but his wares at home He turns every piece in the chest to see how it goes with his estate We must dive into our souls and see what growth of grace what decays of corruption what ornaments and additional beauty we have gained all the week before whether Christ hath given us new bracelets Ezek. 16. 11. Armillae significant nihil indecorum esse agendum sed manus i. e. opera debere esse decora Orig. and Jewels superadded grace or whether we are more wrinckled in the complexion of our souls and look more like to the old man Holy Master Greenham sends us to civil and wordly wisdome for the practise of this duty We see saith he worldly thriving men if not every day yet at least once in the week they search their books cast up their accounts confer their expences with their gain and make even their reckonings whereby they may see whether they have gained Eph. 4. 22. or lost whether they are beforehand or come short and shall Mr. Greenh not we much more once a week at least call our selves to a reckning by examination what hath gone from us what hath come towards us how we have gone forward or backward in godliness that if we have holy increases we may then give thanks to God and if we have come short to travel with our selves the more earnestly to recover our former loss In a word the impartial survey of our inward man will necessarily lead us to a more profitable observation of Gods holy day seeing those wants will be
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.
saepius nobis accidit ut quae omnium optime addicisse videmur quando ad rem ventum est ignoremus Ger. Gen. 19. 3. to aggravate our condemnation Memory is onely the registring of a truth but meditation is the learning of it by heart memory opens the door to entertain spiritual knowledge but meditation it locks the door upon that discovery It will not let it fly out again Meditation like Lot is importunate that holy truths like welcomed Angels lodge with us The meditation of any thing hath more sweetness in it then bare remembrance The memory is the chest to lay up a truth but meditation is the palate to feed upon it The memory is like the Ark in which the Manna was laid up Meditation is like Israels eating of the Manna When David began to Psal 63. 5 6. meditate upon God it was sweet to him as marrow There is as much difference between a truth remembred and a truth meditated on as between a cordial in the glass and a cordial drank down The next thing considerable in this excellent duty of meditation is the timing of it how much how often how long we must meditate Indeed the Scripture doth not positively Requiritur animus memor vigilans qui dies noctes de praeceptis servandis cogitet Ger. determine any set time for this holy service Our chief Pilots and Guides is this main importance must be spiritual prudence and divine affection Our wisdome must select and our love must limit the time for sweet meditation Indeed some of Gods holy people have taken long Journies in this holy duty David tells us that he spent the whole day in it Psal 119. 97. Nay he mentions a Godly man Psal 119. 97. who when the day was shut in would not call off his soul from this blessed service as being tired and wearied but would travel all night in the same complacential performance But leaving these extraordinary examples we may Psal 1. ● certainly and truly conclude that we must consecrate some part of our time every day to this duty of meditation David though he had the business of a Kingdome and the pleasures of a Court to divert him yet saith of the Law it was his meditation all the day and in this evidences the excellent Psal 119 97. disposition of his soul Truly frequency in this duty is not onely praise-worthy but will bring in a harvest of spiritual gain By frequency we shall make our thoughts more plyable for the discharge of this secret and difficult duty the soul will be made more apposite and accommodate for it Frequent and customary running maketh a person long breathed and more able for exercise when we use this duty of Meditation every day our thoughts will be more consistent they Hos 6. 3. will be more improved and ripened for meditation And on the contrary when we neglect the frequent use of it we shall find meditation first more unpleasant and then more unnecessary and at last more distastfull and burthensome Disuse quickly brings holy duties into disgust The interruption in and infrequency of this duty will hinder the fruits of it when there are long strides between the performances of this duty we lose the benefit of former meditations As in the body when a man makes a free and liberal meal this will not maintane and support him long Panem petimus quotidianum quo quotidiè indigemus quique quotidiè nobis frugalitèr alendis sufficiat Par. but the next day a new and fresh hunger importunes another meal and if denyed the body faints and languisheth So meditation like food it must be our daily repast else the refreshing of former meditations wear out and leave no fruit or benefit behind When the Hen leaves her Eggs for a long time and doth not sit upon them they are unfit for production and never are reared to be Chickens but when she daily broods upon them they are living and lively productions So when we leave our wonted course of meditation for some space of time our affections grow chill and cold and are not fit to produce comfort and holiness to our souls when we are constant in this work we shall find the benefit and advantage of it Quest But if it be demanded how long we must continue in this duty of meditation Answ It may be answered so long till meditation bring forth some considerable benefit till it stir up our affections warm Domine nunq●om à te absque te recedam Bern. our hearts and tune our inward man till we find some sensible change and transformation in our souls Indeed nature disrelisheth this duty and we are very apt to be soon weary of it Our thoughts are like a bird in a Cage which flutters the more when confined and meditation fastens and confines them to some spiritual object But the distasts of nature to this duty should make us not more weary but much more vigorous As when the wood is green or wet we do not throw down the bellows in a pet or anger but we spend more time and draw out more strength in the blowing and in so doing there first riseth some smoak then some sparkes and by going forward at last it breaks into a hot and bright flame And so it is with the duty of divine meditation when we first meditate on spiritual things at first we raise a smoak of a few sighs towards God and by continuance sparkes of holy affections fly up heaven-ward Gen. 8. 21. but at last there is a flame of seraphical loves the soul is in an extasie with Jesus Christ Now we should not give over In phrasi hac primò est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tribuiturque deo quod proprium est hominibus Secundò est metaphora sicut homines odoribus gratis suaviter officiuntur it a deus delectatur file gratitudine Noah Par. in Genes meditating till this flame break out and ascend up towards God as Noah's sacrifice with a sweet smelling savour to the Divine Majesty When a man goes forth in a calm and serene evening and views the face of the Heavens he shall at first see a star or two twinckle and peep forth but if he continues his prospect both their luster and their number is increased and at last the whole Heavens are bespangled with stars So when we first meditate upon the promises of the Gospel at first it may be one star begins to appear a little light conveighs it self to the heart but let us go forward and we shall find when our thoughts are amplified and ripened there will be a clear light more satisfaction will be conveyed to the Soul and in continuance of these divine meditations the Covenant of Grace will be bespangled with promises as the Heavens with stars to give us rich and full satisfaction But there are some signal and special seasons for the acting of this duty of meditation Sometimes our
saith Mat. 20. 16. and therefore but few Saints in the world That which speaks the work of grace arbitrary is the free-agency of God in sanctification of the means of grace The Gospel of Christ is a savour of life unto some unto others a 2 Cor. 2. 16. Joh. 6. 67 68. Acts 13. 48 50 savour of death The Word it melts and mollifies some others it leaves to hardness and incrustation When Christ preach't some leave him but his Disciples adher'd the closer to him When the Apostles preached some believed others persecute both the Doctrine and the Preacher The Ordinances of Christ are marrow and fatness to David Psal Praedicatio crucis et mortis Christi est odor mortis incredulis et cedit in eorum exitium qui mortem Christi ut mortem tantummodò considerant sed credentibus est odor ex vitâ quia ipsi vitam ex ha● morte amplectuntur 63. 5. more then necessary food to Job Job 23. 12. But to others they have no tast no sweetness no power no reach to affect the heart When Paul and Barnabas preached at Iconium their Doctrine onely stirs up rage and passion Acts 14. 2. Like a high wind which turns the waves of the Sea into froth The preaching of the word is a cure to some and a curse to others to some it strengthens their grace to others it amplifies their guilt some fall before it as the word of salvation Acts 16. 29. others reject it and so dash upon eternal perdition The word indeed is a light to some and to others onely a stumbling block as God is pleased to pass by or work by his holy spirit Ordinances they are attended by man but sanctified by God The Word works unnaturally Eph. 4. 16. Joh. 3. 19. Prov. 16. 1. Eph. 3. 7. upon the Jews Acts 7. 54. pleasingly upon Herod Mark 6. 20. most powerfully upon Lydia Acts 16. 14. fully and effectually upon Paul Acts 9. 5. And thus the Gospel which is onely an instrument in Gods hand works variously and differently according to the pleasure and free agency of his will That the work of grace is arbitrary is evidenced in the impossibility of humane merit We cannot prepare our selves Natura corrupta est et lex morbum ostendit non sanat vos autem meritum nescio quod excogitastis quod mul 〈…〉 ●●lutem 〈…〉 endam ●●●eat Whit. Q●i dignitate ●i●tationis hereditariae nituntur multò sunt verae pietatis studiosiores quam qui ● servorum merito riâ virtute dependent Mort. Epis Dunelm contra Merita for the entertainment of this work of the holy spirit there is no meritum ex condigno or meritum ex congruo as the Papists fondly imagine and our Protestant Divines have fully evinced When God first begins his work of grace upon the soul he finds nothing but ruines and rubbish no remains of beauty The spirit of God meets with a great deal of enmity Rom. 8. 7. and boysterous opposition much wrigling and reluctancy of the flesh All the powers of man are up in arms against this blessed work It is therefore only Gods free and eternal love which prompts him to carry on this powerful work One observing that of the Apostle Our carnal mind is enmity against God Rom. 8. 7. By carnal mind saith he is not to be understood sensuality the dregs the lees and the whites of nature but our natural wisdom our most refined part nature in its best condition even Lady reason it self unsanctified and therefore the work of grace must needs be arbitrary there is nothing to allure it nothing to engage God to effect it wrinkles will not stir up love The wise man saith Prov. 16. 1. The preparations of the heart are of the Lord Observe preparations in the plural number to shew us that every little wheel in the work of grace is moved Prov. 16. 1. and turns by power from God every good tendency Vita nostrae animae maximè beata à deo pendet et donatur dei amicis every regular propension every breathing and anhelation after good is implanted in us by God who is liberrimum agens as the school-men speak most free and arbitrary in all his works and dispensations This further is demonstrated by the ineffectualness of all mans attempts to arrive at a state of grace and holiness There are many things bid fair for this holy work but they all Tollitur cooperatio liberi arbitrii interior volentis exterior currentis et totum opus bonum est dei miserentis et gratiae operantis Calv. bring onely to the birth they cannot bring forth the least semblance of it all turn into a timpany at last Good Education holy Patterns sweet Ordinances precious Sabbaths these may contribute something to an outward restraint from evil but they beget not the Saint without the admirable work of divine grace The holy spirit must overshadow the soul and so beget Christ in it That holy thing the new birth is the product of the Eternal and Almighty spirit we cannot ascribe the New creature to any thing in Rom. 9. 16. man for creature implies a work of creation which onely is to be attributed to an infinite power Thus most evidently the Apostle Rom. 9. 16. It is not of him who wills nor of him who runs but of God who sheweth mercy Mans fairest colours are but paint they may counterfeit but are not true beauty Let us meditate on the morning of a Sabbath on the secrefie of the work of grace It is a sweet but a spiritual work indeed Vita sanctorum obscondita est quia sancti à mundi cupiditat●bus et mundarâ conversatione se abstrahunt et abscondunt Anselm it is admirable but most frequently indisecruable this blessed work is like a river under ground like a star behind a cloud the world cannot see it they look upon the Saints as the onely troublers of Israel Holy Paul was called a seditious fellow Acts 24. 5. The Apostles were called intemperate men filled with new wine Acts 2. 13. Nay Christ himself was called Beelzebub and a friend of publicans and sinners though he had the spirit above measure John 3. 34. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Epic. The world understands not the Saints Shibboleth Nay often the Saint himself is at a loss whether this work be Mundus non agnoscit aliquid spirituale in fil●is dei Dav. wrought in him or no He often wants the lively and vivid sense of the spirit of God he many times is so clouded with afflictions battered with temptations disturbed Heb. 11. 37 38. with the hurries of the world dazled with sensual flatteries Col. 3. 3. and benighted with desertion that he can scarce see any day light of grace by the least cranny of observation or experience How doth David cry out that the spirit had taken Cum sentiant sancti insehanc vitam spiritualem
Ceiling the largeness of the windows which observation is not blame-worthy in it self yet not eying the person whose picture he is drawing he is guilty of folly and carelesness Our thoughts in holy duties are sinfull if not suitable Wandring thoughts in holy ordinances they are the ebullitions and breakings forth of a corrupt heart Mans heart hath Jer. 2. 24. no month to be taken in it is as the troubled sea which always casts up mire and dirt as a Furnace which is ever sparkling forth its vanity and folly nay the special presence of Christ in ordinances cannot shackle it or compose it to a due consistency Maligni spiritus in menstruis animum inveniunt quando in pollutis cogitationibus positum facilè ad perversam operationem trabunt Greg. it will steal away under the eye of the judge impertment thoughts in holy duties are the pimples which evidence the heat of Corruption within And here we may expostulate with Job Job 14. 4. Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean And surely the scum of a putrified heart must needs be offensive to the pure eyes of an holy God this is wickedness which God hath no pleasure in Psal 5. 6. Vain thoughts in duty are onely the breaking of the impostumation which lies covertly in the heart where no eye sees it But now the Disease being discovered let us apply the Remedies And for the preventing of wandring thoughts in holy Ordinances Let us heartily bemoan these sinfull impertinencies Let us speak to God in the language of the Psalmist Psal 120. 5. Wo is me that I dwell in the Tents of Kedar Wo is me that I cannot keep my heart close to Christ in holy Ordinances nor watch with my Lord one hour no not one hour but that I dwell among sinfull vain foolish and flatulent thoughts God surely will take away the cumbersome burthen of a troubled soul if it be a real burden he will chase away these frothy thoughts from our minds and this is one of those burdens we must cast upon God Psal 55. 22. Christ will not break the bruised Reed It breaks the very heart of a Saint that when he should enjoy close Communion with Jesus Christ a cloud of vain thoughts should interpose to eclipse his happiness and darken his comforts Let us spread therefore this affliction before the Lord with a weeping eye and a bleeding heart God knows how to stop up every passage that a vain thought shall not slip out of any cranny of thy heart Let us over-awe our hearts with a sence of the divine presence Say with the Centurion Acts 10. 33. We are all here present before God The Creature dares not trifle if thunder-struck Acts 17. 28. with the presence of the Lord he cannot but know something of Gods power his own dependance I can speak it Loquor per experientiam quantillum boni per sacras scripturas obtinendum c. Eras by experience saith Erasmus That there is little good gained by the Scriptures if a man hear or read them cursorily and carelesly but if a man do it out of Conscience and heedily as in Gods presence he shall find such efficacy in it as is not to be found in any other Book Gods eye will make us serious and Pedro Mexia Histor Imper. fetter our flitting thoughts The Servant will not sport in the Masters presence The Historian observes That Domitian the Emperour played with flies when he was in the Chamber alone Indeed we give the reins to our hearts in holy duties because we think there are none see them but were we sensible of the divine presence and that Gods piercing eye 1 Thes 2. 13 saw all the hurly burly in the soul when our thoughts took their ranges we should fetter our hearts straighter then the Jaylor did the feet of the Apostles Acts 16. 24. and put a pad-lock upon our imaginations We suppose there is none in the congregation but the Minister and the people and they are strangers to our thoughts whether they are fixed or flying but let us not deceive our selves Psal 139. 12. our thoughts are as fair Champian to Gods eye and prospect as our actions Let us take some pains with our own hearts Children will be wanton if not disciplined our hearts will be flying if not deplumed by care and industry Charge thy heart in holy Ordinances not to stir up to awake thy beloved until he Cant. 2. 7. please which will be after the Ordinance to bless thy care Cant. 3. 5. and watchfulness Cant. 8. 4. We must pray against these wandring thoughts that God would fix our Quick-silvered hearts and keep Dinah at home We must strive against them and set before our hearts 1. The eye of God 2. The day of Account when evil thoughts will be canvassed and condemned for lesser evils 3. The great evil of lesser sins nay let us threaten our hearts if they will not commune with God in Ordinances and be still Psal 4. 4. that we will fill them with smarting grief and sorrow We must fight against these vain and wandring thoughts with the sword of the spirit which is the Word of God Eph. 6. 17. We must convince our hearts how many Scriptural Commands wandring thoughts are the breach of and Eph. 6. 17. therefore in themselves they are weapons drawn against heaven Our hearts like Gardens are best when dressed but being neglected they are easily over-grown with sin and vanity If vain and impertinent thoughts arise in our minds when we are in holy Ordinances let us not dwell upon them Ah let Agrippina cū filio suo Nerone concubitum ambire ausa est ut imperium petulantèr et superbè exerceat Hist Imp. us not take pleasure in speculative Wickedness Evil thoughts like Curtezans if they are smiled upon they grow impudent and will croud in upon the soul therefore when such thoughts arise send them away with a sigh Let us drown our sinfull thoughts as Pharoah did the Israelites Children in their first birth Exod. 1. 16. When our hearts are ready to cherish them let our graces be ready to crush them Vain thoughts even in holy duties will be ready to break out if the love of Christ and holy resolution keep Acts 15. 9. not the door That heart-purifying-grace of faith will give these sinfull intruders their speedy dismission Let us preserve and keep holy affections in the heart for such affections as we have such necessarily will be our Sibimutuò causae sunt thoughts Psal 119. 97. Mal. 3. 16. The fear of God will make us think much of God Indeed thoughts and affections are mutual causes one of another thoughts are the bellows which enflame affections and when they are enflamed they cause thoughts to boyle over and therefore men newly converted to God have new and strong affections and they think more of God then any other Superlative love to Jesus
of Rom. 16. 5. Gods people being scattered as fruitful clouds which Col. 4. 15. are melted into their several drops let us repair to the lesser Church our family and follow Christ home and entertain Privata familia quae ob religiosam sanctitatem illustris est ecclesiae nomen promeruit Daven him there with holy communion Christ hath his lesser as well as his greater banquetting house Cant. 2. 4. And will meet us in our houses as well as in his own Mal. 21. 13. the place of more solemn assemblies He who will come to the house of a Pharisee Luke 14. 1. will come to the house of a believer Therefore after the publick ordinances are done and finished let us haste to our habitations as fast as Zacheus to his Luke 19. 6. to the same end with Familiam suam privata fecit ecclesia eam pietate religione exornans Theod. him to entertain our dear Jesus and pursue those family duties which are incumbent upon us which now shall be opened and discoursed upon There are several duties which must take up this interval that it may not be an empty and unbeautiful chasm Let our meal be adorned with temperance and made lushious and sweet with holy and savory discourse Heavenly communication is salt at the table is sauce in the dish Non prius discumbunt quàm Oratio ad deum praegustetur editur quantum esurientes capiunt bibitur quantum pudicis est utile ita saturantur ut qui meminerint etiam per noctem sibi adorandum deum esse Tertul. is a flavour in our drink Full meales are those which are spiritualized and they have most of rarity which have most of heaven Our tables are spread with variety not from our dishes but from our discourse Tertull. speaking of the carriage of private Christians at their meals tells us That they do not sit down before they have prayed they eat as much as may satisfie hunger they drink so much as is sufficient for temperate men and are so filled as they that remember that God must be worshipped even in the night season O the golden temper of these golden times Temperance must be the Caterer and holy discourse must be the musick of our tables Our tongues are instruments but the good spirit must tune them Holy discourses are perfumes which are not only pleasant to our selves but delightful to others they are the trumpets of our piety the sparks which fly from our zeal the disburdening of a gracious soul they are a celestial harmony which makes a meal on a Sabbath pleasant and seraphical Vivunt impii ut bibant et edant sed bibu●● èt edunt bène ut vivant Socr●t And therefore let us discourse at our Sabbath meals on some things delivered by the Minister or some spiritual matter which may administer grace to the hearers and let us avoid the common rock of vain and worldly talk Xenocrates the Philosopher being in company with some who used evil language he was very mute and being asked the reason he replyed It hath often repented me that I have spoken but never that I have held my peace Oh that our hearts and lips were heavenly on the Lords day that there might be more sprinkling of grace in our discourses Sermo noster sit ad aedificationem necessitatis Theoph. This would turn our food into Manna and drop dissolved Pearls into our Cup and turn our board into a Communion table Holy discourse it Et ad aedificationem utilitatis Erasm First Warms the heart Secondly It gives vent for grace Thirdly It is the bellows of zeal Et ad aedificatione● opportunitatis Sermo aedificet quoties opus vel opportunitas est alios docere Theoph. Fourthly It often awakens conscience Fifthly It is the Gangrene of sin as silence and flattery are the promoters of it Sixthly Nay it countermines Satan and turns him out of the room where our table stands Seventhly Holy discourses are the freedom of imprisoned piety and the Midwife of that holiness which lies in the womb of the heart the turning up of that truly golden Ore they are the Saints Shibboleth which distinguishes him from the foolish world which travels with froth and vanity In a word holy discourse is the ease of Conscience the sacrifice of Religion the Saints refreshment the sinners chain and astonishment heavens eccho the delight of Christian Society It is a twofold Charity First To our selves it enfranchises our affections to Christ our heart is full of love to him and holy discourse gives vent to our full hearts it is the discharge of our duty Cant. 5. 10 11 and so frees us from the guilt of disobedience and Col. 4. 6. moreover it gives fire to our dedolent hearts Our hearts Luke 24. 31. must be awakened and raised sometimes by ordinances Mal. 3. 16. sometimes by prayer sometimes by holy discourses Sequi debet in una●uaque familiâ mutua communicatio et mutua familiae institutio Rivet in Decal Secondly Which likewise are charity to others They may be their satisfaction an answer to their scruples a corrosive to their lusts a check to their sin thou knowest not but thy good discourse may be as an Angel in the way to stop some sinfull progress or a flame to anothers zeal and a salve to anothers sore Such discourse becomes our table on the Lords day and becomes the Sabbath as rich attire the Luke 14. 1 7. beautiful person the garment sets off the person and the person adorns the garment It is reported of the hearers of holy Mr. Heldersham that they would go home from Church discoursing of he powerful and precious truths which were delivered and so they did strew the way home with Roses and made their miles short by heart-sweetning discourse Christ when he was with his little family his twelve Apostles he would always be speaking of the things Deut. 6. 6 7. of heaven Mark 4. 10. Gracious words would flow from Job 32. 18 19 20. him as drops from the fountain or the morning dew from above It was a charge laid upon the Israelites to discourse Deut. 11. 19. of the statutes of God when they were in their Mat. 12. 34. houses sitting with their Children and Servants about them Deut. 6 6 7. The two Disciples going from Emaus Christus suo exemplo declaravit quomedo tempus inter matutinos et vespertinos caetus Sabbati insumendum est Ipse enim suos discipulos dissipatâ turbâ de rebus regni examinavit Chemn were talking of the sufferings and the affairs of Christ and then their dear Mediatour joyns in with them Luke 24. 15. Dr. Bound observeth That when we have heard the word upon a Sabbath we must discourse of it unless we will lose a great part of the fruit of it A talking of worldly affairs will chase away that truth we have been made
men defile not enjoy an Ordinance John 17. 21. They are spots not guests in that holy Feast It is onely the spiritual man is fit for converse with God Princes converse not with Beggars nor God with sinners Christ in his incarnation tabernacled with the Sons of men John 1. 14. But in his communion he converses with the Sons of God he gives his people the meeting Mat. 18. 20. The Sun shines upon the stars and they reflect its light with a glittering rebound Christ when he arose again gave not the meeting to the world but to his Disciples Luke 24. 36. And so in his blessed fellowship he visits not the formalist but the Saint Christ in his ordinances influences his living Eph. 1. 22 2● members not glass eyes the speculative Atheist not painted faces the varnished hypocrite not ' wooden legs with the silken stocking upon them the spruce and self-deceiving moralist who with Agag are ready to depose the bitterness 1 Sam. 15 32. of death is over We must be on the Lords day in grace actual On the Sabbath the soul is to be set on work in acting several graces and some seem to be of a different nature As faith and fear heavenliness of mind and humbleness of heart repentings for sin and relyings on God tremblings of the soul and restings on Christ a real longing for promised mercies and yet a quiet staying for those mercies promise by hope expecting good things to come and yet by faith possessing those things at present This embroydery of grace must be on the heart of Lam. 3. 26 a Saint upon the Sabbath One of the Ancients compares Greg. Mor. l. 19. sect 30. holy men upon Earth unto those holy Angels of Heaven Rev. 4. 8. that are said to be full of eyes within and without In the week the Saints must use their eyes without Psal 77. 6. looking after their necessary callings and their occasions in Hos 6. 3. the world but upon the Sabbath they more solemnly set Ex cognitione dei omnia utriusque tabulae officia tanquam ex fonte promanant et eatenus placent quatenus illam praelucentem habent Riv. on work their eyes within looking inward upon the estate of their souls knowledge must open its eyes and repentance must drop its tears every grace must be in ure and exercise Indeed the Sabbath is the proper season for the acting of our several graces working as Bees in a Hive making honey of every ordinance Sorrow and confession must begin faith and prayer must carry on and holy thanksgiving must conclude the duties of a Sabbath Our hearing the Word must be introduced by holy appetite and desire we must long to be in the Courts of God It must be entertained Psal 84. 2. Luke 8. 1. Heb. 4. 2. Mat. 13. 19. by faith and affection it must be improved by zeal and an holy conversation our lives must be comments on Gods sacred truths and so all other ordinances of the Sabbath must be the sphears for our graces to move in as stars in their Phil. 1. 27. Orbs and this is to be in the spirit on the Lords day Let us study to be in the comforts of the spirit upon the Lords day The joyes of the Holy Ghost are the musick of heaven below the hearts rapture paradise in the bosome the sweet earnest of future blessedness they are the ecchoes of assurance and the reverberations of a good God and a good Conscience Spiritual comforts hath many springs but all most pleasing and complacential They are the comforts of God 2 Cor. 1. 3. who is a fountain above us The Father of mercies leaves a seed of joy in the soul They are the comforts of the Holy Ghost Acts 9. 31. who is a blessed spring within us John 7. 37. shedding those grateful streams of peace and joy which drench the soul with unspeakable delight They are the comforts of the Scriptures Rom. 15. 4. which are as sweet Gardens without us every promise being Consolatio omnis nititur promissionibus gratuit● Dav. as a sweet rose every truth being as a flower of the Sun and every threatning being as wholesome worm-wood in this salvifical garden They are the comforts of the Saints Col. 4. 11. which are as lights about us for our more comfortable passages to Sancti nos solantur invisendo condolendo necessitatibus nostris administrando et miserrimas nostras conditiones sublevando Dav. our rest and happiness Communion of Saints being not only an article of our Creed but an helper of our joy in our travels to Canaan But to return to the comforts of the spirit Gods people may find soul-refreshing comforts in Christ the Lord upon his own day and the measure of their comforts may mount their souls so high as to make them like Moses upon Mount Pisgah viewing Canaan the heavenly Canaan flowing with that which is better then milk and honey the soul of a sincere Isa 51. 12. 2 Cor. 1. 4. Luke 2. 29. Isa 56. 7. Christian may swim in a sea of sweet delight he whose heart hath been as a boat which could not be got up all the week because of low water yet may be brought up in an high spring tide of spiritual comfort upon the Lords day being ready to say with Old Simeon Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace Luke 2. 29. the soul may be so Psal 94. 19. Isa 57. 18. filled with joy upon Gods holy day in his house of prayer that he may be ambitious of his eternal Requiem in the bosome of Christ Nay upon the Lords day a believer being in the spirit the worst evils may amplifie his best comforts to think of sin remitted hell removed death vanquished devil Gen. 42. 38. conquered all these make for him that he may go down with Jud. 14. 14. joy and triumph to the grave Out of every eater comes meat the upper and the neither springs run all into the Josh 15. 19. same stream of comfort to the Saints Every thing on a Sabbath is an occasion of spiritual joy to them If they look up Isa 29. 19. to God they will joy in the Lord Rom. 5. 11. If they consider Isa 35. 2. the season of a Sabbath that is the time nay the term Isa 52. 9. time for the soul which is matter of joy nay as the joy of harvest Isa 9. 3. If they glance at the word they receive the word with joy Luke 8. 13. If they act their graces this is with joy unspeakable and full of glory 1 Pet. 1. 8. It was a brave speech of a Martyr to his cruel tormentors Work your will upon my weak body as for my soul it is in heaven already and over that Caesar hath no power So it may be the case of a Christian upon a Sabbath he may be as in heaven beginning his triumphal hallelujahs It is no
much talk upon the Sabbath about worldly affairs doth as much hinder the sanctification of the day as much work nay we may work alone but we cannot talk alone and so we must hinder others as well as our selves Discourse it either doth cast a stench or a perfume among others according as it is good or bad Now let us take these five Glasses to see the sin of vain discourse on the Sabbath day We may see it in the clear Glass of a Command Frothy language is onely the foam of a carnal heart at any time much more on the Sabbath it is alwayes the breath of vanity Eph. 4. 29. and therefore called corrupt communication by the Apostle who here severely forbids all such communication And indeed Mar. 12. 36. worldly discourse on the Sabbath is no less then corrupt discourse putrid rotten and unsavoury language which is prohibited by a strict command Eph. 4. 29. The same Apostle saith Evil communication corrupts good manners I am 1 Cor. 15. 33. sure it corrupts good Sabbaths it is nothing but spittle cast Versus hic est senarius menandri ait Hier. Mar. 16. 19. upon the face of a Sabbath its affront and shame prophane talkers dealing with the day of a Sabbath as the Jews with the Lord of the Sabbath they spit in its face In the Glass of Example Should I reassume the divine example of our dear Lord Luke 14. 7. No pattern more pure and pregnant his language on a Sabbath was as the dropping Luk. 14. 7. of a honey comb the langudge of Heaven the triumph of Acts 20. 27. words the salvifical discoveries that he brought from his Fathers bosome But let me lay down the wonted custome of a late Minister now with God Holy Mr. Dod briefly he thus Mr. Dod. spent his Sabbath He preacht almost all day long on the Mr. Clark in the life of Mr. Dod. Lords day first in the morning he opened a Chapter and prayed in his Family after preached twice in publick and in the interim discoursed all dinner while to those who sat with him at his Table he would say this is not a day Quàm augusta erit ista Synodus in quâ convenient omnes sancti cujus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 erit Christus in quâ non erit necessarium sollicitè inquirere veritate●● sed omnia omnibus erunt nota et manifesta to feast the body but the soul at the first sitting down he would bid them help themselves and one another and see none want let me said he bid you but once for I would not speak a vain word to day After the two Sermons in publick were ended the house would be filled and then he would fit in his chair and then he used to say if any one have a good question or a hard place of Scripture to open let them say on and when he was faint would call for som● refreshment and so on again till night And thus this man of God spake nothing but the language of God on the blessed Sabbath of God This sin of using unholy language on the Sabbath may be seen in the Glass of Equity If idle discourse be not forbidden in the fourth Commandment then that Commandment is straighter and not so comprehensive as the rest for the sixth Commandment doth not only prohibit bloody 1 John 3. 15. murder but the very hating of our brother the seventh Commandment doth not onely forbid acts of Adultery but Mat. 5. 28. Quod fecit Christus in casu homicidii hoc etiam facit in casu Adulterii et non actum solummodo sed impudicum quoque coercet aspectum ut discos ●bi consistat illu● quod sepra Scriburum et Pharisaeorum nostra precipitur obundare justitia Chrysost lascivious looks wanton glances nay effeminate speculations and shall not the fourth Commandment be as large to condemn worldly discourses as well as secular labours Or shall our obedience to the Commandments of the second table be more exact and strict then our conformity to the Commandments of the first Shall our behaviour be more precise to our neighbour then to our God Surely he that hath said we must not work on the Sabbath hath likewise said we must not word it on a Sabbath about our secular affairs our bargains our pleasures our pleasing vanities In the Glass of Religion We should converse as Saints on Gods holy day our language then more especially should Mat. 26. 73. betray us to belong to Jesus Christ Every thing should be Qnemad modum Moses et Elias in transfigurations cum Christo colloquuntur sic in vitâ aeternâ vigebunt inter sanctes perpetua et jucundissima colloquia Gerard. Rev. 1. 10. Psal 39. 1. holy on a Sabbath we should converse with God in holy duties tread accurately in holy practices breath out nothing but holy affections trade in nothing but holy devotions and edifie one another with holy discourses Vain and idle talking becomes not those who would serve God more seraphically then others and who are in the spirit upon the Lords day Where are our hearts when our tongues range and licentiate in sinfull liberties Religion will cause a Saint to make a Covenant with his tongue on this day that the offend not with his lips At this time our tongues should be a mine of Gold not a pile of Dross And lastly we may see this sin of foolish talking on a Sabin the Glass of future Glory The glorified Saints converse Neque enim beati erunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sed suavissimos invicem sermones conserent de admirandis divinae sapientiae decretis de stupendis divinae potentiae operibus de infinitis divinae gratiae et bonitatis argumentis Ger. one with another in a most holy manner What the method or the way is of their Communications one with another is not so easily discernable but this is clear that it is most holy We should study to spend our Sabbaths here as we shall spend them above in all holy and divine communications there shall be no vain word no senseless prate about the things of this life Let us begin Heaven betimes and in observing a temporal eye our Eternal Sabbath CHAP. VII The Text further opened and explained ANd thus I have run through the negative directions in Isa 58. 13. the Text I now come to the positive There is something Commanded as well as some thing prohibited on a Sabbath something for us to do as well as something for us to forbear Now these practical and positive directions they are not very many but very rare and what they want in number they make up in weight they are ponderous though not numerous and they are principally four like the four Elements to constitute the holy observation of a Sabbath There is a Command for delight so the Text and call the Sabbath a delight Our Sabbaths must be our
inquam animus ad eandem quoque sanctificationem ritè preparetur Wal. of Canaan so were they filled with Corn when they came to Joseph in Aeygpt And according as we prepare our hearts at home in the week time so our comfortable fillings shall be when we come before the Lord on his own day He that expects from his field a large crop and a plenteous harvest must before hand take pains in plowing and well preparing the ground we do not before hand take preparatory pains and that is the reason we reap so little in Sabbath-time man naturally is slow of heart Luke 24. 25. Duty and Industry must help Nature that so our sluggish hearts may be fitted for the receiving of those blessings which usually attend the Sabbath day Emptied vessels take in the liquor Pruned Vines become fruitfull and feracious And dressed Gardens cast the sweetest smells And so the heart mollified with penitential tears pruned by resolute mortification and turned up by frequent search will be accommodate for the magnificent plantations of Sabbath graces Of Zeal and Fervency Can we observe the several Holy-dayes to have their Eves wherein some Service and Liturgy must be used for preparation The Chappels and Cathedrals 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hippo. must be frequented and prayers must be made because some Saints day is approaching and the neglect of this duty is adjudged an indignity by many great ones in the Church Shall a day dedicated to a Saint to an Apostle to a Martyr be ushered in with preparatory services and must the holy Sabbath the day dedicated to the Lord Jesus God blessed Rom. 9. 5. Christus est deus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 super omnes aut super omnia eodem sensu Par. for ever have no Eve no preparatory duties no services to proclaim its coming But the preceding day must be spent in a more eager pursuit of the World then we frequent the Markets mind our shops reckon with our workmen pierce further into the night for our worldly business and we catch greedily after the flying week now drawing towards an end what is this but to give more honour to the Saints day then the Sabbath day to an ordination of the Church then an institution of Christ Shall the blessed Sabbath have no evidence no sign of its coming no preparatory Prayers no precursory pains Must the holy days Eve have the Cathedral for service and not the Sabbath Eve have the Closet for preparation Where is our zeal for Gods honour and Gods day It is very strange that the Saints Festivals should be introduced with greater solemnity then Christs holy day Surely this doth not become the Christian who is or should be sick of love with his beloved Cant. 2. 5. Of Holy Ingenuity Shall we be out-vied by the Jewes the vagabond Jewes in our preparations for the Sabbath Shall they be so exact and we so negligent Let not a blasphemous Jew rise up in judgement against us And here I shall open the care of the Jewes in preparing for the Sabbath Scalig. de Emend temp Lib. 6 p. 261. The Jewes formerly gave and for the present do give very solemn and great honour to their Sabbath The week days they called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cholim Prophane as the Greeks call them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 working days and in respect of the different degrees of holiness of dayes the Sabbath day is not unfitly Scalig. de Emend temp Lib. 6. p. 269. compared to a Queen or to those who are termed primary Wives other feast dayes to Concubines or half-wives working dayes to Hand-maids The Jewes began the Sabbath at six of the clock the night before And this the Graecians called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And the Hebrews 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Biath Hasabbath the enterance of the Sabbath Their preparation Joseph Anti. lib. 16. cap 10. to the Sabbath began at three of the clock in the afternoon which the Hebrews call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gnereb ha-Sabbath the Sabbath Eve and this the Fathers called Caenam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 puram the pure Supper the phrase being borrowed In vitibus Paganorum coen● pura appellabatur illis apponi solita qui in casto erant quod Graeci dicunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isa Causab Mark 15. 42. Luke 23. 54. from the Pagans whose Religion taught them in their sacrifices to certain of their Gods and Goddesses to prepare themselves by a strict kind of holiness observe the very Heathens prepared for their sacrifices to their Idol Gods and Goddesses This preparation for the Sabbath is by the Evangelist called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a preparation Mark 15. 42. whose words are these And now when Even was come because it was the preparation i. e. the day before the Sabbath To the same purpose the Evangelist Luke Luk. 23. 54. And that day was the preparation and the Sabbath drew on And among the Jews the whole day was a kind of preparation for on this preparation day they might not go more then three Parsoth now a Parsa contained so much ground as an ordinary man might go ten of them in a day and Judges on this day might not sit in Judgement upon life and death c. And so carefull were the Jews of observing the time of their preparation for the Sabbath that the best Buxtorf Synag Judaic Cap. 10 〈◊〉 ●almud and wealthiest of them even those who had many servants did with their own hands further the preparation so that sometimes the Masters themselves they would chop herbs sweep the house cleave wood kindle the fire and such like In old time they proclaimed the preparation with noyse of Trumpets or Horns but now the modern Jewes proclaim it by the Sexton or some under Officer of the Church whom they call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Shihach Tsibbur the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hospin de Fest Jud. messenger of the Congregation and this messenger advised them that they should prepare seasonably for the worthy Celebration of the Sabbath Hospinian tells us and his testimony is Authentical that when the Sexton gives notice of the approaching Sabbath that then they prepared all those meats they were to feed upon the succeeding Sabbath and put them upon a table covered with a clean cloth then they washed their heads pared their nails and prepared their Sabbath apparel The Sun setting the woman Occidente sole mulieres lumina Sabbataria accendunt mulier quaeque domi ambas suas manus versus lumen expandit et precatiunculam quandam peculiarem demurmurat Hosp Cum aliqui longiore spatio iti●eris ab hospitio aut aedib●● suis abiit die Veneris quàm die Sabbatino conficere licet in agris vel mediâ sylvâ ubicunque ille sit manere et ibidem quiescere et Sabbatum servare neglecto omni periculo et injuriâ cibi et po●us debet Hosp 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
securing to its self an everlasting Heb. 9. 15. inheritance and therefore no time can well be lost The Client who hath his suit to follow gets up early to wait at his Councellors door The Husbandman betimes waits on his business in harvest time The Sabbath is the souls good wind for heaven and mariners must not lose their winds they may so lose their voyage The Israelites were not to Exod. 16. 25. gather Manna on the Sabbath for then the showre ceased but Christians are then chiefly to gather their spiritual Manna for then the shower is most plenteous If one day in Gods Psal 84 10. Courts be better then a thousand as the Psalmist speaks it is so in relation to the soul and shall then any time of it be lost Shall we clip that day when the very clippings are as good silver as any that is left The souls interest widens the Sabbath and would lose no time The temptation of Satan contracts the Sabbath and would mind no time Now whether we should hearken to our better part or our Manè i. e. tempestivè sollicitè vigilanter secundò mane i. e. opportunè Alap worser enemy is most easie to discern Surely carnal sloth on Gods holy day doth onely evidence the conquest Satan hath gained over us There are two things he tempts us forcibly to to lose our Sabbaths and to lose our souls and it is no weak no faint memento to us to rise early on Gods day to seek him when he professes so often he rises early himself Jer. 7. 13. Jer. 26. 5. Jer. 25. 4. and sends his Prophets early to seek and enquire after us Let us cast an eye upon the examples of Gods Saints they are early in their visits of God The Church resolves to get Cant. 7. 12. up early and go into the Vineyards she would betimes gather clusters spiritual food for her feeding and refreshing The Church denotes her longing after Christs presence E●ce sanctorum animae ec ce sanctorum mentes quae ad excellentissimos fructus gloriosissimè perveniunt Philo. there will be nothing but fruitfulness and flourishing where Christ draws near Christ comes not empty to his Spouse but he brings abundance of grace and sweetness with him The bubbling and boyling hearts of Gods holy and hidden ones are waiting for the first opportunities to enjoy communion with God they will file off the chains of sloth and sleep to be free to converse with their beloved The holy Psalmist in this duty writes us the fairest copy sometimes he began his devotions in the night watches before any appearance Psal 63. 6. of day had made a rent in the mantle of the night when others were rockt asleep and fast in the armes of natures nurse for so sleep is David was waking and busily imployed in holy meditation and devotion But if the night had been farther spent yet he was so early in his addresses Psal 88. 13. that he professes that he prevented God himself he was with him before the Lord could well expect him If he delayed his devotions till towards morning yet then he Psal 130. 6. grew so impatient that he longed as much to be with God as the poor tyred Sentinel waited for day peep that he might be taken from his harsh and dangerous employment for thus he speaks Psal 130. 6. My soul waiteth for the Lord more then they who watch for the morning I say more then they who watch for the morning And it is observable least we should think he had spoken more his affection then his practice he repeats the word twice for our greater assurance Nor will his zeal or divine affection suffer him to let the morning steal upon him that he should see the light of the sun before he had pursued the light of Gods Countenance no He will prevent the very first dawning of the morning so he saith Psal 119. 147. I prevented the dawning Psal 119 147. of the morning and cryed I hoped in thy Word And in this passage it is most remarkable timely piety and devotion it was not a fit of love but a holy custome And lastly if his natural rest had kept him a prisoner from God longer then usual yet he resolves he will awake early Psal 108. 2. Psal 108. 2. Psal 57. 8. Psal 110. 3. 1 John 1. 3. Nay he will awake right early Psal 57. 8. The rest of nature shall not long withstand ●he force of grace and holy love but he will break out of the womb of the morning to cry and wait for God to enjoy salvifical fellowship with him Now if David was so early in his inquisitions after God on any time or time indefinite how much more should we on Gods own holy day that peculiar day which God hath especially Psal 118. 24. made for close converses between himself and the precious soul Now if you ask me what employments or affairs engaged Davids early awakings that he could not fetch his sound sleeps as well as other men I answer I find four things that took up Davids earliest thoughts First Prayer so Psal 5. 3. and so Psal 88. 13. And in the morning shall my prayer prevent thee This holy man must break the silence of the night by the approaches of his soul before God break the darkness of the night by the approaches of the sun He remembred that those who sought Prov. 8. 17. God early should find him Prov. 8. 17. A rich promise can draw out Davids heart in holy prayer Secondly Meditation Psal 63. 6. David could let out his earliest thoughts upon God as the most pleasing subject they could prey upon Indeed most sutably our thoughts should Rev. 1. 8. begin with him who is the beginning of all things who is both the fountain to bubble forth and the pillar to support Porro α. ω. proverbialitèr dicitur de eo qui primus est in re quapiam seu qui in aliquo genere est summus Pau. our beings In the spiritual nature of God is the reason of our spiritual worship his wisdome is the reason of our submission his holiness is the reason of our conformity his justice is the reason of our fear his goodness is the reason of our love his truth is the reason of our trust his grace is the reason of our prayers and his glory is the reason of our praises Now here is the flowy field for the soul to meditate in in the freshest morning Thirdly Holy thanksgivings Psal 92. 2. the words are these To shew forth thy loving kindness in the morning and Psal 59. 16. this Psalm is the song for the Sabbath as the title informs us indeed every morning but much more on the morning of Gods holy day there should be a dew of holy thanksgiving upon the heart of every believer Fourthly Acting of graces so the Psalmist Psal 119. 147. I prevented
affections are more smart and vigorous our thoughts are more lively and unwearied and so more disposed to this excellent service and such seasons are our harvest for the acting of this duty and reaping the great comfort of it The morning is an accommodated time for meditation then the body hath been refreshed with the sweetness of The first season for meditation rest and so the impressions of toyle being worn off it is the more active for the labours of meditation David was with God before break of day The morning Sun smiles with the Psal 119. 147. most pleasant aspect when first it begins it 's laborious circuit Our thoughts are shot out of our minds with greatest strength in the morning when our bodies can yield their most lively assistance and there are many pregnant reasons for it Holy thoughts and meditations are most acceptable in that season When we awake in the morning many suitors attend our thoughts aad every suitor useth urgent importunity Jer. 2. 3. now if spiritual things obtain the first admittance this is most grateful to God It cannot but be a sinful provocation that our thoughts should be as the Inne in Bethlehem Luke 2. 7. where strangers took up all the rooms and Luke 2. 7. Christ was excluded and was fain to lye in a manger Indeed Charitas sponsae quae tot allecta beneficiis sponso deo in amore obedientiâ et obsequio mutuò respondit et eum deperiit Lyran. it cannot but be matter of deploration that vain and worldly thoughts should take up all the rooms of our souls in the morning and Christ shut out But for the prevention of this let Divine things first attach our meditations and this will be well-pleasing to the Lord. In the stilling of strong water the first water which is drawn from the still is more full of spirits and the second and the third they are weaker and smaller and not of the same value So the first meditations which are still'd from the mind in the morning are the best and we shall find them more full Gen. 4. 4. of life and spirits and they come nearer to Abels sacrifice Abel non etemandato tantùm sed exside obtulit The morning is the golden hour of the day like the first springing grass which is most pleasant to the eye and most sweet to the taste The morning is the first budding of time Let Christ have it in holy and divine speculations Meditation in the morning will be more influential The Vessel which is first seasoned with that which is pretious and odoriferous will retain the scent and tincture nor will easily lose it but with much toyle and labour That of the wise man is considerable When thou awakest it will talk with Prov. 6. 22. thee As Servants come to their Masters in the morning and receive Rules from them how they shall manage their business all the day following So a gracious heart which meditates on Gods Word and things divine in the morning those savoury tinctures abide on him all the day and Qu● semel est imbu●a recers servabit odor●m te●ta diu he walks with more circumspection and fruitfulness Wind up thy heart towards Heaven in the morning and it will go the better all the day The wool takes the first dye best and it is not easily worn out The heart seasoned with holy meditations in the beginning will keep this colour in grain It would become us to perfume our minds with divine thoughts betimes on the day that the smell may scatter it self to all we meet withall that day Equity requires our morning meditations to be sequestred and set apart for God Some of his first thoughts were set upon us If we are in Christ we had a being in his thoughts Eph. 1. 4. of love before we had a being in the world His earliest 1 Joh. ● 19. loves fastened upon us when we were onely in the possibility Spirituales benedictiones in ipsâ aeternâ praedestiratione suerunt nobis in Christo praeparatae Zanch. and futurition of a being We had the morning of Gods thoughts before ever the Sun did rise or shine in the World What thoughts of free and rich Grace what kind thoughts of mercy and peace had God of us from all everlasting Let us in some measure retaliate the first loves of God let us fix our thoughts upon God in holy meditation before the day breaks and delivers the light the infallible Jer. 31. 3. harbinger of it But more especially the morning of a Sabbath is the most genuine and sweetest season for meditation and that upon this two-fold account Holy meditation will fasten the heart upon God which is very necessary upon the morning of a Sabbath Meditation is properly the centring of the thoughts as was suggested before and fixing them upon some spiritual object Gen. ●4 1. Our hearts they are naturally slippery and will be gadding with Dinah unless they are kept at home viz. with God the proper home of the soul by divine contemplation It was the boast of holy David that his heart was fixed the Psal 57. 7. fixing of the soul on God is both the duty and the glory of a Psal 108. 1. Christian Now when once meditation hath fastened our thoughts on something divine they will not be so easily call'd off nor so subject to sinfull avocations which will be a transcendent happiness on the Lords day Divine meditation will fledge and raise our affections not onely six our hearts upon God but draw them out to God in ardent and holy desires which likewise is most suitable to the morning of a Sabbath We light affection by the fire of meditation On Gods holy day we should be in an extasie Psal 42. 2. of love to Jesus Christ and meditation is that which can elevate and draw up the desires to Christ and when they are once raised they do not so easily sink and fall again Psal 119. 97. When Bells are raised then they are musical and proclaim their loud harmony to all who are within the hearing The Psal 19. 6. Sun when it is risen it ascends gradually and runs its pleasing and swift circuit untill it be stopt by full noon So Psal 104 34. likewise the soul being raised by sweet and divine meditation on the morning of Gods holy day it will be drawing out its holy fervencies and longings after God the whole Sabbath ensuing The next season for holy meditation is the Evening So we read of holy Isaac He went out to meditate in the field at Even tide Gen. 24. 63. When business is over and every The second season for meditation thing is calm it is then a convenient time to let out our thoughts loose to fly up to God God had his Evening as Exod. 29. 39. well as his Morning sacrifice As the cream at the top is sweet
he had not looked on Bathsheba with such a wanton Psal 1. 2. eye Holy meditation would have quenched the fire of that lust This heavenly duty hath this advantage in it it presses the thoughts for the service of Christ nor will permit them to wander in a sinfull liberty Meditation it puts life into Ordinances and makes them sweet and savoury to the soul Ordinances they are like The third advantage of meditation cloaths which have no warmth in themselves but as they are heated by the body which wears them and so Ordinances have no energy or quickning power in themselves but as the divine spirit co-operates with them and our serious meditation makes them fruitfull and effectual If we canvas an Ordinance or two we shall find this more apparent and manifest Shall we instance In Prayer Meditation before prayer is like the tuning of an Instrument and the fitting it for melody and harmony This holy duty of meditation doth mature our conceptions excite our desires and screw up our affections what is the Preces non tam verbis quam animo aestimantur Chemnit reason there is such a discurrency in our thoughts such a running of them to and fro when we are in Prayer like dust blown up and down with the wind but onely for want of meditation And what is the reason that our desires 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in prayer are like an arrow shot out of a weak bow that they do not reach the mark but onely upon this account we do not meditate before prayer He who would but consider before he comes to prayer the pure Majesty of God the holiness of his Nature the quickness of his Eye the strength of his Hand and that he will be sanctified by all Acts 1. 14. who draw near to him as likewise those things he is to pray Ipsa majestas dei est origo et fundamentum gloriae Gloria ex Majestate emanat sicut radius â sole Alap for the pardon of Sin the spirit of Grace the assurance of Gods Love an inheritance with the Saints in light Col. 1. 12. How would this cause his prayer to ascend as incense before God David expresses prayer by meditation Give ear to my words O Lord consider my meditation Psal 5. 1. In hearing the word the benefit of it much depends upon meditation Before we hear the word meditation is the plough Dum terra labori et agriculturae respondet ipse deus novas pluvias et novas solis caelique influentias immutit which opens the ground to receive the seed and after we have heard the word meditation is as the harrow which covers the new sown seed in the earth that the Fowls of the air may not pick it up Meditation makes the Word full of sap and juice life and vigour to the attentive hearer What is the reason that most men come to hear the word as the beasts came into the Ark they came in unclean and they went out unclean it is because they do not meditate on the truths they hear they put truth into shallow and neglective memories and they do not draw it out by serious meditation It is said of the Virgin Mary that she pondered Luke 2. 19. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tanquam semen in agro those things in her heart A steddy and considerate meditation on divine truth would produce warm affections zealous resolutions and holy actions If we will profit by the Word let us conscionably meditate on the Word In receiving the Sacrament Meditation puts a taste upon that divine feast Examination is commanded before we approach this Supper now this duty of Examination is best managed by meditation He who meditates aright concerning 1 Cor. 11. 28. him who is the Author the Object the end of the Haec 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in tribus p●rtibus consistit 1 In agnitione miseriae et peccatorum magnitudinis reatus gravitatis 2. In fide et fiduciá mediatoris ne desperatione absorbeamur 3 In serio resipiscentiae et novae obedientiae proposito Par. Luke 22. 15. Sacrament and considers with himself what rich testimonies of Grace there are to the worthy receiver how will this dispose the soul to that holy Ordinance And he who meditates of his infinite misery out of Christ and of his happiness in a dear Redeemer how will this encourage and sharpen his desires to come to the Lord Jesus and meet him at his own table And in receiving we should meditate on the sufferings of Christ for the Sacrament is onely the abridgement of Christs agony And we should likewise meditate on the affections and loves of Christ for the Sacrament is a Copy of his love The Sacrament is food and so we must receive it with an appetite and strong desires but this food must be carefully concocted by meditation The fourth advantage we receive by meditation is the strengthning and recruit of our Graces Indeed grace The fourth advantage by meditation and meditation are reciprocal causes of each other meditation maintanes grace and grace exercises meditation A gracious heart with Moses ascends the mount of meditation Exod. 24. 15. to meet with God and then his face shines his graces are more illustrious and resplendent Meditation feeds three royal Graces with supply and support First Faith receives recruit from this heavenly duty Fides est quasi column● et fundamentum in terrâ jactum fides inter omnes res est solidissima certissuna et firmissima Chrysost Heb. 11. 19. When our faith languisheth and our thoughts are ready to terminate in despair then meditation brings a cordial it fixes upon the power of God which is faiths great supporter in all our temptations When the soul shall meditate thus that God by his own Fiat his own Word gave being to the World and raised this glorious superstructure where man now inhabits and that his power is no less then infinite reducing into act and being whatsoever the Divine Will shall command how doth this underprop our faith and preserve it and secure it against the quick-sands of unbelief Haec suit invicta illa fidei 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 et basis in mandato et promissionibus dei radica●a Thus Abraham meditates on Gods power and this meditation so steels and backs his faith that it breaks through the most rigorous and fierce onsets of tryal and temptation and so becomes laureat and victorious Another grace which flourishes and thrives on the Mount of meditation is Hope Faith is confirmed and hope is enlarged 1 Tit. 1. 1. Tit. 2. 13. Col. 1. 5. Quaerat aliquis quando per●eniam ad speratum gaudium respo●dendum cum deus dederit nullae sunt l●ngae morae ejus quòd certò donabit Tert. Psal 103 5. by meditation the hand of faith is strengthned and the wing of hope is plumed by this excellent duty If a Christian should consider by
above all his works Psal 145. 9. Qui●quid est in deo est deus Psal 145. 9. Gen. 22. 17. 2 Chron. 33. 12. How sweet was his mercy in multiplying Abraham's Seed in knocking off Israels bonds in sanctifying Manassah's Fetters in throwing Devils out of Mary Magdalen and introducing himself in the room in stopping Paul in the carier of his persecution of the Saints and destruction to Exod. ●2 51. Luke 8. 2. himself It was Mercy p●nned the Covenant of Grace sent an onely Son into the world and it is the same mercy which Acts 9. 4 5. Deus non pater judiciorum aut ultionum dicitur sed Pater misericordiarum non ●●dò quia Pater filicrum misere●●● timentium so sed quod miserendi causam et originem sumat ex proprio Bern. scatters Gospel-light for mans direction to eternal life Divine mercies are the brightest rayes to enlighten us the sweetest drops to soften us the surest forts to safe-guard us The Hand of mercy giveth us the bonds of the promises the Ear of mercy gives us an account of our prayers the Tongue of mercy speaks comfortably to us in our distresses the Eye of mercy beholds and pities us in our falls and lapses the Heart of mercy yearns over us in our sins and iniquities A learned man observes God in infinite mercy places our justification upon faith not upon works upon the stretching out of a hand not the exact performance of a work If God should lay the stress upon accurate obedience we should assuredly fall short of a Crown Let us meditate on the glory of his wonders He is a wonder-working God He can fetch water out of the Rock Exod. 17. 6. Gen. 19. 24. send fire out of heaven he can rain down Manna and so Exod. 16. 4. furnish the table with a showre and fetch provisions not 2 Kings 20. 10. from the Kitchin but the Clouds He can make the Sun Dan. 3. 25. run in a retrograde motion and turn a flaming furnace into an arboret a walk of safety and delight He can fright Armies 2 Kings 7. 6. with a noyse they shall be discomfited by the weak 2 Kings 19. 7. sound of a rumour He can raise an host of Caterpillers Joel 2. 25. and Palmer worms and they shall do execution and overthrow his Enemies without Sword or Spear Christ can Mark 6. ●2 John 2 9. prepare bread without going to the meal in the Barrel and provide wine without going to the store in the wine Cellar and his Command shall yield more then the Vine And the wonders of God Sometimes they are destructive They strangled the first-born of Aegypt and washed away the Princeliness and Glory Exod. 12. 29. of the Land of Ham in the Red Sea God miraculously stirred Exod. 14. 28. 2 Chro. 20. 2 3. up the Inhabitants of Seir to help forward the destruction one of another Sometimes Gods wonders are preservative The Mariners see Gods wonders in the deep and the boisterous Psal 104. 24. waves by Gods wonderfull power are their Pillars not their Dan. 6. 22. Perdition they support them not swallow them up Thus Deu● solus est qui ●acit miracula mult● enim sunt stultis miracula quae talia non sunt sapientibus Aug. God wonderfully preserved Daniel in the Lions Den and those beasts of prey served for his Guard and not his execution Gods wonders are sometimes walls of fire to scorch and burn and sometimes walls of brass to secure and defend Sometimes God works wonderfully to shew his love and faithfulness and sometimes to shew his wrath and indignation Gods wonders are sometimes declarative they are the essay of his power before the eyes of the world the Heavens take notice of them Psal 89. 5. The children of men take notice Psal 89. 5. Job 9. 10. Psal 105. 5. Psal 77. 14 15. Nehem. 9. 10 Josh 2 10. Psal 136. 4. of them Job 9. 10. Holy Job was a notary to set them down and the sweet singer of Israel an instrument to set them out Psal 105. 5. And not onely the children of Israel Nehem. 9. 10. But the people of the Nations have taken notice of the wonders of the Lord Josh 2. 10. and resented them with astonishment and admiration CHAP. XVII God is most Adorable in his blessed Attributes LEt us meditate on the Attributes of God The Divine Attributes are those glorious beams which give us the best discovery of the Divine Being His Justice is a scorching beam His Mercy is a warming beam His Faithfulness is a refreshing beam His Truth is an enlightning beam His Infiniteness is a dazling beam His Power is a piercing beam But this prospect is so pleasant we cannot so suddenly take off our eye and therefore we shall glance at the Divine Attributes something more distinctly Let us meditate on the Power of God His Power as his Glory is transcendent He can bow the Heavens he can Psal 144. 5. Judges 5. 20. Job 37. 16. Psal 104. 32. Isa 5. 26. Isa 7. 18. Exod. 14 24 25. marshal the Stars he can ballance the Clouds he can destroy single persons he can subvert whole Cities wash away the World with a Flood he can make the Mountains smoak with a touch he can summon the Nations with a hiss and he can take off Pharaohs Chariot wheels with a look If God frown the Mountains quake the Hills melt the Earth is burnt the World is blasted and the Inhabitants of it tremble Nah. 1. 5. He can scatter Nations hurle Mountanes Lev. 10. 1 2. to and fro as the dust Hab. 3. 6. Such divine discoveries Gen. 19. 24. of Gods infinite power we meet with in sacred writ Gen. 7. 19. He created the World by the Power of his Word and bl●w Ad imperium nutum etinstinctum dei volentis puni●e Judaeos sta●im quasi li●lores accurrunt Egyptii et Assi●ii sibilo tantùm opus est et advolant Alap the Vniverse into a being by the breath of his mouth His Fiat reared the Heavens and the Earth into an existence it fill'd the Sun with light bespangled the Firmament with stars deck't the fields with grass laded the trees with fruit and made the vallies sing with Corn Psal 65. 13. Paradise Mans first and delightfull seat was but the issue of Gods Commanding Power He planted every Flower he sowed every Seed he set up every Tree not with his Hand but his Word And as in Naturals so is Gods Power seen in Spirituals He can subdue the strongest corruptions break the hardest Ezek. 11. 19. Dan. 4. 33. Luke 7. 38. Jer. 5. 22 hearts relieve the most fainting graces he can unhorse the proudest Persecutors and put the greatest Kings to 2 Sam. 17. 23. grass and throw the leudest Curtizans at his fect And as Hest 7. 10. Gods Power is seen in perfective so in destructive actions he
had a being in his love before he had a being in the world The Saint first lay in the womb of the decree of love before he lay in the womb of his natural parent God saw Saul when he was hid among the stuff 1 Sam. 10. 22. and God saw and loved the Saint when he was hid in an eternal purpose of grace Chrysostome observes That this is a discovery of the immensity of Gods love that he loved us before the world was made He had us near his heart before all time and had carefull and solicitous thoughts for us particularly and predestinated us through Christ to eternal salvation In Gods love to man this is stupendious and admirable that he who is cloathed with Majesty and encompassed with infinite happiness Deut. 7. 7. who enjoys all good in himself and is indige●●● nothing complacential should set his heart upon poor dust from all everlasting The love of God is free and drawn out by no incentive Cyril observes There is no utility or profit in man to lay any Deus nos amat sine suâ utilitate et commodo superflua est deo creaturarum productio quantum ad dei perfectionem attinet hoc enim erat deus ante quam nos creati essemus quod nunc etiam est nihil ei attulimus Cyr. engagement upon God The production of the creatures belongs nothing to the perfection of God he was infinitely and absolutely perfect before when we were created we brought nothing to him and if we were annihilated we should detract nothing from him God made us to love us but he loved us before he made us Indeed naturally man hath no beauty no attractive quality to endear or engage the heart of God to him One saith well We are made not born beautiful God plants his grace in us and then loves his grace in us gives us his Christ and then loves us for the sake of his Christ The love of God is infinite and unmeasurable and admits of no comparison The love of Relations the passionate love Isa 49. 15. 2 Sam. 1. 26. of women nay the love of a Jonathan which surpassed the love of women are but painted fire compared to the sweet Amor dei gratuitus est quia nullâ re per●otus suit ad nos amandos Zan. and sacred heats of divine love The love of an indulgent Father of a tender Mother of the dearest Husband of the most affectionate wife are no more to divine affection nay infinitely less then the light of a glow-worm compared to the light of the Sun Read a line or two of Gods love in humane Dilatat amor terminos suos extendit funes expandit sinus disponens omnia suavitur Bern. instances in the meltings of a David over his Son Absolon in the heart-breaking loves of a Mary Magdalen to Jesus Christ Luk. 2. 38. How did the hearts of these Saints faint away in an extasie of unspeakable affection But Christ in a greater and more of unspeakable affection takes our nature 2 Sam. 18. 33. upon him that we might wade to Canaan through the Red Sea of his blood In the mystery of our Redemptiot saith Rom. 5. 10. Bernard Gods love was dilated and passed all bounds out-stretched all cords opens the whole bosome and disposeth all things sweetly for the accomplishment of that great design Gods love is unchangeable and withdrawn by no diversion Whom God loves he loves to the end Joh. 13. 1. There is Joh. 13. 1. no unstayedness in the love of God whom he loves he loves freely fully and finally whom God loves though he do not find them lovely he makes them so and although their beauty doth not allure his love yet his love doth confer their Psal 45. 2. Col. 1. 27. beauty he puts grace into their lips and draws Christ upon their hearts that there may be no cause of change or repenting Further to evidence this truth we must consider there is nothing in the Saints can make a change in the love of Psal 34. 19. God Not their afflictions God pities he doth not throw off his afflicted ones he delivers them but he doth not disown them he lays his rod upon them but he sets his heart upon Isa 43 2. Isa 63. 9. them he is present with them in all their troubles Isa 43. 2. He sympathizeth with them in all their troubles Isa 63. Isa 48. 10. 9. Nay oftentimes he takes the opportunity to shew greater favour to them in their troubles Isa 48. 10. Then he selects them for himself The afflictions of the Saint they draw out but they do not draw off the heart of God Not their temptations How many promises hath God made to his tempted Saints 1 Cor. 10. 13. He will sweeten 1 Cor. 10. 13. and proportionate their temptations 1 Cor. 10. 13. He will deliver them out of temptations 2 Pet. 2. 9. he would not 2 Pet. 2. 9. have them grieved for but rejoyce in temptations Jam. 1. 2. Jam. 1. 2. He will bring Satan under their feet Rom. 16. 20. He will Rom. 16. 20. tread the Tempter under them All these expressions evidence the care of God over his tempted ones The temptations of the Saint may discover Gods watchfulness but no way divert his loving kindness Not their Transgressions If any thing would spunge our names out of the Book and heart of God it is sin for sin Eph. 4. 30. 1 Joh. 3 4. Deut. 9. 8. 2 ●am 24. 15. 2 Sam. 24 25. Psal 89. 32 33. Omnia cooperantur in sanctorum bonum etiam et peccata August grieves the spirit of God breaks the commands of God provokes the displeasure of God yet God can shew his wrath against the sin and his love to the sinner God punished David for his foul sins yet he pitied him after his foul sins Sin grieves not alienates the heart of God from offending Saints But let not this encourage any in sin Davids tears and bitter sufferings are a forcible argument against all such presumption though God will not take off his heart yet he will hide his face from offending believers But to close up my discourse on this blessed attribute the love of God participates something of all his attributes It is a wise love He chooseth according to the purposes Eph. 1. 4. Amor dei non est ex ignorantiâ nec ex passione sed omnis dei amor cum summâ aequitate et sapientiâ conjunctus est of his grace and then makes his Elected ones fit for his love then he makes them spiritual believing holy fruitful that he may take delight in them He determines mercy to a poor sinner out of the wisdom of his choice not out of the goodliness of the sinner In infinite wisdom he selects his little flock out of the mass and generations of mankind It is a powerful love The softness of Gods bowels can
break the hardness of mans heart the love of God can heal Rom. 12. 2. Formam vitae spiritualis induantus Forma enim constantior est et interior et ad substantiam pertine● Chrysost natures kill lusts plant graces change hearts convert stubborn sinners and accomplish whatsoever is strange and glorious If God love thee he will conform thee to his will and carry thee through all the hazzards and difficulties of this life and never leave thee till he hath lodged thee in his own bosome It is an omniscient love God sees from eternity the waywardness and obstinacy of those whom he chooseth to salvation Eph. 1. 4. and yet the force of his love is not overcome by that foreseen petulancy but he in time removes it and mans unworthiness puts grace upon a greater attempt but no way Dilexit deu● quos praescivit fore ingratos immo hostos suos drives God to a sentence of neglect or rejection Indeed here is the wonder of Gods love he from eternity sees us a mass of corruption and sin and yet no discouragement withstands or weakens his love but in due time he beautifies his chosen ones and loves them everlastingly for their comliness and beauty he foresees all disengagements but decrees to remove them It is a just love God loves not but where he sees something lovely Indeed the duties of sinners are distastfull to Isa 1. 13. Prov. 28. 9. Job 1. 1. Psal 7. 10. Psal 112. 2. Prov. 15. 8. God But God loves the Saints because of their uprightness The wise man saith The upright in their way are the delight of the Lord Prov. 11. 20. The curious work of grace in the heart of a Saint pourtrayed with so much wonder and drawn with so much exactness by the pencil of the divine spirit is a beauty God is pleased with and fixeth his love upon and doth evidentially declare that though he is free yet he is most just in his favour and affection CHAP. XVIII God is much to be admired in his Works of Creation LEt us meditate in the morning of the Lords day on the works of the Lord. David was much busied in this contemplation Psal 77. 12. He usually took his views and Psal 77. 12. Psal 143. 9. prospects of the beautifull issues of creating power which are the evidences of the wisdom goodness and almightiness of the Great Creatour How doth the Psalmist in the beginning of the nineteenth Psalm fall into the admiration Psal 19. 1 2 3 4 5. of the heavens that bespangled Court where God took up his eternal abode and residence How is Davids prospect checkerd and delighted with beholding the firmament which is embroydered with stars that large branch which holds those twinkling tapers which enlighten the world in the Psal 8. 4. Est autem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ob ornatu appellatus tota haec pulchra machina quod eâ nihil sit Ornatius et pulchrius non tam propter pulchras rerum formas formosamque coeli faciem et splendidissimam lucem quam etiam propter pulcherrimam totius mundi rerumque omnium inter se 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quatenus à deo creantur et reguntur Zanch. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plato Job 28. 4 5 6. Si quis varia motuum genera circularem rectum obliquum et alias temporum vicissitudines et distinctiones in momenta horas menses annos si quis attento animo omnia haec contemplatur et perpendet poterit faciliùs sentire nihil h●c mundi machinâ pulchrius night-season And in the eighth Psalm especially in the fourth verse David goes down stairs into the lower room of the Earth and there he contemplates on man that Microcosme the world bound up in a lesser volumn and how doth he enlarge his wondring thoughts on this Vice-Roy of God Man who is the Vniverse contracted And in these meditations let the Psalmist be our pattern for meditation on Gods works becomes the blessed Sabbath In that Psalm whose title is a Psalm for the Sabbath viz. the ninety second David begins it with holy admiration of Gods works in the world Psal 92. 5. And truly it is a dishonour to a workman to manifest abundance of skill and ingenuity and none to take notice of his workmanship for a Limner to draw a rare piece and no eye to admire his Artifice to draw the curtain from before the Picture and to observe its Curiosities God hath his mighty works to be remembred and wondered at It is said of Pythagoras that he lived sequestred from men in a Cave for a whole Year together that he might meditate on the abstruse points of Phylosophy On the Lords day let us take some time to ponder the infinite perfections which appear in the operations of Gods hand Alas the choicest works of man compared to the smallest works of God are but as the childrens houses of cards or dirt compared to the loftiest Courts or the stateliest Palaces of the world The Lilly hath more magnificence and beauty in it then Solomon in all his glory Mat. 6. 29. Solomon was not so gorgeous in his richest Attire as the Lilly in its beautifull colour and blush The meanest of Gods works hath more rarity and wonder in it then Archites his wooden Dove which was soequally poysed with its own weight that it hung firm in the Air without falling or Archimedes his Horology wherein the motions of the Sun Moon and Stars were so lively depainted There is so much of God appearing in the Heavens that many have taken them for a God and gave them divine worship The Persians adore the rising Sun and admire the daily visit of that glorious body which they think little less then a Deity When we meditate on the works of God we have a large field here our souls may wander from Sea to Land from Earth to Heaven from Time to Eternity yea we may walk upon the Sun Moon and Stars and enter into Heaven it self the Paradise of God Every Creature we cast our eye upon on the blessed Sabbath should be a flower to refresh our Meditations we should now feed our Graces by our Senses and the meditation on created beings should conduct us to Christ When we look upon the Sun we should look up to Christ the Sun Mal. 4. 2. Numb 24. 17. 2 Pet. 1. 19. Joh. 10. 7. Eph. 1. 22. Isa 61. 10. Rev. 15. 3. Joh. 14. 6. Joh. 1. 1. Joh. 6. 51. Gal. 2. 20. of Righteousness every star may mind us of the star of Jacob that bright morning star when we look on our houses Christ is the door when we look on our bodies Christ is our head when we look upon our cloaths Christ is the garment of Salvation when we look upon our friends and relations Jesus Christ is our husband Cant. 2. 16. our Friend Joh. 15. 10. our Beloved Cant. 4. 16. our King Rev. 15. 3. If we walk he
glory be in its full brightness and perfection But as our Sabbath below doth something resemble so it doth infinitely fall short of our Sabbath above The two Sabbaths differ in their duration Our Christian Sabbath is a golden but a little spot of time like a draught of rich wine it is lushious but it is quickly drank off Our sweetest Sabbath here is but the passage of a day it endures no longer then the Sun can make its flight for a few Psal 39. 5. hours Our life is but a span our Sabbath how little a Nemo tam Divos habuit faventes Crastinum ut possit sibi polliceri Sen. part of this span It is the Lords day but yet a day of bright gleam the souls market which is presently over like a great Feast wherein we have fed plentifully but the next day the meal must be renewed or the body faints and languisheth Nay our Sabbath is only the seventh part of the week and all our Sabbaths are but the seventh part of our Vita nostra tam brevis est ut nescio an dicenda sit vita mortalis aut vitalis mors August life which the Apostle calls a vapour Jam. 4. 14. both for its contemptibleness and speedy disappearing Gods blessed day here is sweet but short it is a banquet indeed but the cloth is soon taken away it is like the star in Bethlehem which was useful to bring to Christ but it soon disappeares Mat. 2. 10. But our Sabbath above shall be stretched out to all eternity Vbi appropinquassent magi● Hierosolymae disappar●it stella Hoc Sabbatum est sempiternum neque alio quodam Sabbato terminabitur excipietur aut perficietur Musc it will be always spending but never wasting no week day shall follow it no night shall close it no death shall bury it The Jewish Sabbath was entombed in Christs grave the Christian Sabbath shall end with the world The beautiful fabrick of the world shall be taken down and the Sabbath of Christians shall be rolled up together but our Sabbath above shall never be shut in with any period or termination This blessed Sabbath in glory is spotless and why should it die if it have not offended It is perfect and perfection admits of no end or conclusion whatsoever is undefiled is eternall so God is everlasting the good Angels John 3. 16. 2 Cor. 5. 1. Heb. 13. 14. Luke 16. 9. 2 Pet. 1. 11. Heb. 9. 15. Heb. 4. 9. and glorified Saints The Sabbath above is a full rest and it could not be perfect ease if it met with a certain end a conclusion must needs be a disturbance and that rest must needs be imperfect which is interrupted The Saints would not pray so ardently for this rest Psal 55. 6. if they were to Heb. 4. 9. 1 Pet. 5. 10 2 Cor. 4. 17. Spirituale Sabbatum licet N. T. sit tamen ipsum est imperfectum tum demum perficietur quando veniet quod perfectum est suffer another remove and still be liable to change and mutation The Jews rest in Canaan which was sweetned with the over-flowing of milk and honey did only prefigure this Eternal rest as the shadows in the time of the Law did typifie Christ But the rest of Canaan is at an end and all the legal shadows are passed away but Christ and our Sabbath above shall remain for ever In this then our Sabbath to come surpasses the present viz. in continuance and duration The two Sabbaths differ in their purity Our Sabbath here may be and is spotted it is black as well as comely fair indeed but yet not without its wrinkles the emblems of Cant. 1. 5. frailty and imperfection This holy One will see corruption The most acurate Saint defiles his best Sabbath and when Psal 16. 10. he is most circumspect he is offensive he either pollutes it with the lesser stain of vain and frivolous thoughts or with the larger stain of unsuitable and impertinent language or with the blacker stain of unjustifiable and sinful practice or with the deeper stain of deadness and unbecomingness in holy duties or with the more usual stain of mispending time letting that golden oil run in wast The Saints themselves fall seven times on this day as well as others The Prov. 24. 16. way is so narrow on a Sabbath that we easily miss it either we are not prepared for the duties of a Sabbath or we are defective in those duties or we are weary of those blessed Peccatum ita omnes homines invaserit ut nemo in hac vitâ quamvis vir sanctus sine peccato esse queat et peccata sanctorum sunt lapsus qui eis inter ambulandum in luce contrà animi sententiam contingunt Zanch. Joh. 1. 1 8. 10. services There will be still something amiss either our tongues slip or our hearts wander Isa 29. 13. Our feet slide or our graces flag either we neglect holy Ordinances that day or we are careless in Ordinances or we are incautelous after Ordinances we have not been so vigorous in closet duties or not so savory in family services or we have not behaved our selves so composedly in the publick Assemblies as did become the purity of a Sabbath The Sabbath here may complain that it sojourns in Mesech and dwells in the tents of Kedar Psal 120. 5. It is like the Ark among the Philistims 1 Sam. 5. 1. It is unattainable by the Saints of the highest form to keep a Sabbath upon earth without blot or blemish Here the learest sky hath a cloud But now our Sabbath above shall not be defiled or freckled with the least defect or imperfection We are perfect in our eternal Sabbath and therefore we can breath no damp upon it The Apostle avers there we shall be like Christ 1 John 3. 2. which is security enough against all fear of 1 John 3. 2. Quemadmodum pu●itas mundities speculi requiritur ut imago in eo conspiciatur sic animae corporis perfecta mundities in beatis erit ut Deum videro ejus demque imaginem in semet ipsis perfectè exprimere possint Ger. taint or pollution Hereafter we shall fully recover the image of Christ our souls and bodies shall be perfectly pure And indeed that glass had need be clean in which God must see his image and representation the least speck or tincture of imperfection would wholly spoil the resemblance The Psalmist by an eye of faith seeth the day of Resurrection and rejoyces in this he shall fully recover the image of Christ Psal 17. 15. Both the Prophet and Apostle agree in this triumphall truth we shall be fully restored to Gods image in glory And if we are perfect from whence should our Eternal Sabbath receive a stain From the Author of it He is a holy God from the nature of it It is a perfect rest from the possessors of it They are unspotted Saints
and therefore it must remain in eternal purity The two Sabbaths differ in the fulness of their enjoyments Mat. 5. 8. 2 Pet 3. 13. Our Sabbath here is only the tuning of our Musick we shall enjoy in the Bride-chamber and in the tuning of the rarest instrument there will be some jarring some harshness Our present Sabbath is a pleasing twilight in it we tast how good and gracious God is we see through a glass darkly we Psal 34. 8. drink drops of divine delight we have refreshing gleams sweet visits of Christs presence but we know visits are soon 1 Cor. 13. 12. over There is a threefold imperfection which clouds the enjoyments of the present Sabbath We enjoy but little of God we onely see him through a cranny or a lattice on our Sabbath here It may be one truth in a Sermon may warm the heart and many savory Cant. 2. 9. Nonne fidelis anima Deum talem experitur quando celeri omnium commutatione in spiritualibus exercitiis illum modò presentem devotionis fervore modò ut absentem ariditate quidem sentit modò suprae coelos contemplatione elevatur modò transilit humilium cogitationum colles Del. Rio. truths pass by and make no impression we are sometimes affected in a prayer other times the heart is dead and flat and the chariot wheels are taken off and we drive heavily we rise with grief and guilt from our knees Sometimes at a Sacrament we make a good meal but at another season we are little better than spectators at that heavenly banquet Nay the very efficacy of Ordinances is sharp and painful when the word doth work it breaks hearts it slaughters lusts it meets with the torrent of corruptions it is the corrosive which eats out dead flesh and all those things are unknown in our better Sabbath And how many Ordinances do we enjoy and how few do we profit by Sermons oftentimes are more our musick then our medicine they court more then they cure we seldom meet with the blessed appearances of God Our spiritual benefit by Gospel-dispensations is like the grapes after the Vintage In our Sabbath here we see God more remotely at such an infinite distance we can scarce discern him as we look upon stars as so many twinkling tapers they are at such a distance we see little or Ezek. 33. 32. Mic. 7. 1. Psal 63. 2. nothing of their vast magnitude Our little enjoyment of God on our Sabbath here meets with great interruptions it is like a shallow stream which runs a little way and then is dryed up we happily meet with Christ on a Sabbath and many Sabbaths pass over before we meet again with our beloved there are many pauses and chasms in our sensible communion with God The visits of Christ are sweet but they are not constant we often come to the assemblies of the Saints but we do not meet with our beloved Showers of divine mercy they are refreshing but they are rare the Spouse cannot find Christ Cant. 3 1. no not on his own day how often doth the Saint say even Cant. 5. 1. concerning the Sabbath as once Titus did They have lost a day as some flowers sometimes they lift up the head and open but of a sudden they hang the head and fade away so the poor soul it sometimes cries out in an Ordinance He is Cant. 3. 4. come he is come he hath given me the kisses of his lips but presently all is dark again and the distressed Saint is ready Cant. 3. 3. to enquire did you see my beloved did ye meet with him whom my soul loveth Our little enjoyment of God upon our present Sabbath is much darkned by our own neglects On Gods holy day we do not prepare to meet with God and so we miss of that little of his presence we might enjoy Our own follies draw the curtain raise the cloud set up the screen which hinder Isa 59 2. Sicut firmamentum est interstitium dividens aquas supera● ab inferis ita peccata nostra sunt interstitium firmiter dividens et separans nos à deo abscondunt ejus faciam oculos ejus benevolos ne nos benigne et gratiosè respiciat Alap our pleasing views we might have of God We sometimes come to hear from God and we will not take pains with our hearts and then though we hear the word of God we miss of the God of the word And so in Prayer we do not pullice up our hearts exert our graces and stir up our strength to lay hold on God and so we loose the sweet appearances we might otherwise be ravished with we loose the lifting up of Gods countenance Psal 4. 7. the sweet smiles of Gods face the powerful workings of his Spirit and the practical visits of his grace that power and glory which God shews in his sanctuary revives his p●ople with on his own day So that many imperfections beset our present Sabbath But our enjoyments in our Sabbath above are superlative and glorious we shall have a three fold vision to delight us First A corporal vision by which we shall see the humane nature of Christ which will be most transcendent his incarnation Robes being embroydered with all variety of perfections Mans nature was crowned with all glory in Christs assumption of it Secondly A spiritual vision By which we shall see the Psal 103. 20. Psal 148. 20. In vitâ aeternâ primò penitus remoto velo ignorantiae et densissimarum tenebrarum quibus in hac vitâ circum septi sumus gloriosissimam faciem Domini dei Zebaoth Patris F●ii et Spiritus sancti lucem essent●am bonitatem sapientiam c. Chytr Lib. de vit Mort. blessed Angels those beauteous spirits the illustrious master-piece of the whole Creation and this view will be most complacential the Angels beauty being never stained their strength never impaired their wisdom never foyled their musick never jarred but these morning stars sing together Job 38. 7. and it shall be ever morning with them and their Hosts were never discomfited Thirdly An intellectual vision by which we shall see the ever blessed Trinity and not as we do here with clouds and shades but clearly and face to face 1 Cor. 13. 12. Job 19. 26. which sight will be the spring of ineffable joyes Chytreus observes In our heavenly Sabbath we shall see God and all masks shall be removed all vails rent we shall be filled with light without all darkness with wisdom without all errour with righteousness without all sin with joy without all grief with life without all decease or death One well observes That our sight of God in glory shall not be like the sight of one man beholding another for from that sight Rev. 20. 14. Ex visione dei ●mnia beotorum bona unicè oriuntur et dependent Ger. there may be some pleasure but nothing of advantage But our sight
of God shall be close and intimate and not onely the conveyance of delight but an affluence of all good things and desireable satisfactions God being the chiefest good our beholding him must needs return to us all unspeakable happiness all joy and sweetness in the highest degree Mat. 18. 10. Our Saviour avers hereafter the Elect shall be like the Angels Mat. 12. 25. Luke 20. 36. And how glorious Dei visio summum erit beatorum praemium Aug. is their sight of God! Those excellent spirits how do they fill their joyes from that ocean of pleasure which flows from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Greg. Nyssen de Virgin the beatifical vision Augustine saith our sight of God is our chief reward in heaven Gregory Nyssen takes notice That so far to be honoured as to see God is the consummation of our hope the full of our desires the top of all unspeakable good things I may add to see God is the issue and stage of our faith the sea of enjoyment into which the River of faith runs and is lost How infinitely greater then will our enjoyments in our Sabbath above be then those we attain to here in our Sabbath below In our Sabbath above there shall be fulness of joy Psal 16. 11. A torrent of pleasures which will be ever running and over-flowing but here our delights Imago dei sita est in hominis mente sive in eo quod homo sit in summo rerum gradu in quo est d●us et Angelus scil quod sit naturae spiritualis secundum animam et naturae intelligentis Alap in the Lord are faint and few like the Sun shining in a showre mixed with successive tears In our Sabbath above we shall be satisfied with the likeness of God Psal 17. 15. But here in our Sabbath below we must bemoan the iniquity of our holy things not onely the iniquity of our slips but of our services there are black spots upon the face of our fairest duties those which look with the most taking countenance our very tears had need of washing our prayers interceding for pardon and our sighs which are the hearts incense had need perfuming and when we are in our best dress we may be censured for uncomliness In our Sabbath above there shall be everlasting triumph and exultation Psal 68. 4. The Saints shall be alwayes glorying upon their beds of spices and on their Mountanes of prey everlasting Cant. 5. 13. joy shall be upon their heads as a triumphall Crown Isa 35 Isa 35. 10. 10. But here in our Sabbath below our rejoycing is soon Isa 61. 3. over-cast either God hides his face in displeasure or we let Isa 65. 14. fall our hands in duty and then our triumph is turned into Mat. 25. 21. trouble and we are ready to say Wo to us that we sojourn in a valley of Baca a wilderness of tears and inconstancy The two Sabbatht differ in their suavity and delight Indeed our Sabbath below is not wholly destitute of its sweets Exod. 16. 14. and consolations dews of delights fall upon it like Manna about the Israelites Camp there is marrow and fatness in the Ordinances of it Psal 63. 5. There are refreshings and The sweetness of holy duties Psal 104. 34. Job 23. 12. Acts 10. 10. Dan. 9. 21. perfumed gusts in holy duties Davids meditations were sweet and lushious Psal 104. 34. Job perfers Gods word above his necessary food Job 23. 12. John was in the spirit on the Lords day Rev. 1. 10. in an excess of joy and in the height of intellectual rapture Peter in his prayers was in a trance Acts 10. 10. he was carried above himself and saw heaven opened to present him with unwonted views Daniel in the midst of his supplications had the prospect and company of an Angel Dan. 9. 21. An inhabitant of glory descends to congratulate and accost him nay oftentimes the word is sweeter then honey to the tast of the hearer Psal 19. 10. And while we attend upon it we feed upon dropping honey-combs Peter preaching to his Auditory there falls a showre of the spirit and heaven came Compositio thymiamitis offerri debuit coram domino Altare enim incens● ob eam causam fuerat constructum Riv. down to visit the Congregation Holy duties how often are they spiced with unspeakable delight and complacency Among the Oblations of the Jews there were perfumes to be offered upon the Altar of Incense Exod. 30. 1 7. And our Gospel Sacrifices are often sweetned with inward joy and consolation If Christ meet us in a duty or an ordinance he drops sweetness from his voyce Cant. 2. 14. sweetness from his lips Cant. 5. 13. sweetness from his fingers Exod. 30 34. Psal 119. 103. Psal 141. 6. Lev. 16. 14. Cant. 5. 5. sweetness from his cheeks Cant. 5. 13. sweetness from his mouth Cant. 5. 16. If we tast any thing of his fruit it is very sweet Cant. 2. 3. when Christ gives a visit he is every way sweet to the soul The Sabbath receives an additional delight from the Fructus Christi● dulcis est accipi potest de praedicatione Evangèlii aut de contemplatione dei aut deconsolatione Sacramenti Del Rio. Communion of Saints we do not only meet with God but with his people on his sacred Sabbath we flock as Doves to the windows and as stars meet in a constellation as morning stars we sing together David remembers with some kind of complacency the joy he had in going to the Sanctuary with the multitude Psal 42. 4. The Primitive Christians prayed and brake bread together Acts 2. 42. Their harmony was their happiness and their society was their satisfaction But yet all these sweets have their allayes their damps and their ecclipses they are as the shining moon behind Isa 60. 8. a cloud they yield onely a duskish light Isa 38. 7. First The sweets of our present Sabbath are onely partial they may delight the soul they do not delight the body a diseased body is not cured at a Sermon a tormented body is not eased at an Ordinance if we read the dim eye is not made more vivacious if we receive the Sacrament the paralitical hand is not made more steddy the hand of faith may be strengthned but not the hand of flesh moreover the Ordinances they may delight the mind with information when they do not affect the heart with gracious impressions Hos 6. 3. they may be our Counsellers when they are not Psal 119. 24. our Comforters they may convey gladness when they do not transmit grace to us Mark 6. 20. Nay they may cherish one grace when they do not recruit another The word Maledicere rebus irrationalibus in se consideratis est otiosum vanum Aquin. may be a pillar to our faith when it is not a prop to our patience as Job he flings in his troubles Job
10. 25. The Prophet calls for full vials to be poured out upon them But prayer never better becomes a family then on the morning of the Lords day Our closet devotions and family prayers common to other Numb 28. 9. days must not be omitted on this blessed day but rathet augmented It is worth our notice that the first service of Exod. 30. 7. the Jews on their Sabbath was burning incense before the Lord Exod. 30. 7. Now family prayer is the burning of incense in our family every branch of the family joyning in prayer doth as it were fill his hand with incense and so offer it up in Christs merit which is the sweetness of our 2 Cor. 1. 3. incense to the father of mercies and how perfumed must Sicut suffitus sursum ascendunt et odorem suavem praebent sic preces sanctorum coelestia petunt et deo gr●●ae sunt that house and family be where so much incense is offered Let our whole family in the morning of the Sabbath cry out seek the Lord O our souls As Mary Magdilen she was early up to seek him whom her soul loved Mat. 20. 1. John 20. 1. Mark 16. 2. She was last at the Cross and first at the Sepulchre And O that our love could keep pace with hers The whole family shall be as morning stars to sing together Job 18. 7. and pour out their souls in the bosom of God this is worship like that of heaven where the multitude the whole host of heaven sing forth the praises Job 38. 7. of God together And in this we follow the clew of Reason First Families have their wants as well as single persons they may want prepared hearts composed spirits exerted graces to meet with God on his holy day that which is the complaint of one may be the moan of the whole family as if some one string in an instrument be struck another string trembles heart may answer heart throughout the whole family Secondly Spiritual grace is as necessary to the whole family as it is to any particular person and so ardent prayer is as indispensible The whole land of Aegypt came to Joseph for Corn because of their want Every foul in the family Gen. 41. 57. had need to beg for the beauties of Christ that he may meet pleasingly with his beloved on his own day Grace is the comeliness of the Servant as well as the Master of the Child as well as of the Parent In the fourth Commandment the injunction is laid upon all within our gates to keep holy the Sabbath Exod 20. 10. Thirdly Moreover the whole family is to attend upon Quamvis nullus advena ad hoc cogebatur ut circumcideretur tamen ad auditum divinae legis adhibebatur et die Sabbati ad sacrum otium constringebatur Muscul publick worship and prayer is both the plow and the harrow to prepare the ground of our hearts to meet with God and to receive the immortal seed which is able to save our souls Jam. 1. 21. Indeed the Apostle adviseth us to pray continually 1 Thes 5. 17. but then more especially when we are going to the publick assembly to prepare us for those solemn Ordinances wherein we joyn issue with the Saints in holy worship and for this God will be intreated Families must not rush upon Ordinances as the Horse into the battel but prayer must prepare the way and so let us feed Ezra 8. 23. upon the Manna of the word and drink of the truths of the Jer. 8. 6. Gospel Fourthly Family prayer makes a musicall harmony Consort Vna communis oratio quam unâ mente et fidem Jesum inculpatâ protulerunt Ignat ad Magn. is the life of melody a heavenly host celebrated Christs Nativity Luke 2. 13. Not a single Seraphim but a quire of Angels In the primitive times there was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 One common consent and harmony of prayers And Clemens Alexandrinus tells us That in the golden dayes of the Church there used to be on the Lords day a pile and heap of suppliants having one voice and one mind in their prayers and addresses to God It was the wish of Athanasius in his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Athanas Apology to the Emperor Constantius That all might lift up the same voice to God without any dissonancy or disorder Vnited prayers are the stronger voice united sighs are the thicker cloud united tears are the fuller stream and so make the deeper impression upon the divine breast The devotions of a family must needs make a greater noise then one single cry to awaken the Lord to give answers of love and grace A single instrument may make musick but no harmony As we must take the opportunities of prayer in the closet and in the family on the morning of a Sabbath so we must look to the qualifications of our prayers Every prayer is not an engine to batter heaven we must so pray that we may obtain we must therefore look to the character as well 1 Cor 9. 24 as to the custom of praying Our prayers both in the closet in the family and likewise in the publick assembly must be fetched from the heart Christiani usi sunt precibus prout illis suggerit Sp. s sine monitore qui de pectore orabant Tertul. not lip labour only then they are lost labour Tertullian tells us The Christians in the primitive times needed not a monitor in their prayers to dictate to them they prayed from their own hearts which suggested to them seasonable and sutable petitions And the Apostle tells us That the effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man avails much Jam. 5. 16. The original word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A working prayer when the heart works in holy affections and yearnings as the Bee in the midst of its wax and honey Success may be much known by the heat and warmth of our spirits Luke 11. 8. We translate the word importunity but it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 impudency In the times of the Law the sweet perfumes in the censers were burnt before they asscended When we go to our closets or our families we must look to our affections in our addresses to God get Cant. 4. 6. them fixed by the Holy Ghost that they flame up towards Vtinam eodem semper ardore orari possim tunc erit responsum fiat ut velis Luth. God in devout and religious ascents There is language in groans a voice there is in weeping Psal 6. 6. Sighs have their speech and are articulate before God Indeed it is no easie thing to work a lazy dead heart to a necessary height of affection the weights always running down-ward but they must be wound up by force as the weight of a clock must be tugged up by the strings And when our affections are pulliced up it is hard to keep them so like Moses his
Exod. 17. 10. hands they are apt to faint and fall down but a continued violence and force must keep our affections in their highest sphere The Bird cannot stay in the Air without continual flight and motion of the wings nor can we persist in affectionate prayer without constant toil with our own hearts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Justin Mart. Apol 2 affections faint and thoughts scatter weariness makes way for wandring so that we must take pains to keep our affections sailing towards heaven we must keep the wind of the spirit and row at the Oar that we be not sinfully becalmed and so miss of the end of our voyage Justin Martyr observes That the prefect of the assembly in his time used to pray with his utmost strength So then our prayers on the morning of the Sabbath must be cordiall and affectionate Our prayers must be cloathed with humility we must pray in a sense of divine purity and of our own unworthiness Luke 18. 23. Not only the bended knee but the submissive Isa 66. 3. spirit becomes prayer Christ himself kneeled down and prayed Luke 22. 41. On the morning of a Sabbath we Quatuor sunt gradus humilitatis Primus est contemptibilem se esse cognoscere Secundu● de hoc dolere Tertius hoc confiteri Quartus Aequo animo ferre se contemptibilitèr tractar● Ansel have great things to beg and we our selves usually give our charity not to the sturdy but to the stooping beggar If we look for blessings from Gods hand it is fit we should lie at Gods feet Christ himself melted Heb. 5. 7. and shall not we stoop and be humble in prayer Hezekiah turned his face to the wall and prayed Isa 38. 2. as being conscious of his own unworthiness covering his face with blushes which the world must not see and so confounded in himself he pours out his soul before God In this holy duty we lie at the allowance of Gods mercy and most rationall it is we should lie at the foot-stool of Gods Throne The Publicans stroke on his breast which was an evidence of his humility and self-abhorrency made his way to that acceptation the Luke 18. 13. proud Pharisee could not attain unto Our closet and family prayers on the morning of the Sabbath must be sharpened and spirited wirh the sense of want and with hungrings and desires after supplies The Mat. 5. 6. Neh. 1. 11. Luke 11. 13. Non frigidè à deo petere debemus beneficia sed affici nos oportet sensu et vehementi desiderio illarum rerum quas à deo petimus Daven beggar cryeth loudest his rags make him roar we are cloyed in our apprehensions and we are cool in our Petitions Necessity inflames importunity Were we but sensible on the morning of a Sabbath to come to our case in hand what need we have of sins pardon of an understanding heart of a hearing ear of a holy and suitable frame of spirit for divine Ordinances and to run profitably through the duties of the whole Sabbath surely our hearts would be like coals of Juniper Psal 120. 4. we should burn with ardency and importunity We pray most fervently when we pray most feelingly want is the bellows of desire Let In petendo panem nostrum quotidiunum egestatem mendicitatem nostram agnoscimus us therefore study a sense of our spiritual wants and that will set the wheel of prayer on going with the greatest speed and eagerness Let these introductory prayers on a Sabbath be animated with faith That grace makes every duty weight and every service without it if it be put into the ballance will be found too light In our prayers we must be perswaded of the Heb. 11. 6. 1 John 5. 14. Psal 10. 17. mercifulness of Gods nature to encline and bow his ear to them of the riches of his promises to encourage them of the infiniteness of his power to fulfill and accomplish them Olea Arbor pinguedine suâ fertur nunquam deficere sed folia sub aquis manere possunt virentia Par. or else all our requests are like the bird with clipt wings they may flutter up and down the ground but they can rise no higher We must believe that God can fill every chink of our desires and that he will send home the Dove with the Olive branch in his mouth These annexed Scriptures will further evince this truth 1 John 5. 14. Mat. 21. 22. Psal 141. 2. Jam. 1. 6. Psal 55. 17. Where David saith He shall hear my voice O rare act of vigorous faith In a word Then Jude v. 20. we pray aright when we pray in the Holy Ghost His concurrence is necessary God will own nothing in prayer but Rom. 8. 26 27 what comes from his spirit any other voice is strange and barbarous to him God delights not in the flaunting of parts and in the unsavory belches of a carnal heart nor in the tunable cadency of words which is only an empty ring in Gods ear But the method of the Lord is to prepare the 1 Kings 18. 38. heart and then to grant the request Psal 10. 17. Our heart is opened first and then God opens his ear Fire from Potentia ad precandum non est ex nobis metipsis sed ex spiritu sancto Psal 147. 9. Vt adjuetis me in Orationibus i. e. ut concertetis in agone mecum grae●è est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 heaven to consume the sacrific was the solemn token of acceptation heretofore 1 Kings 18. 38. Fire from heaven is the token still even an holy ardour wrought in us by the Holy Ghost Indeed prayer is a work too hard for us we can babble of our selves but we cannot pray without the Holy Ghost we can put words into prayer but the spirit must put affections without which prayer is but cold prattle and spiritless talk Our necessities may sharpen but they cannot enliven our prayers The carnal man may cry unto God as young Ravens and as the rude Marriners did in Jonahs ship but now gracious affection is quite another thing There may be cold and raw wishes after grace in an unbeliever but Jonah 1. 6. serious and spiritual desires after the same blessed gift these Hos 12. 4. we must have from the Holy Ghost Quest Did we consider what prayer properly is we should then easily see the necessity of the spirits assistance Prayer is a Qui precatur debet esse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 certans et luctans etiam cum ipso deo Daven work which will cost us travel of heart Acts 1. 14. a working spirit Jam. 5. 16. an earnest striving Rom. 15. 30. and contending with God himself Col. 4. 12. It is very observable that the party Jacob wrestled with Gen. 32. 25. is called a Man an Angel nay he is called God a man for his shape and the form he assumed an Angel to denote the
the Gospel We might likewise fall into the thoughts That there are many opposites to the Gospel as Jannes and Jambres resisted Moses 2 Tim. 3. 8. And thus Stephen in preaching Christ was opposed by the Sanedrim of the Jannes Jambres duo suerunt magi qui Mosi restiterunt cum eo miraculis et portentis edendis concertarunt Jews and truth was buffeted by Cryes Storms and Stoning of the Preacher Acts 7. 57 58. The building up of souls like the building of Jerusalem will meet with Sanballats and Tohias to race the very foundation Neh. 4. 3. Satans instruments will hinder Christs work The worlds persecutions are ready to obstruct the progress of the Gospel Threats and flames like the Angel which stood with a flaming sword Gen. 3. 24. are ready to keep the soul from entring Paradise And when persecution Josh 6. 20. arises for the Gospel sake mens fear often shuts out mens faith and few will close with a persecuted Gospel It may be hinted how the Sun of the Gospel is often clouded with reproaches Paul was called a Babler a setter forth of strange Gods Acts 17. 18. The Gospel is often Acts 17. 18. reviled where it cannot be rooted out and it must wear the habit where it doth not endure the execution of a Malefactor it is often wounded by the sword of the tongue where it escapes the sword of the hand Nay the evil lives of those who preach and profess the Gospel put no small stop to the enlargement and progress of Sicut Foetor apes ita peccatum bona abigit Hier. it and therefore what need of strong and numerous prayers to God That he would give the Gospel a free and uninterrupted passage into the hearts of all that hear it seeing it is encompassed with so many impediments and obstructions We must pray in our closets and in our families on the morning of the Sabbath that the Ordinances of Christ may accomplish their designed events that God would cloath them with his own power and that they may be mighty in operation for the bringing in and building up of many souls Psal 63. 2. and that the Saints may see the power and the glory of God in the Sanctuary There is no greater reproach to a Congregation or a people then barren Ordinances that they Hos 9. 11 14. should be clouds without water and breasts without milk and that God should give them a miscarrying womb pray Durum fuit maximè apud Hebraeos vulvam esse sterilem apud quos simulier esset infaecunda apud omnes infamioe stigmate notabatur Riv. therefore earnestly before thou comest to the publick Assembly that God would take away this reproach Indeed it is a mournful consideration that the blossoms of holy Ordinances which promise hopefully to bring forth fruit should on a sudden be blasted either with divine withdrawings or our own neglect Prayer is necessary for the success of Ordinances as a right wind is for the Ship which sets forth and a fresh wind to fill the sails to carry it to it s desired Port. And we are the more comfortably induced to pray for that Hos 9. 16. which is most consonant and agreeable to the Divine Will Now nothing can be more pleasing to the Lord then that Isa 45. 19. our prayers should not be in vain but return fraught with Mat. 13. 8. success and advantage and that the seed of the Word Luke 22. 19. should fall into good ground and so we should not hear in vain Let us therefore lie at Gods feet for that which is so according to Gods heart But as we must pray for other persons and other things on the morning of a Sabbath so more especially must we pray In 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est metaphara à rebellicâ translata ad cogitationes ordine mi●itari animo digestas instructas Cartw. for our selves The wise man saith Prov. 16. 1. The preparations of the heart of man are from the Lord And he that makes provisions of grace must prepare the heart for grace we must make our approach to the God of Ordinances before we come to the gate of Ordinances he that gives us the priviledge must teach us how to use it Let us then earnestly beg Eph. 6. 17. First That God would enlighten our minds let us begin Quanta fuerit caecitas gentilium in gentilismo etiam quoad illa quae ratio naturalis lex naturae dictat Persae sorores matres filias suas nefandis sibi matrimoniis jungebant Humanis carnibus vescebantur Scythae filios suos immolabant Mossagetae cognatos senes comedebant Hirc●ni senes avibus Caspii canibus devorandos objiciebant Lacedaemones furtum laudabant tanquam rem solertem ingeniosam Alii conjuges suis hospitibus tanquam symbolum hospitii adulterio polluendas concedebant Euseb lib. 6. de prepar Evan. at the head The Apostle saith Eph. 5. 8. That in our selves we are darkness Not dark in the concrete but darkness in the abstract which shews our own incapacity to understand Gospel-mysteries of our selves we are as Paul when he was first unhorsed by Christ Acts 9. 8 9. blind and had need to be led by the hand Nature's eye hath a mist before it and cannot of it self see the glorious things of the Gospel 1 Cor. 2. 14. But it is the blessed spirit must scatter this mist must take away the scales from the eye of our understanding and make way for an apprehension of the glad tidings of Salvation which spirit saith our Saviour is obtained by prayer Luke 11. 13. And if we have any feeling of our own blindness and not as Prisoners in a dungeon laugh at the Sun or if we have any high esteem of the great things of the Law Hos 8. 12. if we see the word with the eye of the Psalmist Psal 19. 7 8 9 10. First To be perfect in its nature Secondly Predominant in its effects converting sinful making wise simple and rejoycing sadned souls Thirdly Various in its operations rellishing the soul rejoycing the heart opening the eyes pleasing the taste enriching the believer all which are attributed to it nay if the word be everlasting in its duration which the Psalmist strongly avers Psal 19. 91. and is likewise attested Rev. 14. 6. we should then be importunate for that directive spirit which can lead us into the right understanding of this most glorious word This manuduction of the spirit was the summe of that precious promise which Christ when about leaving the world made to his drooping Disciples Joh. 16. 13. And how earnestly doth the Psalmist importune this very mercy That God would open his eyes that he might behold wondrous things out of his Law Psal 119. 18. Psal 119. 34. God must give us the prospect of the glories of Divine truth Psal 119. 73. This eye-salve we must beg of the
examine every passenger it will keep out sin and the world which are very unsuitable to the work and worship of the Sabbath It was observed of our Henry the fifth that when he came to the Crown he threw of all his old companions and when God Crowns our pilgrimage with the Psal 94. 12. honour and happiness of a Sabbath we should throw off Psal 139. 23. all our worldly and frothy desires which have been too much our companions in the week past Let us resolve then in the strength of God against these unbecoming workings Psal 45. 13. Aristoteles asserit suo tempore in urbibus creatum fuisse praefectum qui mulieribus intenderet ne vagarentur sed domi se continerent Arist Po●it of our hearts On the Lords day let us be like the Kings Daughter all glorious within Psal 45. 13. Cobwebs are not to be suffered in Pallaces nor vain thoughts in those hearts which are to meet with Jesus Christ Now let us say with David I hate vain thoughts Psal 119. 113. and firmly resolve that on the Sabbath the world and our souls shall be wholly strangers they shall take no acquaintance one with another and this will be a successful method to purge our hearts Resolution if sincere is invincible We must attempt to over-aw our hearts The heart is never more fitted for holy duties then when it is fixed then Psal 57. 7. when a sense of divine presence stayes it from roving and Psal 108. 1. breaking out into paths of sin and vanity Bring thy heart 1 Sam. 1. 28. before God as Hannah did the Child Samuel before the Lord in Shiloh and that will keep the heart serious and demure Dinah gadded when she was out of her Fathers eye Say to thy soul on the morning of a Sabbath Soul there is an infinite Heb. 10. 31. God which is irresistible in power incomprehensible in Heb. 12. 29. majesty tremendous in justice into whose hands it is a fearfull Non solùm apud Judaeos Deus fuit ignis puniens et consumens idololatras aliosque violatores thing to fall Heb. 10. 31. and who is a consuming fire Heb. 12. 29. He will fasten his eye upon thee this holy day He will see every turning and winding of the heart and therefore O my soul close to the work of the day do not scatter from the work in hand least God take thee up as a stray and carry thee to the whipping-post of some judgement and tribulation The Schollar writes his Copy and Deut. 4. 24. doth not glance up and down with his eye when his Master Sed apud nos Christianos Deus paritèr est ignis vindicans et consumens peccatores Alap is over him but the absence of the Master leaves the Schollar to his wanton vagaries That eye is upon us on the Lords day which is ten thousand times brighter then the Sun To stake down thy heart then to things spiritual and divine First Let it know that it is under the piercing eye of God Secondly Make it sensible that heart sins are heavy sins Thirdly That the heart is principal in holy worship and if that be tainted with frivolous and foolish thoughts it sowres all holy services Fourthly Commune with your hearts of loose and carnal thoughts when Christ on the Sabbath is the proper and sweetest Psal 4. 4. object of them And why should he solicite the embraces of a leud Curtizan who himself is indulged with a beautifull wife Let the heart onely be set on him who is altogether lovely Cant. 5. 16. Machiavel saith The great design of Religion is to keep the people in awe Surely it is a Michiavel del princip great piece of Religion to keep the heart in awe especially on the morning of Gods blessed Sabbath Let this be onely annexed that the Fear and Reverence of God are the best means to confine a quick-silvered heart from its sinfull ranges Heb. 12. 28. Mans heart naturally is slippery and we by 2 Sam. 22. 11. our own power can no more confine it then we can clip the wings of the wind or button up the rayes of the Sun We must endeavour to spiritualize our hearts on the morning of the Sabbath and this work will not onely fit the heart for the grace but likewise widen it that it may receive much of the spirit of God Josephs Brethrens Corn was more or less according to the proportion of the Sacks for they were all filled and when we spiritualize our hearts for God Gen. 42. 25. we shall have our money too in the mouth of the Sack we Gen. 44. 1. shall have redundancies of grace and comfort Now to spiritualize our hearts First Let us stir up holy longings after Christ let us blow off the ashes from those sacred fires let our hearts glow in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Appetitio et vehemens desiderium gratiae nobis dabit meliorem et gratiorem bencdictionis proventum Ger. holy ardencies after their beloved The Spouse was sick of love Cant. 2. 5. The real consideration of Christs love and loveliness would bring us into these blessed fits Ordinances will be sweet m●rsells to these hungring affectionate souls Secondly Rally up holy contemptations be thinking what a sun-shiny day the Sabbath is and how well it imitates the rest of eternity contemplate on the riches of Ordinances and what glorious spoyles the prepared soul shall fall upon Josh 7. 21. there more then Achans golden wedge or goodly Babylonish garment Ordinances are the souls golden Chariots which drive towards heaven Thirdly Let us blow up our hearts into great expectations The Sabbath is the souls spiritual harvest the season of unlading Anima gratiâ Christi regenerata et renata immò recreato et nova creatura spiritualis facta novam gratiae vitam sortita deinceps in novitate vitae ambulet Alap Psal 81. 10. spiritual treasure and the prepared Saint comes to carry it away In the Paradise of Ordinances grows the Tree of life For the most part the Sabbath is the souls New-birth day the blessed nativity of the new man It is not Anno Domini but die Dominico not such a year of the Lord but such a Lords day most believers were born to an inheritance with the Saints in light Let us therefore possesse our hearts with high expectations for if we open our mouths God will fill them Indeed much of our work on the Sabbath lies not only in the closet of our houses but in the closet of our hearts We must endeavour to tune our hearts to spiritual joy and delight Joy suites no person so much as the Saint and no day so well as the Sabbath Joy at other times is like the birds chirping in the winter which is pleasing but joy in the Lord upon the Lords day is like their warbling notes and musical noise in the spring when all
Jer. 31. 33. of growth in Promissio facta est Christianis amicitiae dei remissionis peccatorum et regni coelestis grace Hos 14. 5. the gift of a Christ lay under a promise Gen. 3. 15. Luke 1. 71. the gift of the spirit was bound up in a promise Acts 2. 33. Gal. 3. 14. If a new heart be put into our bosomes it is the issue of a promise Ezek. 36. 26. And God in a pursuance of a promise breaths a new spirit Ezek. 36. 26. into our souls Shall we rise higher Thirdly God hath made promises to his people of things eternal Of a future Crown 2 Tim. 4. 8. Of a glorious Kingdom Luke 12. 32. Of a heavenly Throne Rev. 3. 21. Of eternal Inrer pocula Germaniae clamatum est spiritus calriviamus est spiritus melancholicus Sclat Life John 3. 16. Of everlasting Habitations Luke 16. 9. Of everlasting Salvation Heb. 5. 9. And therefore how much are they to be censured who accuse Religion of sadness and sorrow and upon the force of that argument draw back to courses of sin and prophaneness What do they less then blaspheme both the God and the priviledges of the Saints Joy is a constant dish with the people of God but Cujusmodi est gaudium quod est in domino In his quae secundum domini mandatum fiunt gaudere debemus Basil their joy is hidden Manna it lodges in their bosomes not in their looks their musick-room is a little more retired the world doth not hear their melody Look upon the Saints in their lowest condition when grace it self is at an ebb at very low water Yet then First The Lord assures us that little is a pledge of more 2 Cor. 1. 22. And even Secondly That little he will enable to get a final victory Rev. 3. 8 9. And in Rev. 2. 7. the promise is made to him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who is overcoming not to him who hath already overcome And Thirdly That little shall be kept perfect to the day of the Lord Jesus 1 Thes 3. 10. Phil. 1. 6. So many causes of constant joy are there to all Gods Children what roses do they walk upon here even while they are in a valley of tears In their bosomes lies a pardon like Aarons Rod blossoming in the Ark their consciences are serene and calme with holy peace nay they can laugh in a storm they can joy in tribulations Rom. 5. 3. Jam. 1. 2. And they can Gaudium Christiano utile est immò necessarium ut jucunde vivat et alacritèr in virtutibus pergat glory in a ship-wrack they can triumph in death it self 1 Cor. 15. 55. And therefore the Apostle inculcates and reduplicates the command for holy joy Rejoyce in the Lord alwayes again I say rejoyce Phil. 4. 4. But though the joy of the Saints open to the wide Common they can and may rejoyce in all things and in all times yet in the inclosure of Gods blessed Sabbath the freshest and sweetest springs of joy are to be found And thus much for the third duty Jam. 1. 2. to be performed on the morning of a Sabbath before we go to the publick congregation Viz. Labouring with our own hearts The fourth duty to be discharged before the publick on Gods holy day is private reading of the Scriptures What a charge doth God lay upon the Jews to be acquainted with Deut. 11. 18. the Scriptures Deut. 6. 7 8 9. And these words which I command thee this day they shall be in thy heart and thou Verbum dei in nos totos admittamus in mentem in memoriam in affectus in vitam ut nulla sit pars nostri in quâ verbum dei non inhabitet shalt teach them diligently to thy Children and thou shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thy house and when thou walkest in the way when thou liest down and when thou risest up and thou shalt bind them as a sign upon thy hand and they shall be as frontlets between thy eyes and thou shalt write them upon the posts of thy house and on thy gates Let us summe up this charge First Gods word it must possess every part it must be between our eyes for direction it must be a sign on our hands to regulate our works and operations it must be lodged in Evangelica historia debet esse perpetua lectio cujuslibet hominis Christiani Mirandul our hearts to sanctifie and spiritualize our love and affections that the heart may be warm but not feavourish Secondly Gods word must possess every room it must be our discourse in our Parlors where we use to sit it must be our meditation in our chambers where we use to lie and if we take the air abroad this holy word must be our companion this must be testis conversationis the witness of our conversation Thirdly Gods word must possess every season It must go to bed with us to sanctifie the farewell thoughts of the day that we shut up the day and our eyes with God if we rise in the morning it must be our morning star to guide us our morning dew to soften us our morning Sun to warm us Ne patiamini verbum dei esse quasi peregrinum et foris s●are sed intromittatur in domicilium cordis nostri versetur assiduè in animis nostris non secus ac domestici versantur in domo suâ immò sit nobis non minùs no●um ac familiare quàm illi esse solent qui apud nos habitant Daven it must be our first company and our best Breakfast in the morning And Fourthly Gods word must not only possess the inside of the house but the out-side too it must be written on the posts and the gates to shew its own excellency that we must hold it out and own it in the view of all the world This is the summe of the charge and indeed it is not unnecessary if we consider the Scriptures are the guide of our youth 2 Tim. 3. 15. They are the cure of our minds Mat. 22. 29. Ignorance of Gods word breeds errour and spiritual distempers in us They are the comfort of our souls Rom. 15. 4. They are both a Cordial and a Julip to warm us in cold affliction and to cool us in careless prosperity They are the treasure of our hearts Col. 3. 16. He is the potent and mighty man who is an Apollos in the Scriptures Acts 18. 24. Nay they are the breathings of the Holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1. 20. They are not only mens advantage but the divine issue of the third person in the Trinity The result of the whole is this if God lay so much weight on reading of the Scriptures and man receives so much advantage by acquaintance with them no season fitter for this duty then the morning of a Sabbath First The reading of the word prepares for the hearing of it that we
in the soul he will then either suggest unto us vain impertinencies which may be as Sodoms pleasures to Lots wife to cause us to look back or so many golden balls to stop us in our journey towards the Heavenly Canaan or else this evil one will assail to rock us asleep and so sit heavy upon our eye lids he will bring doune and pillow for us to lean upon This is the stratagem of Satan if he cannot steal us from the Word to keep us back from Ordinances he will steal the Word from us to make Ordinances useless and unprofitable Mat. 13. 19. The souls term time is Satans tempting time When we are most busie about our souls he is most active against them he will make any musick to rock us asleep when we are discoursing with Jesus Christ The Syren sings sweetest when we are upon the waters sailing to our Port and Satan never sweetens his temptations more then when we are sailing heaven-wards and therefore when we sleep in Ordinances let us remember the Charmer hath swayed with us more then the Preacher A sleepy eye in holy Ordinances is a sad sign of a sleepy conscience if the eye be drowsie without it is much to be feared the heart is dead within It is very observable A fat Eph. 5. 14. heart a deaf ear and a closed eye are all coupled together Isa 6. 10. Grace is an awakening principle the power of grace will fix the eye in heavenly contemplation will bend the knee in humble supplication will lift up the hand in holy devotion will wind up the tongue in savoury communication Col. 4. 6. and will bow the ear in holy and carefull attention A gracious heart will even Quick-silver the body in Josh 9 21. holy duties and make the flesh serve the spirit and the Didicisse fidelitèr artes emollit mores nec sinit esse feros senses be as Gibeonites to the soul As the Arts soften us to ingenuity and will not suffer us to be brutish so a conscience awakened by a work of grace will keep the eye awake in Ordinances seriously considering 1. That every Ordinance concerns the soul 2. That every Ordinance may be the last 3. That every Ordinance is the purchase of Christ 4. That every Ordinance is a good wind for Heaven In a word The work of grace may very well be suspected where the means of grace are so much slighted as to be passed away in a sleep and a dream Let us consider there will be no sleeping in hell Here we sleep when we might awake there we shall awake when Si magnificum quid vides cogito regnum dei si terribil● cogita gehennam Chryst we cannot sleep we shall take no naps upon our bed of flames Scorching wrath screetching cries gnawing conscience will keep the reprobate waking Here we sleep unseasonably and let us take heed least we awake eternally and carefully beware least for want of watching one hour we lose our rest for ever There is no sleeping in heaven Rev. 4. 8. Now Ordinances they are the glimpses of heaven And it should be our endeavour to serve God here as the Saints and Angels do in glory there is no weariness no drowsiness no deadness there hallelujahs are pleasant and perpetual When we come to the Sanctuary we are about heavenly employment and let us study a heavenly deportment and let us ask our souls the question Would an Angel was he capable of it fall asleep when he converses with God And further to discourage us from the practice of this customary and crimson abomination let us observe a few quickning and awakening prescriptions Let us be instant with God beforehand for a suitable frame of spirit Was the heart tuned by preparatory prayer Preces preparatoriae sunt administratoriae the strings would not so soon crack in sleep and drowsiness a warm heart would cause a wakefull eye Neglect of preparation exposes us to wanton glances wandring thoughts and a sleepy eye in holy administrations Gardens if not digged and dressed bring forth weeds not flowers Let us converse with God in Ordinances as either employed in our Bibles or our Note Books we shall hardly sleep with a Book or a Pen in our hands If our eye was employed in Scripture search it would not suffer the eye lids those curtains to be drawn for sleep and sluggishness But oftentimes the shutting of the Book brings the shutting of the eye and if we stand idle in the market of Ordinances who will Mat. 20. 3. 6. hire us but Satan Let us fix a steady eye of faith upon God and the glorious Angels when we come to Ordinances We will not sleep in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sic exemplaria graeca 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sic Arias Mont. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sic. Vet. Lotin presence-chamber especially if the Prince and Nobles be there The blessed Ordinances are Christs Presence-Chamber his Court his Garden his Banqueting-House and shall we sleep in the presence of the King of Saints Nay the King of Nations as the Prophet calls him Jer. 10. 7. Nay the King of Ages as the vulgar Latine terms him this is not onely incivility but impiety Let us take heed of pampering Nature An over-free use of the Creatures on Gods holy day will lay us open to sinful drowsiness when we make Kitchins of our bellies the smoak will soon fly in our eyes and encline us to wretched and careless sleepiness When Lot was overcharged with Wine he soon sleeps himself into incest and wantonness Gen. 19. 34. Let us come to Ordinances expecting great things from God They are vigilant who are in a waiting posture Beggars Psal 123. 7. are not dormant if they are so in the Barn they are Psal 4. 7. not so at the door Let us come to Ordinances as to a Golden Mine the Miners do not sleep with the iron instruments in their hands Let us approach to the Sanctuary looking for grace loves smiles the kisses of Christs lips the light of Gods countenance and this will keep us wakefull Cold desires and mean expectations make us careless and oscitant in Ordinances We sleep not telling Pearls or picking Diamonds there are better riches to be found in Psal 63. ● Communion with God CHAP. XXIX Other Evils to be avoided in our outward behaviour when we come to the Publick Assembly WE must not rove in Ordinances As the eye must not sleep so it must not wander when the eternal Gospel is preaching or we are pouring out our souls in holy prayer to an infinite God It is recorded of Christs Auditors that they did fasten their eyes upon him Luke 4. 20. Luke 4. 20. We must bring a double eye to every Sermon Triplex est aspectus Christi 1. Vnus corporalis qui sit oculis carnis et hic per se non bea● 2. Spiritualis qui sit oculis fidei
Prophet Jeremy adviseth us Lam. 3. 41. Let us lift up our heart with our hands unto God in the heavens The soul is principally interested in all holy duties First Not only because in all holy services God principally eyes the heart Prov. 23. 26. Or Secondly Because Gospel Ordinances chiefly influence and aim at the heart But Thirdly Likewise because the welfare of the soul is the only Port we sail to in all our attendance upon Gospel opportunities It is the souls conviction the souls conversion the souls edification and building up in its most holy faith which is the grand design in every Evangelical administration Now for the composure of our inward man in Eph. 3. 16. holy Ordinances Let us apply our understandings to the word and the work we are about The wise man saith Prov. 20. 27. The spirit of a man is the candle of the Lord and when we Haec lux in intellectu in tenebris micans sovenda est studio et diligenti operum dei commentatione et experimentis et otio veluti rubigine corrumpitur Cartw. come to holy Ordinances it is both our duty and our wisdom to snuff this candle that it may burn the brighter to see the mysteries of the Gospel and this is suitable to the Apostolical Counsel 1 Pet. 1. 13. Gird up the lo●ns of your mind A metaphor taken from travellers who gird their garments close that they may not be impeded and hindred in their journey When we draw nigh to God in Ordinances we must bend our minds and be intent on the word and drink in truth as the parched ground doth the rain we must screw up our minds to an acurate observation of what ever is revealed unto us from divine Writ If the Gospel John 3 19. be light it is the eye of the understanding must behold this light If the Gospel be a day it is the eye of the mind must Rom. 13. 12. discern this day Some hear the word and understand it Isa 6. 10. not and this is Gods judgment But some hear the precious truths of God and entertain them not and this is mans sin Men shut the eye of their understanding by carelesness and neglect We should hear the word as condemned men their pardons as Legatees the Wills wherein their Legacies are set down with that intenseness of minde Preaching if we spur not up the minde to pursue it is a noise Pater nobis de● illuminatos oculos cordis nostr● ut ejus lumine illust●ati Christum plenè agnoscamus Ambr. not the word an inarticulate sound not soul-saving Doctrine And that our understanding may discharge its office prayer must precede That God would open the eyes of our minde that we may see the wonderfull things of the Law Psal 119. 34. and we must beg eye-salve Rev. 3. 18. and that God would give us the spirit of Revelation Eph. 1. 18. to shed a light upon our understandings Luke 24. 45. that we may dive deep into the profound Mysteries of the Gospel We know not what ardent prayer and a diligent minde may Christus solus operit intelle●tum Scripturarum Chemn● Mel in Ore melos in Aure. Bern. accomplish towards Scripture knowledge Indeed the Gospel is proportionate to every thing in man it is honey to the taste and Gold to the interest of man Psal 19. 10. It is musick to his ear Ezek. 33. 32. light to his eye John 19. and comfort to his heart Rom. 15. 3. And pity it is the shutting of an eye a little rareless remisness and not bending the minde should rob the soul of such unsearchable treasure We must deal with our hearts to embrace the word in the dispensations of it The Gospel is not only to be let in by Prov. 23. 23. Verbem dei s●t domesticus non peregrinus non for● stare sed in domo cordis continuò versari Daven our apprehensions but to be lockt in by our affections and we are to entertain it not only in the light of it but in the love of it The Apostle complains 2. Thes 2. 10. That many did not entertain the truth in the love thereof that they might be saved The truths of God must have the heart and we buy them not by our audience but our espousals The word must dwell in us Col. 3. 16. and not as a transient guest but as an inmate Scholars may understand the word but Christians embrace it It is a rare speech of the holy Psalmist Psal 119. 20. My soul breaketh for the longing it hath to thy judgments at all times The word is the Mat. 13. 23. seed the heart the ground where this seed must be thrown John 5. 40. David calls the Law not his light but his love Psal 119. 97. and his delight Psal 119. 35. When we come to Ordinances we must resolve to treasure up truth and entertain it as Lot the Angels Gen. 19. 3. Or the Virgin Mary the wonders of her time Luke 2. 19. A refractory will renders all opportunities of grace abortive The two Disciples Luke 24. 32. which came from Emmaus question one with another Whether their hearts did not burn within them when Christ had opened the Scriptures to them intimating to us that the heart is properly the Altar upon which the fire of the word is to be laid to the sacrificing of our lusts and the inflaming of our graces And it is the glorious promise of God to write his Law upon our hearts Jer. 31. 33. Let us meet this blessed promise in bringing our hearts to every Gospel dispensation We must put our memories upon employment when we come to holy Ordinances The memory it is the Secretary of the soul and as at Council boards the Secretary cannot be absent so at Ordinances which are the Council table Acts 20. 27. where soul-concernments are agitated and transacted the memory must not be absent We must not write the word when preached to us in dust but in marble not in a heedless neglect but in a faithfull remembrance We do not throw Pearls into sieves to drop out The paradox is greater Memo●ia ignis gehennae est ●emedium ap●rimè utile contrà omnes tentationes Chrysost Rev. 14. 6. when we put the eternal Gospel into a treacherous and faithless memory Surely we shall never practice that truth we cannot remember if we do not mind the word we shall never live it We cannot read blotted lines or understand torn papers and if the word lie onely upon the surface of the memory it will never get within the bark of the life That Sun-dyall will never give us the time of the day which wants the gnomon to cast the shadow charge thy memory to retain every truth thou hearest Let it pick up the filings John 6. 12. of divine Truth that nothing may be lost The richest Fringes are so many several threads wrought together We do not Agnoscamus
in ordinances for what will it profit thee to gain a whole world of Gospel opportunities and at last to lose thy own soul Let us study a broken frame of spirit in Ordinances A eleven foot is a sign of Satans appearance A cloven tongue was a sign of the spirits appearance but a cloven broken Psal 51. 17. heart is the sign of a Saints appearance Our best composed Acts 2. 3. services flow from a broken heart Hezekiahs chattering 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plural numeri denetare amplitudinem magnitudinem sacrificii cordis contriti like a Crane Isa 38. 14. And Davids weeping oratory were forcible engines to batter heaven Our hearts like clouds they are best when melted It is well when our services like Pauls companions come to the shore upon broken planks A melting spirit will melt God into compassion Moaning Ephraim is a pleasant Child Jer. 31. 20. The softer the Luke 4. 18. heart is the sweeter is the duty Squeezed Grapes onely Psal 34. 18. yield the Wine The Psalmist avers That the Lord is nigh to them who are of a broken heart he loves to dwell near Isa 57. 15. them nay the Prophet saith he loves to dwell with them Unquestionably God is never more seen in the Sanctuary Psal 63. 1 2. then when it is a Bochim a place of tears and spiritual dissolvedness Foramina Petrae sunt vulnera sanciantia Alap Broken clouds forerun a fair day broken hearts foretell a fair acceptation Thus Christ comes in at the clefts of the Rock Cant. 2. 14. And when we faint most we sink least When the Spouse is sick of love Cant. 5. 8. then is Cant. 2. 5. her beloved well pleased When we are most spirituall in ordinances let us h●ve ardent desires to be better in those sacred administrations The gracious soul is good at desires he would offer better if there was better in the flock his love shall piece up what is wanting in his duty though he cannot be excellent yet he Duplicem Cain culpam impingit unam quòd post multos dies obtulit serò obtulit cúm celeritate sacrificium commendatur alteram quōd ex fructibu● non ex primis fructibus obtulit Phil. Jud. would be obedient if he cannot offer an entire service yet he would sacrifice a broken heart to God and though his services are wanting in weight yet they are not deficient in wish his desires are plumed though his performances flag and hang the wing Abel will give the best though he hath no better and though the Saint can only offer a little Goats hair or a pair of turtle Doves yet he would offer a young Bullock or the fat of Rams he could wish his tongue was more fluent in prayer his ear more attentive in hearing his spirit more melting in service his heart more open in ordinances his desires are fledged though often his duties are in the shell And this would become us in holy ordinances when we are best to think we are short and when we fly fastest to complain of our clipt wing and Psal 63. 8. when we follow hardest after God to suppose we might mend our pace And surely holy desires after better things are most pleasing to God The Child who offers to serve his Father is very acceptable though his desire be more then Phil. 3. 14. the Act. Paul pressed forward towards the Mark in this our exsample We are most acceptable and more truly spiritual in Ordinances when we bring the whole man to them when the knee doth bend and the eye doth weep and the heart doth yield and the soul doth stoop and the ear incline in holy duties Gods great work was to make the whole world for man and mans good work in spiritual approaches is to give the whole man to God We must come to Ordinances as the Israelites went out of Aegypt with their whole train we must come with all the faculties of our souls and all the Psal 103. 1. parts of our bodies If there be one wheel missing in a In divinis officiis non tantùm sit totus homo sed totum homini● watch it cannot go at all to be an Index of time And so in holy duties if the ear be missing or the memory wanting or the heart lacking all our design falls to the ground Those who will serve God in ordinances must give him their hottest love their highest joy their strongest faith their greatest fear they must act every grace extend every faculty improve Psal 9. 1. every part all the worshipper must be employed in that sacred work The Ship which sails well must have all Psal 119. 34. its tackle the Mast must be up the sails must be spread it must have both its pump and its lanthorn the want of any furniture may endanger the whole There must be head Jer. 3. 10. work and hand work and heart work in ordinances It was the resolution of the Psalmist to keep the Commandments Jer. 24. 7. with his whole heart Psal 119. 69. It is the whole man which is gratefull to God in holy duties we must as the poor widow give all we have cast in all our capacities into the treasury of holy worship Mark 12. 44. CHAP. XXXII Active graces do well become Holy Ordinances AND we must not only be strict in our behaviours and spiritual in our duties in the time of publick Ordinances but we must likewise be very active in our graces in those sacred solemnities There are three seasons when our graces must be active and vigorous Eph. 6. 13 16. 1. In a time of temptation Then faith is a shield as the Apostle speaketh Eph. 6. 13 16. Taking the whole armour of God we shall be able ●o withstand in that evill day Luke 21. 19. 2. In the day of affliction Then patience keeps possession and self-denyal breaks the stroke Wind up the watch and it goes as stedily in the night as in the day 3. In Gospel opportunities The breast is full of Isa 12. 3. milk but the Child must draw and strive to get it out A quae salutis sunt sacrae scripturae doctrina Evangelica quam h●●●imus á Christo Hier. Orig. There is a life and sweetness in Ordinances but grace and desire must draw it out there must be a hand of faith to let down the bucket to bring up the water from the wells of Salvation If any ask what spices must flow out what graces must be acted in holy ordinances it is answered We must act our knowledge in holy duties We must know it is God the infinite Jehovah with whom we have to do All worship without the knowledge of the true God is a notion and empty speculation God alone is the object of a godly mans worship Exod. 20. 2. His hope is in God Psal 39. 7. His dependance is on God Psal 62. 8.
Psal 103. 4. We are then stirred up to sing forth the praises of God and every part of man makes up the Consort the eye looks up with joy the tongue sets the tune the hand claps with triumph Psal 47. 1. The heart is the Organist which sets all the rest on going that bosom instrument begins the songs of praise Secondly Bishop Davenant expounds with grace viz. with gracefulness with a gracefull dexterity which brings Et prodesse volunt delectare both profit and pleasure to the hearers When we sing Psalms we must sing seriously and solemnly not lightly or sensually to gratifie a curious ear or a wanton spirit Psalms they are not the Comedies of Venus or the jocular celebrations of a wanton Adonis but they are the spirituall ebullitions and breakings forth of a composed soul to the holy and incomprehensible Jehovah Therefore David Psal 96. 1. will sing a new song to the Lord Psal 96. 1. i. e. in the Hebrew dialect a most excellent song a song tuned with suavity composed with piety and warbled forth Psal 137. 4. with real sincerity Thirdly This phrase with grace may most properly signifie the acting of grace in that heavenly duty Not only our heart but Gods spirit must breath in this service in it we Cum in conspectu dei Cantus sit hoc considera in mente Bern. must act our joy our confidence our delight in the Lord. Singing is the triumph of a gracious soul his unconstrained exultation which is not penned up in the mind by meditation nor confined to the ear in attention nor yet chained to the tongue in prayer and supplication but flyes abroad in a more solemn Ovation praising him who causeth him to triumph in Christ as the Apostle speaks 2 Cor. 2. 14. In singing 2 Cor. 2. 14. of Psalms the gracious heart takes wing and mounts up to God to joyn with the celestial Quire We must sing with understanding We must not be guided by the tune but the words of the Psalm and must not so much mind the melody as the matter we must consider what we sing as well as how we sing The tune may affect Psal 47. 7. the fancy but it is the matter affects the heart David in 1 Cor. 14. 15. the Old Testament Psal 47. 7. And the Apostle in the Spiritum intelligentiam opponit Apostolus ut causam effectum docens psallendum esse spiritu ut non modò à psallentibus sed ab audientibus intelligatur Quia secus fructu illud totum carebit Par. in Cor. New 1 Cor. 14. 15. call for understanding in singing otherwise we make a noise but we do not sing a spirituall song and so this duty would be more the work of the Chorister then the Christian and we should be more delighted with an Anthem of the Musicians making then with a Psalm of the spirits enditing We must therefore sing wisely that not only our own hearts may be affected but those who hear us Alapide observes that the word understanding mentioned by the Apostle 1 Cor. 14. 15. it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Hebrew which signifies profound judgment and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Septuagint which signifies the acuteness of understanding the sharpness of it the mind of the understanding if there be any more spiritual and freed from the body And thus we must sing our Psalms and spiritual Psallite diligentèr ut nimirum vos intelligatis sapiatis ea quae ps●llitis et alii qui vos audiunt ea quae vos psallitis intelligant Alap Pr●ces Pontificiorum linguâ ignotâ non tam Oratio sunt quàm murmur songs A learned man observes We must rellish what we sing Now the understanding must lead the way to the taste and the gust Let me superadde one thing more The Apostle in the forementioned place 1 Cor. 14. 15. saith He will pray with the spirit and with understanding he will sing with the spirit and with understanding So then we must sing as we must pray Now the most rude and ignorant Petitioners will understand what they pray rather then they will Petition in the dark they will confine themselves to a form or to the Lords prayer None so ignorant as not to understand what they ask Unknown prayers are the soloecism of Religion they are only a vain muttering a troublesome noise Children know what to ask of their Parents and their minority doth not speak so Luke 18. 13. much ignorance as to wrap up their requests in a cloud Luke 11. 13. that they cannot understand their meaning It is well observed by a learned man That the prayers of the Papists in an unknown tongue are not so much a supplication as a murmur Now ignorance in singing falls under the same condemnation with ignorance in praying and is as great a soloecism when we understand not what we sing it speaks the harshness of the voice the hardness of the heart and the impertinency of the service We must sing to the Lord In singing of Psalms the direct intention of our minds must be to God And we must be Deo laudes et hymnos in gratiarum actionem canamus Ansel Psalmus est signifer pacis spirituale thymiama exercitium coelestium luxum reprimit sobrietatem suggerit et lacrymas movet Aug. affected as the matter of the Psalm is and our present condition doth occasion Singing is part of divine worship a piece of Gospel service The Apostles counsel is That in singing we should make melody in our hearts to the Lord Eph. 5. 19. And least we should omit this circumstance which is the substance of the whole duty the Apostle repeats his counsel Col. 3. 16. and adviseth us to sing with grace in our hearts to the Lord. A learned man observes That the right singing of Psalms is an evidence of the holy spirit inhabiting the heart and a spirit of joy breathing in the Saints And if the spirit of the Lord be in us he will be aimed at by us in all our duties The spirit will mount service upwards will Psal 7. 17. lift up the soul in prayer Psal 25. 1. Isa 37. 4. will lift Psal 30. 4. up the hands in request Psal 28. 2. will lift up the head Cantare in corde domino non vocem excludit sed cordis affectionem cum voce conjungendam monet Dav. with joy Psal 110. 7. And will lift up the voice to God in singing David saith Psal 111. 1. I will praise the Lord with my whole heart Deborah and Barak sing their triumphal song to the Lord Judge 5. 3. And the Psalmist calls the songs of Sion the songs of the Lord Psal 137. 3 4. Singing of Psalms properly is nothing else but the lifting up the voice and the heart to God One gravely tells us Our In eo rectè sentiebant qui hunc spiritualem cultum
Isa 59. 2. Gods service and to waste any part of it upon our gains ease or pleasure is to rob God of his offerings which is Macrob. Saturn l. 1 c. 16. matter of complaint and condemnation Mat. 3. 8 9. While we make bold with Gods day we do but mangle it and every Illorum dierum quibusdam horis fas est jus dicere quibusdam fas non est jus dicere Macrob. waste is a wound in it Indeed Macrobius tells us That the heathens had their dies intercisos bipartite dayes which were divided between their God and themselves Semisolemnities And the Papists have their half holy dayes as St. Blacies day and others c. But we have not so learned Christ It was an excellent constitution of King Pepin of Abstinere in eo di● primò mandamus ab omni peccato et ab omni opere carn●li ●t ab omni opere terreno et ad nihil aliud vacare n●si ad orationem et ad ecclesi●s concurrere cum summâ mentis devotione Concil Forojul cap. 13. France We command saith he That all abstain from every sin and from every carnall work and from every earthly work and to be at leisure for nothing but prayer and Church assemblies with the greatest and highest devotion and with charity to bless God who upon this day rained down Manna in the desart and fed so many thousands with bread Morsels nay grains of time are savoury upon a Sabbath The soul can feed upon the crums of such a day Sabbath wastes are the throwing away pearls the casting over-board the best goods which might enrich us to all everlasting That time thou mispendest on a Sabbath might be Gods time for the calling thee home to himself CHAP. XXXVII Some further Directions conducing to the same End Dir. 6 LEt the whole man be employed on the Sabbath 1. All the parts of the body The tongue in prayer the ear in attending the knee in submission the eye in contemplation the hand in charitable contribution This Rom. 12. 1. would be a sacred symphony and make the body not only a a reasonable but an acceptable sacrifice 2. All the faculties of the soul must understand their several offices and tasks 1. The understanding must drink in truth as the tender Deut. 32. 2. herb the small rain and the new mown grass the seasonable Nondum in observatione externorum exercitiorum Sabbati plena est sanctificatio nisi eo fine quó institutum est ut piè sanctè et interiùs haec gerantur Qui est sabbatismus internus Leid Prof. Cant. 5. 16. showers Then the understanding must be as the lights of the Sanctuary of very great use 2. The will must embrace the Doctrines of the Gospel The understanding sees the commodity the will buys it The understanding fastens the eye upon the treasures of the Gospel but the will fastens the hand the understanding is the purveyor of truth but the will brings it home 3. The affections must be employed in pursuing Christ and in holy meltings in sacred duties the soul must be all afloat in loves and delights on Gods blessed day then our affections must follow the prey our dear Jesus our Beloved who is altogether lovely 4. The Memory must be the Scribe to set down every heavenly counsel every thing which drops from the heart of God As that King of Syria whose Ambassadours catched at every word 1 Kings 20. 33. The Memory must record every soul-concernment it must be the Exchequer where the riches of Ordinances are reposited and laid up And after all we must with the Virgin Mary ponder all those things in our hearts Luke 2. 51. Thus both soul and body must be Luke 2. 45. espoused in Sabbath service they must as Joseph and Mary go both together to seek Christ as the two Disciples which went to Emmaus both must joyn in conversing with Christ Luke 24. 15. Though the body act the part of Martha in Luk. 10. 29 41. the week and is cumbred with many things yet it must act Maries part on the Sabbath and mind onely the one thing necessary and lie at Gods feet in holy dispensations Body and soul on the Sabbath are as those two Disciples that went to Christs Sepulchre John 20. 4. but the soul is that Disciple which out-runs the other and comes soonest to the end of their Enquiry the soul comes quickest in and closest up to Christ Mariners observe that the two stars Castor and Pollux when they are asunder they prognosticate Intus est in corde est sabbathum nostrum August foul weather but when together they portend a fair and calm season so when we bring onely the body to the Ordinances of a Sabbath it portends nothing but sorrow and disappointment but when soul and body both meet in sacred duties upon this holy day it is a good prognostication Mat. 6. 24. of fair weather to the Christian smiles from above Luke 16. 13. and peace from within In the duties of a Sabbath we must study devotion but not division we must not think to please the flesh and to please the Lord too on his own day Direct 7 Works of mercy do very well become the Sabbath This is a day of love and mercy If in the times of the Law the Law of Circumcision a painful Ordinance was not to be omitted Opera misericordiae nemo illo die facere prohibet ut sub v●n●re egeno curare aegrotum Opem consilium afflicto laboranti afferre Cujus cura illo die nobis maxime commendatur Rivet in Decal John 7. 22. Much more in the times of the Gospel a law of Love must bind us and oblige us on a Sabbath Love is under a Command as well as Circumcision John 13. 35. Rom. 13. 10. Mercy it is the very musique of Gods Attributes Psalm 108. 4. it is the Almoner to provide for mans wants it is the service of Angels Luke 22. 43. And it is the comely dress which sets off the beauty of a Sabbath That we have a Sabbath is an Act of divine mercy and we cannot duly keep a Sabbath without employing our selves in the works of mercy Tertullian in one of his Apologies joyns Prayer reading of the Scriptures and giving Almes together as being all equally the duties of a Sabbath With him joynes issue Learned and profound Huc referenda sunt reliqua misericordiae opera quibus sabbatum minime profanatur Just Mart. Chemnitius who speaking of the Church of Brunswick saith That upon the Lords day a great multitude of people are gathered together to praise God to hear his Word to receive the Sacrament to holy Prayer to give Almes and other exercises of godliness Thus Charity is mingled with other holy duties Gualter cryes out Let us admire the goodness of God in giving us a day of Rest and shall not our bowels Dei bonitatem exoscul●mur
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
Apostles when they were Mat. 13. 19. propagating the blessed Word Acts 14. 2. Acts 17. 13. He John 13. 27. endeavours either to keep us from the Word or to steal the Acts 20. 9. Word from us The evil one enters Judas at the Passeover Mat. 4. 6. rocks Eutichus asleep at a Sermon useth the word as a weapon against Christ and attempts to make it a sword to destroy Ephes 6. 17. which is given for a sword to defend In Ordinances we are seen by good Angels and tempted by evil Good Angels observe our behaviours and evil Angels corrupt them God is no where more pleased and the Devil no where more 1 Cor 11. 10. busied then in the Assemblies of the Saints And therefore it may be Satan hath shaped his temptations into wedges Isa 4. 5. to divide between God and thee in Ordinances and this makes thee complain of slightness of spirit in those holy seasons It may be some unrepented sin damps thy heart to and in Ordinances Jonah when he had sinned then he falls asleep in the ship Sin clogs thee and therefore opportunities do Jon 1. 6. not please thee Thou fearest thy title to Christ and that makes rhee so remiss in thy pursuits after him Stopped stomacks have no appetite Holy David longs to appear before Psalm 42. 1 2. God Trembling consciences like aguish fits take away all delight Musick sounds not to a Prisoner Guilt unremoved by repentance flats the tast of any Ordinance David will wash his hands in innocency so he will compass Gods Altar Psalm 26. 6. The Curtizan in the arms will keep the wife from the bosome Purity and repentance make ordinances as the honey combe It is Christian prudence first to throw out the beam of sin before we look up to the Sun Psalm 19. 10. of Ordinances and to cast out that which grieveth the spirit Job 6. 6. before we come to taste the spirit in holy Communion with Ephes 4. 30. God Offending slaves love not to see their Master Sin makes Isa 59. 2. us shie of Gods presence Adams fall drives him to the trees for a hiding place and sowred Paradise it self to him Choice Gen. 3. 8. dyet doth not fatten one in a consumption Any one sin not vomited up by hearty repentance and self-abhorrency will nauseate the soul in Ordinances Sins are the souls obstructions which may cause more flushes but less digestion of the holy Word VVhen Jonah was thrown over-board then the Sea was calm Let sin be thotowly bemoaned and repented and Christ will be sweet in Ordinances Sin not disgorged sucks the sweetness out of all holy duties and makes them dry and jejune If thou art slight in or omissive of Sabbath duties read lectures upon thy own heart thy formality arises from disproportion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thy heart is not sutable to holy Duties The Apostle speaks of a savour of the Gospel 2 Cor. 2. 14. We want this savour and rellish and this straines the juyce out of every Ordinance our hearts must be assimilated by grace Psalm 42. 4. before they leap for joy in Ordinances as John the Baptist in Luke 1. 41. the womb or as David danced before the Ark. Carnal 2 Sam. 6. 14. hearts are dragged to the Sanctuary Rom. 8. 7. As we see paint drops from the face that not being its proper place but it stayes and remains upon the sign The unsanctified heart is in Ordinances as a Bird in the Cage it flutters a little Cognitio Christi est dulcissimus et fragrantissimus odor tanquam ex praestantibus herbis aut pretiosi● aromatibus exhalatus but it doth not flye it is cooped up and wants its desired freedome it works at an Ordinance as the Israelites did at their bricks they work because they must give an account to their task-master When we are superficial in Ordinances let us see the naughtiness of our own hearts Sickish palates find no meat savoury There are three glasses in which we may best see our hearts 1. In the glass of temptations Sharp storms try the house sharp encounters try the souldier and soft temptations 2 Sam. 11. 4. try the heart How soon did Bathsheba's beauty enthral David though otherwise he was a pattern of sanctity 2. In the glass of afflictions Fire which refines mettals burneth up drosse When Christ was seized upon then all the Disciples left and forsook him Mark 14. 50. Birds which sing in the spring hide in the winter 3. In the glass of Ordinances If the Spirit hath not breathed upon thy heart it will not be lively in holy Ordinances Indeed a gracious heart melts at a reproof clasps Gen. 2. 7. about a Promise hides truth as its treasure but a slight heart will either rage at the smart fret at the length or be Luke 2. 51. offended at the spirituality of an Ordinance Nothing more puts the heart upon the test then holy duties Many followers of Christ left him upon the account of a Sermon John 6. 66. If therefore thou hast not understood more of God on a Sabbath then study to understand more of thy self thy heart is an useful book to read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Take up resolutions of stricter communion with God for the future Bones which are broken if well set grow the stronger Let the sence of former neglects prompt future Ex malis moribus bonae nascuntur leges care thou hast been slight in Ordinances resolve thou wilt be serious and wherein thou hast done evil to do so no more Joh. 5. 14. The heart of man stands in need not onely of Gods work but of mans care the Spirit must sanctifie it Prov. 4 23. and man himself must watch it When thou comest to Ordinances bend thy ear gird up the loynes of thy mind incline 1 Pet. 1. 13. thy heart and summon thy conscience to every truth Cant. 8. 14. in hearing to every petition in praying Ordinances are like Mountains of spices sweet when we are got up but there is some difficulty to get up we must keep our foot Eccles 5. 1. when we go to the house of God and we must keep our heart when we come there Gods Ordinances are high and sublime and the Psalmist saith Mans heart is deep Psalm 64. 6. Now there must be some toyl some labour and Per labores magnos ad praemia magna pervenitur pains to bring them both together God must make an Ordinance stoop and man must pullice up his own heart to an Ordinance It is mans priviledge to enjoy Ordinances but it is his artifice to improve them much strength must be put forth to over-master the heart in holy duties there must be a sense of Gods eye and mans account to enforce a sutable frame The Scholar can scrible by himself but the Masters hand and his own eye
expietur Greg. M. lib. 11. Epist 3. of complacency variety of choice voices please the ear variety of curious colours delight the eye variety of sweet dainties is acceptable to the tast and so varie●y of holy duties make a Sabbath gratefull and complacential God hath set forth his worship in several services that it might be the more pleasing and the less wearisome Sometimes on a Sabbath we are praying to him for the supply of our necessities sometimes we are praising of him for his own infinite excellencies Sometimes the ear is busied in hearing truth sometimes the Dies dominicus est dies panis per Eucharistiam Athan. hand in giving almes sometimes the eye in weeping tears sometimes the knee in doing homage alwayes the heart in willing obedience Thus the same meat is dressed several wayes to make it more delightfull and pleasing to the pallate To see several towns pleaseth the traveller and makes Dies dominicus est dies lucis per baptismum Chrysost his journey the less tedious and the more recreative In Sabbath worship the bending of the knee is relieved by the hearing of the ear and the hearing of the ear by the singing of the tongue and the service of the tongue may be refreshed Die dominico pro arbitrio quisque suo quod visum est contribuat et charitatem suam deponat and relieved by the contemplations of the mind So then the Sabbath cannot be tedious whose duties are so various Several birds singing make the Grove a common musick room That soul must needs distast every Ordinance which cannot be pleased with variety Just Mart. 10. But no further to amplifie the vanity of these objectours who put this case I shall now a little rectifie their mistake by shewing them how flesh and blood may keep a whole Sabbath spiritually and sweetly to God Let them be earnest in prayer for the spirit of grace this is that principle which can turn the soul to any point that spirit which can guide our way Rom. 8. 1. which can produce the new Creature John 3. 5. which can fill our sails John 3. 8. which can heal our Natures 1 Cor. 6. 11. which can help our infirmities Rom. 8. 26. that spirit which can Acts 16. 14. open the eyes to behold Acts 26. 18. and can open the heart Joh. 7. 38. 39. to embrace Gospel mysteries 1 Cor. 2. 14. that spirit can sweeten Ordinances and accommodate our souls to them that Spiritualia spiritualitèr examinantur et spiritualis judicat omnia qui spiritum rectorem animae habet Doctorem Ansel the streams of a Sabbath may run smoothly without the stop of weariness or storm of discontent The spirit of God can fit our spirits to the things of God and where there is no disparity there can be no dissatisfaction Indeed the Ordinances are the ship and the spirit is the wind As the ship of an ordinance cannot move without the wind of the spirit so the wind of the spirit will not blow without the ship of an Ordinance but when the wind carries on the ship it is pleasant and delightful sailing Therefore let John 3. 8. these Objectours beg the spirit and we have an assured promise to encourage us Luke 11. 13. Let those who put this case which now hath been ventilated and discussed consider our present Sabbaths are Sabbatum est sabbatisini primordium initiale benificae fruitionis odoramentum only the first fruits of an eternal Sabbath The Spring is pleasant though not so fruitfull as the Harvest Our present dayes of grace have their glory and their verdure though not elevated to the raptures of heaven Sabbaths are heavenly dayes though not heavenly eternities Now our Saviour bids us rejoyce at the putting out of the leaf for then Summer draws near Mat. 24. 32. This should silence all scruples of a floathfull heart Sabbaths are golden though little spots they are pensions of grace though not portions of glory they are earnests of better things and he that is to receive the summ will not easily be weary in telling of the earnest The Israelites rejoyced in the Clusters before they came to the Vintage Numb 13. 23 24. Our precious Sabbaths are Cant. 1. 14. our clusters of Camphire before we come to the mountanes of Spices Think not a Sabbath tedious which is only a little stream running into the Ocean of Eternal Glory Such should do well to study their wants more and their ease less Their necessities call for every Ordinance of Grace which fills up the time of a Sabbath their empty cruze Mat. 6. 11. calls for the duty of Prayer their dark understandings call Hos 6. 3. for the Ordinance of hearing their faint graces call for the Isa 25. 6. feast of a Sacrament their sadned spirits call for the joyous Jam. 5. 13. service of singing Psalmes their ignorant Families call for Gen. 18. 19. the duty of Catechizing and their frail memeries call for the Phil. 3. 1. seasonable recruit of Repetition and when these Services are faithfully and spiritually performed the time of a Sabbath Eadem scribere dicit Apostolus est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tutum Ambrosius verò inquit est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 necessarium Ambr. flies away and there is no room for the objection of flesh and blood We are much provoked to see Beggars lie sunning themselves in ease and laziness Let these Objectors pass industriously and chearfully through the Ordinances of a Sabbath or else find some other way for the supply of the necessities of their souls But thus much for the fourth Case Case 5 What shall we do when after our serious attendance upon Ordinances on Gods holy day we taste no sweetness in them Saepe etiam pi is successus in laboribus vocationis denegatur non malè sed certo consilio dei cùm verò Petrus sine successu laborasset non ex impatientiâ murmurat non rejicit vocationem Chemnit nor reap any advantage from them It was once the complaint of the Disciples that they toyled all night and could catch nothing Luke 5. 5. The Saints labours in this life are not alwayes successful they may plow upon a Rock and sow the Seed though presently they do not reap the Harvest Beautiful Rachel was barren for a time and she who had so much comliness had no Child Answers to prayer are not alwayes on the speed but sometimes they are suspended and many wait on God in a Sabbath and yet in the evening do not carry their sheaves with them Psal 126. 6. they may toyle all the Sabbath in the fire of Ordinances and yet not for the present be sensible of their melting and refining power But what shall be done in this case Answ 1 Such should examine themselves whether they bring not too much of the world with them to Sabbath opportunities Happily when they are at
in all our toyle and gains on the six days Gods day concerns our better part the week dayes only our outward man 2. Gods bounty in giving us a day for converse with himself The Sabbath is a day wherein Christ gives his visits the spirit works his wonders the Father shews his face to the children of men this blessed day is the morning star of happiness the worlds choicest festival and those who are blessed with it may say with the Psalmist Psal 147. 20. God hath not dealt so with every Nation It is Sabbath-enjoyment makes every Province a Goshen every place a Paradise every nation a Canaan and every City a Jerusalem The Sabbath is stil a sign between him his people that he is among Ezek. 20. 20. them and the foot-steps of his presence remain with them 3. Gods own pattern God rested on the seventh day that he might be presidential to us in our holy rest In the command for the Sabbath God is not onely our Soveraign to enact a law for us but our example to set a copy before us and therefore in this we must be perfect as our Father in heaven is perfect Mat. 5. 48. Philo Judaeus bids us spend the Sabbath in holy contemplation and the study of spiritual wisdome In hoc deum sequeremur operando sex dies septimâ verò requiescendo vacando contemplationi et studio sapientiae sequere deum h●bes dei exemplum et praescriptum Phil. Jud. and in this follow God who is an example of holy rest ye have not onely his prescript but his pattern And indeed as Mr. Byfield observes Gods example doth not court us but bind us to an holy imitation 4. Gods benediction which he sheds on the Sabbath is a reason to enforce the command God blessed this day above all dayes we may say of it as once it was said of the Virgin Mary in another case Hail thou art highly favoured the Lord is with thee thou art blessed among dayes Morning and Evening doth not describe this day as it did other dayes no Evening predicated of it to shew its prerogative above all other dayes this day is all light all day all sun-shine to prefigure our eternal joyes God doth most delight to dispense Luke 1. 28. his grace on this day Heathen Princes are wont on their Coronation dayes to cast about Gold and Silver and Gen. 1. 5 8. largely to scatter their donations God on this solemn day is present with us in holy duties and sheds abroad in our hearts his holy graces then he comes and speaks with his people and is magnificent in his royal and spiritual donations And what need so many reasons to press a rite a ceremony to urge a shadow Col. 2. 17. A meer command is sufficient to enjoyn a fainting ceremony an ordinance calculated onely for a time there need not so many cords of reason to bind a ceremony upon us which will soon die away and be evaporate Let this be superadded In the fourth Commandment God gives us reasons which are common to us Christians with the Jews As namely 1. Conformity to Gods Image which is no less proper to us then the Jews 2. The memorial of the Creation for which benefit the Ex creatione nos omnes possumus et debemus deum agnoscere cognoscere Alap Patriarchs before the Law and we since are no less bound to be thankful to God then the Jew 3. Rest of our selves and families a common necessity to us as well as to them therefore this Commandment appeareth moral and to be given to us as well as to them And seeing the reason of this 4th Commandment doth urge as well as the reason of the second third and fifth Commandments why should not this Commandment tie us to the observation of it as well Ratio immutabilis facit praeceptum immutabile as the other and why not Christians as well as Jews Its reasons are as strong why should not its obligations be so too Let us look upon the fourth Commandment in the congruity of it how agreeing to the principles of nature The learned Twisse argues most profoundly we are to distinguish three things in subordination the latter to the former 1. The first is a time in general to be set apart for Gods worship 2. The second is the proportion of this time Igitur deus benedictus cupiens Sabbatum cujus sanctimoniam tantis documentis approbaverat in aeternum ab omnibus coli decem praeceptis illud inseruit quo scientes praecepta aeterna esse etiam hoc quartum praeceptum inter ea habendum intelligerent Manasseh Ben Israel 3. The particularity of the day according to the proportion specified Now the first seems of necessary duty by the very light of nature to as many as know God and acknowledge him to be the Creatour and this is the highest degree of morality in the fourth Commandment As to the second we are something to seek by the light of nature as whether one day in a week or one day in a month or more so that herein it is most fit we should seek direction from God who is the Lord of the Sabbath 1. Because the service of the day is his and it is but fit he should cut out what proportion of time he thinks fit and convenient 2. Because of the maintenance of uniformity therein and least otherwise there may be as many divisions thereabouts as there are Churches in the world For reason of a conjectural nature is various and therein commonly affection bears the greatest sway and draws the judgement to comply with it but when God hath determined a certain proportion of time we shall find great congruity therein even to natural reason more then in any other Dr. Field as Mr. Broad reports professeth That to any one who knows the story of the Creation it is evident by the light of nature that Consentaneum est maximè rationi ut post dies sex opera rios unus cultui divino consecretur Et hoc praeceptum manet et est perpetuum et jure naturali et lumine constitutum one day in seven is to be consecrated to Gods service And Azorius the Jesuite in his moral institutions acknowledgeth that it is most agreeable to reason that after six working dayes one day should be consecrated to divine worship Now by the light of nature it seems far more reasonable that one day in seven should be employed in Gods service then one day in a month for such long strides and great chasmes would quickly breed an estrangement between God and the soul and if a seventh part of our time be consecrate to God better a seventh day then the seventh part of every day because the Azor. Instit Moral Part. 2 dae cap. 1. lib. 2. worldly occupations of each of those dayes must needs cause miserable distractions Thus reason may discourse in a probable manner when God
quam jus Domini the right of an indulgent Father then of an Authoritative Lord. Mans good and benefit is twisted into Gods Command as rich embroydery is put upon a piece of sine cloth This is a Precept not only prefaced with a memento but seconded with an appeal to mans reason and conscience Let us take a view of the force of this equity It is most equal that God should have one in seven to add somewhat to what hath been said already If God gives us six dayes shall we deny him one It is the confession of Mr. Brerewood Our adversary in this cause of the Sabbath That it is meet that Christians dedicate the Lords Day wholly to the Lord and to the honour of his name and that we should not be less devout in the celebration of the Lords day then the Jews in the celebration of their Sabbath because the obligation of our thankfulness is more then theirs Thus far our adversary pathetically exhorts us to keep Gods blessed day wholly and fully to himself Holy Greenham saith If God had given us one day for our selves and kept fix for himself it had been equity in him to command and duty in us to obey But now God hath kept but one for himself and that for our profit too to break this Commandment then when God hath shown such liberality it must needs be a stupendous sin It was a rational discourse of Joseph with his Mistriss Gen. 39. 9. My Master hath kept back nothing from me but thee because thou art his Wife and therefore how can I do this great wickedness and sin against God God hath kept no day in the week from us but only the first day because it is his Sabbath how then can we do this great wickedness to prophane his Sabbath and sin against God This amplified Adams guilt he was only forbidden one Tree in the Garden and he must eat of that and this will aggravate our sin we are only forbidden one day in the week and yet we must do our owne 2 Sam. 12. 4. work please our own corruptions and gratifie our flesh and Datur Sabbatum homini ut se segreget et quiescat propter dei gloriam Aben. Fzr. sense on that very day Nathans parable which he used to David 2 Sam. 12. 3 4. is rightly calculated for every one who prophanes Gods day Hath God only one day which he hath kept to himself and sanctified to his service and laid as it were in his bosome and shall men be so unworthy then when their hearts tempt them to vanity they must take the time of this one day to please and gratifie their own corrupt hearts when they are rich in time and have six days every week given them for themselves I may here take up that of the Apostle Rom. 8. 1. Shall we sin and continue in it because Grace abounds Gods bounty should encourage not dispirit our duties it should be a spur to holiness and not a gap to prophaneness Psal 119. 164. 2. And most equitable it is that Time being one of the most precious blessings on this side eternity a jewel of inestimable worth a golden stream dissolving and as it were continually running down by us out of one eternity into another yet too seldome taken notice of till it be quite passed by us and from us It is most just I say and meet that he who hath the dispensing of other things less precious and momentous should be the supreme Lord of our time especially Eccles 9. 12. when he takes so little to himself as one day in seven And our guilt must boyle up to a great heighth if we dash the eighth Commandment upon the fourth to break both in pieces and rob God of his little spot of time the Sabbath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Homil 5. in Mat. day to waste it upon our lusts sloath or vanities It is a zealous and pathetical speech of the excellent Chrysostome What desperate folly is it saith he for people to bestow five or six dayes upon the affairs of the world and not to give one day to spiritual things Therefore let men be perswaded that at least they would set one day apart wholly to these things whatever they do on the week dayes one of the seven dayes must be set apart to our common Lord. Let us observe the Argument of this holy man not only Gods indulgence but our own dependance commands Sabbath-holiness God is the common Lord and shall we not consecrate one day in the week to his service to the great Jehovah in whom we live move and have our being Acts 17. 28. His time is not only in our hand but our times are in his hand Psal 31. 15. And if we abuse his time he can shorten ours And besides all our labours which are as the humming of a Bee or the fluttering of a Butterfly are not so valuable to take up six dayes as his sacred worship which is Psal 31. 15. not only our homage and tribute but our way to life and salvation to take up one day Gods honour and glory which is promoted on his own day by all devout and holy Christians is infinitely more considerable then all our worldly gains and petty interest which is carried on the other six dayes Bucer saith most truly and gravely He discovers himself a most deplorable despiser not only of his own salvation but of divine bounty and indulgence and not fit to Deploratum sanè i●se contemptorem demonstrat sicut salutis prop●iae sic admirandae dei ergà nos beneficentiae ecque omnino indignum qui cum populo dei vivat qui non studet tum ipsum diem domino deo suo glorificando et providendae suae propriae saluti sanctificaro maximè quùm deus nostris nego●iis et operibus quibus praesentem vitam sussentemus sex dies concesserit live among Gods people who doth not study to spend one day in seven viz. the Lords day to the glory and honour of the Lord and to look after his own salvation especially seeing God hath given us six dayes for our labours and employments to sustain our selves in this present life This holy man thinks him unworthy of any station in the Church of God who hath so far sunk himself below the shadow of all reason and justice as not to take Gods grant in giving us six dayes for our selves and so to conscerate the seventh in holy duties and exercises to the glory of a bountifull and a gracious God And indeed the waste and prophanation of Gods day only one in seven would fill any pen with gall and turn the smoothest tongue into a sword such sacrilegious and unreasonable men who prophane this blessed day a day in a week would fill any face with blushes and any tract with sharpness Dr. Twisse observes that Gomarus and Rivolus two learned men though much differing from other Divines in
against Gods sacred Sabbath shall be condemned of the Almighty and they who regarded not the Lords Day shall not be regarded in the day of the Lord nor of the Lord of this day but shall be enforced to undergo unavoidable and intollerable calamity O how sweet would Mark 2. 28. one Sabbath of Rest be from Hell torments in ten thousand years But this drop of water shall not be granted to the Luke 16. 24. miscarrying sinner This day indeed draws near when all Hieron Epist de scient legis Tom. 4. men must appear bofore the judgement-seat of Christ 2 Cor. 5. 10. and then answer for not attending on Gods holy day O what shall we do saith Hierome In that day when the Lord shall come with trumpet sounding fire flaming sinners fainting stars falling mountanes melting poor creatures crying to graves Christus Judex appropinquat ut veniat ad judicium ut suorum gaudium compleat et inimicorum injurias vindicet et puniat Ansel to hold them to hills to hide them Let none then who abuse the Lords day suppose this day is afar off for behold saith the Apostle The Lord comes with ten thousands of his holy ones to execute judgement Jude vers 14 15. And the coming of the Lord draws near saith another Apostle James 5. 8. Nay The day of the Lord is at hand said a third Apostle Phil. 4. 5. Let all therefore who trifle away Gods blessed Sabbath fear and tremble and not like wanton Israelites Amos 6. 3. put far from them the evil day Rivet pronounces Obstinatis autem in Sabbata peccatoribus aeternum mortem suisse denunciatam non inficias imus Rivet peremptorily That to obstinate offendours on Gods holy day eternal death and damnation is denounced Shortly there comes a day when reckning must be made for all our sleepy duties cold affections dead hearts sensual meales open prophaneness and secret hypocrisie for all our wasts of time and pleasing the flesh on Gods most blessed day I might add that all our formal services on that day shall be weighed in the ballance and with Belshazzar will be found too light And then if Repentance and Faith in Christ hath not crossed the debt we shall be discharging it in terrours and torments to all Everlasting CHAP. XLIX Gods Tremendous Judgments executed upon those who have prophaned and violated his holy Day WE have already seen by Scripture light frowns in the face of God wrath in the heart of God flaming in the eye of God and a Sword in the hand of God against those who dare pollute his holy Sabbath Let us now trace the methods of Providence and still more wrath and vengeance breaks out against the same Offendors and indeed a little to preface what is subsequent The sin of prophaning of Gods day is no sin of surprisal but it is a deliberative offence a sin carried on with consultation Sometimes an Oath is sworn unadvisedly as that of Herod to Herodias her Daughter Mark 6. 26. which cost John the Baptist his life an act of intemperance is hatched by the warmth of a temptation he is brutified when reason on a sudden hath left its habitation Nay sometimes one wounds another and it is only a lightning of passion as high Feavers soon run into a distraction But now the violation of the Sabbath is a premeditated act and is the leisurely effect of a corrupt heart it is a sin accompanied with time to consider and with an enlightned mind to understand it Recreations upon a Sabbath they are no vain surprisal but studied wickedness sleeping at Ordinances is a giving way to the flesh Riots and Surfeits on the Lords day they are designed Exod. 20. 8 9. debauchery nothing but a striking hands with Hell in cold blood we consult with our ease when we trifle away the Sabbaths we neglect not Ordinances on the Lords day and court our Bed or our Belly instead of the Sanctuary without Ezek. 22. 26. advice and debate with our selves nor can the fantastick piece of pride spend hours on Gods holy day with the Glass Deut. 5. 12. and the Dressing-box nay and it may be the Box of Patches and the Perfuming-pot without concluding before hand they will appear to the worlds eye in the most flattering dress Sabbath-prophanation is a sin of knowledge and deliberation which puts it into a scarlet dye surely it must needs be a great sin to forget that which God bids us remember Exod. 20. 8. to prophane that which God biddeth us to keep holy to labour on that day when God bids us to rest and to unhallow that day which God hath blessed what is this but to throw down the Gantlet and to challenge God himself Isa 51. 6. God indeed hath punished this sin with the most stupendous revenges I shall marshal his dreadful executions into their several ranks whereby we observing the many examples 1 Sam. 3. 11. of divine fury and indignation we may carefully take the alarm and so avoid the stroke for God usually strikes Deut. 32. 42. one to awaken and warn another and hearing these thunders we may fly that guilt which is pursued with such Rom. 12. 19. Hue and Cries of divine displeasure and may write upon our hearts not our phylacteries that dreadful position of the Apostle Heb. 10. 31. It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God Sometimes God hath punished the prophanation of his Sabbath with consuming the goods of the Offendor One who carried Corn into his Barn upon the Lords day had it all consumed with fire from heaven together with his house A Miller likewise who lived at Wotton was going forth to a Wake upon the Lords day and coming home at Levit. 10. 2. Night found his house his Mill and all that he had burnt down to the ground Thus the fire of Gods wrath hath over-taken Heb. 12. 29. this sin and great transgression To add one Example more In the year 1635 a Miller at Churchdown near Glocester would needs make a Whitson Ale notwithstanding the private and publick admonitions of the Minister and all christian friends so great provision was made and Musick was set out as the Minister and people were going to Church in the Afternoon and when Sermon was done the Drum beat up the Musick played and the people fell on dancing until the Evening at which time they all resorted to the Mill But oh the Justice of God! before they had supped at nine of the Clock a sudden fire seized upon the house which was so furious that it burned down his house and Mill and the most of all his other provisions and housholdstuff ●nd most just it is that if we commit Sacriledge and 〈…〉 the time of his day he should act severely and dispoy● 〈…〉 fruits of our labour sinners make waste of his glory and most righteous it is God should make waste of their
loose to carnal liberty on the Lords day the more loose his heart will be in all good duties the whole week following Let men neglect meditation repetition of Sermons holy conference and other private duties betakeing themselves after the publick worship is over to vain and worldly discourse or vainer pleasures they shall quickly find that the publick service is utterly lost and become unprofitable And on the contrary as Moses continued forty dayes with God on the Mount had his face shining with splendor and glory Exod. 34. 30. So he who shall this day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Septuag of God wholly converse with God not only in publick Ordinances as Moses in the tabernacle but likewise in private duties as Moses on the Mount shall find a sensible spiritual vigour and an unexpected strength to carry him through all the occasions of the whole week following and a kind of glorious lustre arising from the increase of holiness put upon him and this shall be visible to the eye and hearts of others Eccles 3. 1. He who keeps the Lords day with the most strict and and accurate observation shall find 1. Most blessing upon his labours 2. Most holiness in heart and life 3. Most comfort and joy in his own soul 4. Most sweetness in death 5. Most glory and rest in Heaven when there remains that Populo dei superest Sabbatismus i. e. requies d●i ad quam quotidiè sanctus vocatur Par. everlasting Sabbatism for all the people of God It is a good observation of a learned man That when the spirit cometh effectually to convince of sin usually one of the first sins which the eye of the enlightned conscience fixes upon is the neglect of the Lords day and conviction usually ending in conversion one of the first duties which the soul comes seriously to close withall is the strict observation of the Lords day and grace usually works this way and doth exceedingly dispose to this duty Young Converts will be full of meltings on Gods holy day And truly the holy observation of the Sabbath much speaks the temper of a Christian However the week fares as Judg. 12. 6. the Sabbath doth Good Sabbaths usher in good weeks and are the morning stars of an approaching day when we hear truth on the Sabbath digesting it by prayer and meditation when we put up strong cries to God with fervour and devotion when we enjoy Ordinances our spiritual meals on a Sabbath with appetite and satisfaction this will cast a chain upon our corrupt hearts and will be bellows to our future zeal wil supply us with holy meditations which will be as so many bright gleams and will put a heat upon our affections and make us every way act the Saint all the ensuing week As Queen Mary said when she lost Callais When I am dead open me and you shall find Callais written upon my heart So the Christian who hath been very serious on Gods day you shall find Sabbath written upon his heart all the following week The seent of a conscientious Sabbath is not easily lost nor is the warmth of it so speedily chilled souls drenched in Sabbath Ordinances like vessels seasoned with excellent liquors Quo semel est imbuta recens servabit odorem Testa diu they long retain the taste The believer is disciplined upon a Sabbath and we do not easily forget our Education A Sermon kindly entertained on the Lords day will be faithfully improved on the week day Our best Christians were ever strictest on the Sabbath Those tasts of love we then sense and gust will abide and not lightly wear off these will lie upon the heart when the Sabbath is over Let us keep Sabbaths well we shall be better in our shops better in our worldly affairs better in our families better in our discourses better in our converses more righteous in our dealings more exemplary in our walkings more vigorous in our duties all the week following After a well passed Sabbath we shall more watch our hearts more keep our ground and withstand temptations and the deceipts of our Calling which happily Quaestus magnus est pietas quia opes supernaturales secum affert et amicitiam dei obtinet qui suis opes coelestes promittit praeparat are quilted into the very nature of it shall not so much tempt as exasperate and provoke us The whole week must be spent holy to prepare us the better for the Sabbath and the Sabbath must be spent h●ly the better to influence the week as the beginning with God on the morning of a Sabbath may influence the whole Sabbath so the beginning with God in the morning of the week viz. The Lords day may exceedingly influence and prosper the whole week He 2 Thes 2. 10. who on the Sabbath hath been much in the work of heaven cannot easily be much in the dross of earth or the dregs of sin on the time of the week Ordinances like clocks when they have struck leave a sound and a noise for a considerable time nor can a Sermon carefully heard be presently shaken out of the heart The word when received in the love thereof is fire in the bones Jer. 20. 9. and not heat in the face an inward warmth which is permanent and not only a colour which is transient The tasts the impressions the power and spirituality of a well-observed Sabbath cannot without much difficulty strong assaults of Satan powerful workings of a corrupt heart be disanulled and eradicated Hearts steeped in holy Ordinances will not soon lose their perfume It is very true our slight deportment in Ordinances makes them superficial and so soon slide off and they who pass over the Sabbath loosly will spend the week profligately they who spend it formally will spend the week vainly But a serious composure of spirit on Gods holy day will blow off the froth of the ensuing week Ignatius as hath been suggested calls the Lords day the Queen of dayes Regis ad exemplum totus componitur O●bis and according to the example of the Queen inferiour and subordinate days will be composed The endeavour of every Christian should be that his practices in secret in his calling in his company on the week day should be answerable to the great priviledges he enjoyed and to the rich grace he received on the Lords day One well observes That Religion is just as the Sabbath and it decays or groweth as the Sabbath is esteemed it flourishes in a due Veneration of the Sabbath and it pines and consumes when the Sabbath is under neglect or contempt And Dr. Twisse takes notice That the conscionable observation of the Sabbath ever was is a principal means to draw us to spiritual rest from sin and to fit us for an eternal rest in glory In a word the Sabbath and the week are both embarqued in the same ship they both are safe or sink together if our souls
thrive upon a Sabbath by our holy deportments upon it and our careful improvements of it it will be seen in the week but if by our careless behaviour we grow lean upon the Sabbath like Pharaoh his lean Kine Gen. 41 20. in his Dream it prognosticates nothing less than a Famine of grace and happiness Arg. 3 We put on our best Attire upon a S●●b●th and why sh●uld we not be in our best spiritual Dress Shall we deck our Bodies and neglect our Souls Shall we stand before God on his own day with Bodies dressed with all art and curiosity Ille Judaeus vere est qui tal●● est in absc●dito Q●i fidem ●bed●entiam prae●at Christo ● h●bet cir●●●cisionem c●rdis conv●rs●●ne cordis ad Deum Par. but with Souls undressed and unprepared ruffled with worldly thoughts unwashed by repentance all things h●nging careless and loose by formality only painted over and dawbed with pretence and hypocrisie The f●rma●ist on a Sabbath might correct himself by his Ga●● and the exactness of his Attire Surely it is an high blemish to Religion to be curious in our fashion and to be careless in our devotion and to spend more time on a Sabbath to set the D●●ss ●● curl the Hair and to fit the Garment than to inflame Devotion to compose the Heart and to trim the Lamp to meet with the Bridegroom of our Souls Shall not a piece of Eternity be as richly attired on the Lords day as a piece of dust and clay Why should not the Soul wear the Ornaments of Grace put on the Jewels of Faith and Zeal be 1 Pet. 3. 3 4. dressed up with holy thoughts with heavenly desires with spiritual aims with steddy resolutions for further increases of grace and sanctity as well as the sinking dying body a crumbling lump of earth be adorned with all the garish modes of art and bravery Nothing more uncouth that when the body is only the plain case of a pretious Soul that it should be decked on a Sabbath with all the setting forth of costly and lovely Ornament but the immortal Soul should want its trimming to make it look comely in the eyes of its Beloved when the Body is the fine cover of a deformed Soul what is this but to shovel dung into a rich Coffer or to put Pebbles into an Ebony Casket A serious Christian would more mind the trimming of the Lamp than Mat. 25. 7. the setting of the Dress or else the setting of the Dress should more mind him of the trimming of the Lamp Arg. 4 Let us consider what a rare priviledge it is to enjoy the Sabbath of the Lord To keep a Sabbath is not our work but our rest not our service but our liberty not our task Psal 42. 4. but our triumph The Sanctuary is the Souls Paradise and Psal 24. 4. Ordinances are the Tree of life in this Garden of Eden O Psal 84. 10. then let us not turn this grace into wantonness Kings do not spurn their Crowns nor use their Scepters to turn up Turffs in the field The Mariner makes not use of the Deck of his Ship to be a Stage to act on Thus Antipodes to reason and religion do prophane persons act when they slight over the momentous Sabbath of God shall God honour us with a Sabbath and shall we provoke him on a Sabbath Great Estates amplifie the prodigality of the Heir and make his sin more odious and shameful Our Sabbaths are our seasons of grace our spiritual Mart our Pisgah sight of Canaan our Term-time to follow our Suit for glory and eternity and to prophane and formalize away these acceptable days of life and salvation what is it but to throw Jewels upon Cùm omnibus diebus h●mo sese occupet in negotiis suis ne●essariis die sabbati consentaneum est ut se segreget et quiescat propter Dei gloriam Aben Ezra the Dunghil and to disinherit the Soul of its primogeniture as if its concerns were not considerable and of little importance How can we do the work of Earth or Hell upon this heavenly day If we will be working Let us work out our salvation with fear and trembling Phil. 2. 12. Our Sabbaths are mercy rich mercy costly mercy soul mercy the finest of the Wheat Let us then solemnly observe them and dextrously improve them remembring that he who had five talents gained five more Mat. 25. 20. The Viceroy whose trust is great and charge more honourable he is more active Quamquam fidelis servus minimè gloriatur tamen fidelitatem et diligentiam debitam Deo humilitèr commendat Par. Exod. 20. 7 8. and vigilant then every petty Officer whose Precincts are narrow and inconsiderable O that Christians would keep holy Gods blessed day What is it O devout Souls but a day-break of eternal brightness And let us not forget that as God will not hold him guiltless who takes his Name in vain so neither him who spends his day in vain Those surely are foolish Children who play by their Candle and those frantick Christians who frivolously pass over that holy day wherein they enter into the suburbs of the holy City and begin that work of praising pleasing and enjoying God which shall be the Employment of Eternity Arg. 5 In the holy keeping of the Sabbath there is praemium in opere a reward in the work What would the Lord have thee to do on a Sabbath but onely enjoy himself Our sweat on a Sabbath is spent only in hearing from God in the preaching of the word in flying to God in holy prayer and supplication or contemplating on God in devout meditation or feasting with God at his own Table so that in the whole management of a Sabbath there is more honour than burden more Opera sabbati sunt opera coeli profit than pain more delight than disgust The works of a Sabbath are the works of Heaven and the Angels are not weary nor the glorified Saints tired with singing Hall●lujahs On a Sabbath we feed on Manna and the fat things In nostrà enim Do●ini●● die semper pl●it domin●● Ma●na de coelo Coelestia namque sunt eloquia illa verbum lectum et populo praedic●tum Orig. of the Sanctuary we drink of the Brook in the way and of Wine on the Lees well refined Isa 25. 6. we carry Benjamins Sack with the Cup in the mouth of it Gen. 44. 2. we are spiritual Publicans and take custom of Heaven All which aggravates Sabbath-prophanation it would be strange to see a Lutanist who hath a rare Lute and who is dextrous in playing on the Instrument to spend his time in breaking the strings of his Lute What less doth the formal or prophane person do who enjoys the heavenly opportunity of a Sabbath and loses his good wind by sloth or neglect and slights over those rare duties which like Sampsons Lion Judg. 14. 18. are sweet in
precious institution of the Sabbath was the first-born of Ordinances it drew its first Deus in primâ creatione sabbatum sanxit et hau● dubiè in familiis Patrum sanctorum sedulo observatum fuit Par. breath in Paradise as hath been fully discovered already this was the Reuben of Gods institutions the morning star and the rising Sun of Divine appointments Now the Sabbath being the first-born Ordination which enriched the world it is the more pleasing and acceptable to the Lord and the due observation of it will assuredly be the more gratefull to him God remembers the kindness of Israels youth Jer. 2. 2. the initials of his obedience were most pleasing We put Sabbatum ab initio mundi destinatum est ad cultum dei Luth. buds into our bosomes The Sabbath was from the infancy of the world and therefore our carefull keeping of it must needs delight the Father The first born was alwayes to be dedicated to God the first born of Man and the first born of Beasts Exod. 13. 2. The first fruit of Corn Deut. 18. 4. Nay the first of all the fruits of the Earth Deut. 26. 2. Nay God will not only have the first born of mans person but Sabbatum ab initio mundi observatum est Baldw. the first fruits of his labours Exod. 23. 16. And God is so pleased with the first of every thing that he ordains a feast of first fruits Exod. 34. 22. And a sacrifice of the first fruits God calls a sweet savour unto himself Levit. 23. 17 18. Sanctifi●atio omnium primogenit●rum tam hominum qua● best●arum e●●t eorum separatio ab aliis quae inservi●bant us●bus humanis ut deo soli cederent in e● nallum jus hom●n●s habe●●●t Rivet Nay so gratefull were the first fruits to the Lord that he would not only have the first born of the Sons of Israel and the firstlings of the Herds and the Flocks Nehem. 10. 36. The first fruits of the ground nay of the very trees Nehem. 10. 35. But likewise the first fruits of the very dough Nehem. 10. 37. And Christ himself is called the first fruits of them that sleep 1 Cor. 15. 20 23. And Israel his chosen people are called the first fruits of his increase Jer. 2. 3. and converts the best of men are the first fruits of his creatures Jam. 1. 18. Surely then the holy Sabbath the first fruits of Divine Ordinances must needs be dear to God and unholy practices on that day must the more provoke him and holy duties sincerely acted on that day must the more please him and holy hearts on this day must the more delight him and holy graces in their most vigorous exercise on this day must the more be acceptable to him the Sabbath was his primitive institution nor must it be forgotten the Lords day Our Christian Sabbath is the first day of the week and was in time the first day of the world wherein the light received its production and the blessed heavens their being Gen. 1. 1 3. Now then let this emphasis which God hath put upon the Sabbath engage us to a stricter and more wary behaviour on it least the order be inverted as our Saviour notes Mark 10. 31. And that Sabbath which was the first in Gods institution be the last in our condemnation and Mat. 19. 30. this darling ordinance procure a damning sentence upon us in the general assizes of the world Arg. 9 The sanctification of the Sabbath will be profitable to our outward estate For the more conscionable we are in sanctifying the Sabbath the greater blessing we may exp●ct from Lev. 26. 9. God which divine blessing the wise man tells us Prov. 10. Jer. 17. 25. 22. maketh rich This piece of godliness gives us right and title to the promises of this life 1 Tim. 4. 4. He who hath Benedictione dei divitiae parantur melius et meliùs conservantur et effi●aci res redduntur ad omnes usus ad quos adhibentur Et Deus suâ benedictione piis quasi somniantibus de eâ re parùm cogitantibus bona suppeditat exempla sint Abrahamus Josephus c. Cartw. been with God upon the Sabbath day God will be with him on the week day and he who hath sanctified God in his heart when he hath been agitating the affairs of heaven God will assuredly bless the works of his hand when he is providing the things of earth It is our Saviours own promise If we first seek the Kingdom of Heaven I may add if we begin the week with God on the first day thereof all these outward things shall be added to us Mat. 6. 33. as a surplusage of divine love The best way to get estates for our selves is to keep Sabbaths to God and to enquire after the blessing where he hath lodged it viz. in preserving his Sabbath pure and unblemished Isa 56. 2. It is very observable that when God had perfected the Creation and put man into his tenement of Paradise he then ordains the Sabbath to shew that all creature comforts are only attendants on this Gen. 2. 3. holy day and if Adams sensual delight had given way to his spiritual communion he had neither lost Paradise nor his posterity It must be granted that the smiles of Providence usually accompany the sincerity of obedience And Sabbath-holiness is the Jachin and the Boaz the pillars of this obedience 1 Kings 7. 2. To keep that Arke in our house to keep Christ 2 Sam. 6. 11 12 in our heart and to keep the Sabbath in our eye so as devoutly Eph. 3. 17. to observe it makes all we have to prosper and entails Isa 56. 2. a blessing upon our selves and families Constantine the Great Euseb de vitâ Constant lib. 4. cap. 18. justly called so in a Military in a Civil and in a religious sence was as flourishing an Emperour as ever sate in the Throne of the Romane Empire and he took great care for the holy observation of the Lords day and made a statute to oblige both Himself and his Subjects so to do and as some report Composed Prayers for every one of his Regiments to use upon that holy day Thus Sabbath-holiness made his Crown flourish and his exemplary sanctification of Gods blessed day shall preserve his memory more honourably and more durably then the Walls or Structures of Constantinople a City of his own Name and Erection However most sure it is that as the prophan●tion of Gods day is a Lev. 26. 26 31. moth and a worm so the holy observation of it brings a secret blessing to our outward estates and when we have been on the Mount with God on his own day the Lord will make his face to shine upon us Numb 6. 25. and will be gracious Exod. 34. 35. to us in shewing mercy and showring benedictions upon us on the week day Arg. 10 How serious
Gospel So the Apostle most expresly 1 Cor. 15. 14. If Christ be not risen then is our preaching in vain and your saith is also vain Christs death had been wholly ineffectual for the remission of sins if Christ had not conquered death but still had been Peccatum plenè aboletur quia ejus effectus i. e. mors aboletur Chrysost detained in his dust But Christ hath abolished sin because he hath conquered death the effect of sin by his glorious resurrection as Chrysostom well notes and observes All the sufferings of Christ were animated by his resurrection that glorious Act put worth and value upon them Had he not risen all our hopes had been buried in the same Grave with him but he is truly risen and this is the comfort of our Souls and the riches of his sufferings Christs resurrection makes faith a saving grace and therefore the rather is put upon Christs rising not upon his death Rom. 8. 34. His Resurrection makes the Gospel a lively and glorious Gospel 2 Cor. 4. 4. Totum Evangelium esset vanum et mera fabula si Christus non resurrexisset Par. and Christ an all-sufficient Redeemer When Christ rose the Jews blasphemy was execrated Scripture-prophesies and types verified the hearts of believers revived and the Gospel was made a Doctrine full of grace and truth fit to be preached for life and salvation The Prophet Hosea tells us Hos 6. 2. After two dayes he will revive us and the third day he will raise us up and we shall live in his sight which text Hos 6. 2. of Scripture Tertullian rightly accommodates to the Resurrection Quem locum Tertullianus lib. adv Judeos cap. 13. ad Christi resurrectionem rectè accomodat Ger. of Christ which was on the third day then did our life spring with his and the Sun rising caused our light The Resurrection of Christ is that pleasant spring which the Law foresaw the Gospel discovers and the Christian rejoyces in Had Christ been shut up in the Grave and there kept as Natures Prisoner all the truths of the Word had been as fading leaves and the believers faith an empty notion the Preachers pains unprofitable sweat and the sinners soul irrecoverably lost and the professors of Christianity truly of all men most miserable as 1 Cor. 15. 19. And that cursed Quantas divitias comparavit nobis ista fabula Christi Leo. 10. Pap. Rom. speech of Pope Leo the tenth viz. How much wealth hath this Fable of Christ brought to our Coffers might have escaped a reproof And now shall the Resurrection of Christ put life into the Gospel and none into us upon our Sabbath the commemoration of that glorious Act Shall every truth of the Gospel be confirmed by it and shall not we be established in our duties on this holy day Christ rose and our hopes sprang and budded with his rising and shall not this animate our services on the Lords day Either let us lay aside Faith in the Act or be more conscientious in keeping the day of Christs blessed Resurrection The Resurrection of Christ was not only the breaking of his own chains but the breaking out and harbinger of our joyes For Christ as a common person is become the first fruits of 1 Cor. 15. 20. them that sleep 1 Cor. 15. 20. which is an allusion to a rite and ceremony in the Law All the sheaves in a field being unholy in themselves there was some one sheaf in the name and room of all the rest which was called the first fruit lifted up and waved before the Lord and so all the sheaves abroad in the field by that act done to this one sheaf were Christus opp●nitur omnibus terroribus in die judicii quidem quadruplici ratione 1. Christi morte qua peccata expiavit 2. Resurrectione quâ j●stitiam peperit 3. Evectione ad dextr●m dei quâ sp sanctum effudit 4. ●ntercessione quâ meritum effi●acitèr applicat Qu●tu●r ●is●e gradibus totum Redemptionis opus à Christo peractum est Par. consecrated unto God by vertue of that Law Lev. 23. 10. Rom. 11. 16. And thus when we were all dead Christ as the first fruits riseth and this in our name and stead and so we all rise with him and in him we are all vertually risen in him and this in as true a sence as if we were personally risen As on the contrary hand we being personally alive yet are reckoned dead in Adam because he was a common person and had the sentence of death pronounced upon him by vertue of which we must die and this by the force of the same law 1 Cor. 15. 21 22. Adam was the first fruits of them who died and Christ of them that rise Hence we are said to be risen with Christ Eph. 2. 5. and which is yet more to sit together with him in heaven Eph. 2. 6. Because Christ is a common person representing us and he sits there in our name and in our stead Now let us a little canvass the equity of this law If sentence of condemnation was first passed upon Adam alone yet considered as a common person for us we were condemned in him therefore also this acquitting and justification which was passed upon Christ at his Resurrection for then he had fully suffered whatever divine justice could demand for our sin was passed upon him as a common and publick person for us yea in this his being justified Christ must much rather be considered as a common person representing us then Adam was in his condemnation V●va ego quamvis mortem feram resurgam et vos quoque vivetis i. e. quia videbitis me laetabimini et quasi o●cisi revi●is●e●●● in meâ manifestatione Theoph. For Christ in his own person had no sin so he had no need of justification from sin nor should ever have been condemned and therefore this must be only in respect to our sinnes imputed to him and if so then in our stead and so herein he was more purely to be considered as a common person for us then ever Adam was in his being condemned for Adam besides his standing as a common person for us was furthermore condemned in his own person but Christ being justified from sin could only be considered as standing for others Thus Christ rose as a common person in our stead and for our good to be the object of our faith the incentive of our hope and the forerunner of our glorious resurrection By Christs rising to life we receive A life of joy His springing from the grave was the blossoming of our joy The retirement of our beloved into his tomb was but transient the delay of three dayes and then In diem solis laetitiae indulgemus Tert. he came from behind the hangings and in this our joy is full This dried up Mary Magdalens tears and swallowed up the Disciples griefs and this inflames the Christians triumphs And
exactness of the quaver not the dexterity of an Anthem which is venerati●n proper to Gods holy day But a melting heart an obedient mind an attentive ear the acting Luke 2. 25. of grace and the enquiries after the Beloved a Soul raised to experimental communion with God suits more fairly and Jer. 31. 19. genuinely to the right observation of Gods holy day This Ezek. 21. 12. extrinsical worship onely tongue deep and knee deep and which is not animated by a devout Soul is Englands stain and should be Englands moan and we should do well to consider cold Devotion usually foreruns hot indignation and it is onely in the bosom of the Almighty how soon he will further revenge the quarel of his Sabbath not onely as bemired by open prophaneness but as slightly passed over by a specious cold and formal observation We may bewail the sinful abridgments which England puts up upon Gods holy day In former times and so now in these later years two or three hours signifie a Sabbath among us Dominicis diebus tantùm divino cultui a little time in publick is our Sacrifice upon the Lords day the Lord may here put the expostulation Mal. 3. 8. Do ye servi●●dum est sicut Antiquis praeceptum erat de Sabbato dominicum diem religi●sâ solennitate celebremus Aug. say wherein have you robbed me It may be answered not in tythes but in time not in the Priests allowance but in the Lords day If the people come to divine service and to the pittance of a Sermon in publick they have then liberty to sport it in the helds or to frisk ●t in a Maurisk dance to be social in an Ale-house to be frolick in a Tavern without the controule of an Officer or the stroke of a Magistrate This is Englands sin and this sin was formerly punished by a Civil and hath lately been pursued by a forraign War But we may truly say with our Saviour Mat. 19. 8. Improperandum est contra eos qui unam aut du●s horas ex integro die deo deputant ad Orationem veniunt vel in transitu verbum audiunt quasi festi●anter praecipuam verò curam erg● sollicitudinem seculi et ●ent●is expendunt Orig. Homil. 2. in Numer Iren. lib. 4. cap. 30. From the beginning it was not so Augustin tells us Upon the Lords day we are to be wholly taken up in divine worship nor are we to abridge the Lords day more then the Jews did their Sabbath which was wholly kept to the Lord. And this worthy and learned man was run into a kind of passion against those who would spend some time only of this day in divine worship and the rest in sensual pleasures Origen was very invective against those Who would depute two or three hours to prayer or to hear the Word in transitu by the by but their chief care was to consult the World or their belly and to spend th●ir time in profits or delights Chrysostome tells us his opinion was fully That one day in seven was to be consecrated wh●lly to the worship of the Common 〈◊〉 of all and to his service And Irenaeus who trod upon the heels of the Apostolical times freely acknowledgeth That we are to persevere in divine worship upon Gods holy day Nay the Fathers gathered in a Die dominico ad nihil aliud vacandum nisi a● Orationem et alia pietatis munia full assembly declar● their judgement That we being sequestred from all servile w●rk must persevere in the praise of God and in holy thanksgivings ●n the Lords day And so the Fathers in the Council of ●●i●li We must say they be vacant for nothing upon a Lords day but holy Prayer and other duties ●●ncil Ferojul Can. 13. A. D. 791. of piety And the fiftieth Canon of the Council of Paris is very remarkable We must meet say they upon the Lords day wherein the Lord our life arose from the dead and granted us hope of our Resur●ection and wholly abstain from our own delights or secular empl●yments and only be filled with spiritual joyes and heavenly praises and this with all endeavour of heart and this is our vacation on that day Chrysostome in one of his Homilies upon Genesis seems to order our very gestures A veshertino ingressu ad altare in Sabbato Judaico usque ad sequentem vesperem in die dominico in officiis sacris peragendis perseverandum est Concil on the Lords day and saith our eyes and our hands all this day must be lift up and stretcht out to God And a venerable Council gives us this direction from the evening of the Jewish Sabbath to the evening of the Lords day we must persevere in holy duties But Englands practice hath been a contradiction to these golden rules and to these golden times When our evening service hath been done we have laid aside the privacies of divine worship and some to the Green to bowls some to the Trall Can. 90. Ring to dances some to the street to Cudgels and to other sports which feed the corrupt heart of an inconsiderate multitude But in this while our Country is a Baalim our Closets Judg. 3. 7. should be a Bochim and others wantonness should be our wound and whilst their hearts are a spring of vanity Jer. 9. 1. our heads should be a fountain of tears We may bewail the unpunished liberty which is used in England upon Gods holy day Sabbaths are prophaned and the Jer. 5. 31. people love to have it so and the Magistrates love to leave it so this is an Evil to be deplored among us The things which are Caesars are given to Caesar and good reason too when we have a divine Command for it Mat. 22. 21. But the things which are Gods are not given to God Gods day suffers and none suffer for his day We have not only the Nehem. 13. 21. merchandise of wares but the merchandise of hell upon the Lords day but where are the Nehemiahs to restrain them This is Englands sin and this calls for Englands moan the Heads of our Tribes are not Zealous for the Lord of Hosts The day of God is torn by the Oaths of the Miscreant it is stained by the excesses of the intemperate it is painted over by the cold worship of the hypocrite it is curtailed by the short services O quàm redarguendi sunt Judaei qui sep timam vitae partem otio et voluptatibus impendunt Senec. of the formalist Taverns and Ale-houses if not Stews and Brothel-Houses are frequented and filled on this sacred day and all these debaucheries acted with impunity And men do on Gods day what is right in their own eyes not because there is no King but because there is no awe of God in Israel Surely if when there was almost a Tribe cut off in Israel there was nothing but moans and lamentations how much more
day before the Sabbath the Jews called Sabbatulum the little Sabbath on which they made ready against the great day of the Sabbath of the house sets up lights and a short prayer being made then they go into the Synagogue and in their going wish one another a joyfull Sabbath and when they return they spread the table with some provisions and alwayes set salt on the table to intimate an inward savouriness and they put on two loaves of bread and then give thanks in these words Blessed art thou O Lord our God the King of the World who brings forth bread out of the ground and then the Master of the Family breaks some to those who sit down with him and in a larger quantity then at other times for the honour of the Sabbath for then sparingness is intolerable And the same Author Hospinian observes that when any person is further from his home on the Friday then he can reach to observe the Sabbath strictly he remains where he was in the fields or in the middle of a wood and willingly incounters any hazzard and the want of meat or drink rather then he will intrench upon the holy Sabbath And thus exact the Jewes are in bodily and spiritual preparations they would not prophane the Sabbath with an unpared nail they wash their heads to betoken inward purgation they set up lights to denote spiritual illumination they go into the Synagogue the day before the Sabbath to fit them for the sanctuary on the holy day of the Sabbath Joseph Jud. Antiq. Lib. 16. Cap. 10. and these Jewes were so conscientious in these preparations that Josephus reports it was taken notice of all the World over insomuch that Caesar Augustus upon some complaint wrote unto every Province where the Jewes resided That it was his pleasure that the Jewes should enjoy their ancient Is it not meet for Christians whose Sabbath exceeds that of the Jews to prepare themseves thereunto We have no sheep or oxen to prepare we have the more time to make ready our hearts and souls for spiritual service Mr. G. Priviledges and among the rest that they should not be compelled to appear before any Judge on their Sabbath dayes or the day before their Sabbaths after nine of the clock upon their preparation dayes Their Conscientious Religion in this particular procured them favour with Heathen Princes the Roman Emperour and obtained indulgence for them And shall the Jew be so accurate and diligent in his preparations and the Christian so loose and careless Doth the knowledge of Christ no more influence us Let us even blush to be out-done by a rejected and obstinate Jew the Son of a Curse which adheres to that Generation from Age to Age. Shall those branches which are cut off as the Apostle speaks spread in their carefull and dutifull observances and we who are branches growing on the stock be contracted and fall short in a due and necessary composing of our selves for the Lords day the weekly memorial of our Rom. 11. 21. Lords Resurrection Surely it will be more tolerable for Rom. 11. 17. Jerusalem and Samaria in the day of judgement then for Mat. 11. 21. many Christians who wreaking out of the world rush upon Sabbaths without the pauses and interpositions of a due preparation But happily now some being evinced would set upon the work did they fully understand it they would keep a Sabbath Eve did they know how legitimately and suitably to spend it Therefore the next Chapter shall be the clew to lead us into this Labyrinth CHAP. XI What those Preparatory Duties are that must fore-run the Sabbath THus far we have travelled to assert the duty that we must prepare for Gods holy day our next task is to unfold and open the duty how we should prepare for a Sabbath Every one who takes the pencil into his hand cannot draw a Picture Preparation for the Sabbath is easier confessed then understood and many can sooner acknowledge then give an account of it and that we may therefore neither erre in the omitting nor yet in the doing of it we must understand Sabbath preparation compriseth these several duties We must the day before the Sabbath for some time sequester our selves wholly from the world and all the affairs of it we must for some time make off from worldly hinderances as Mariners that intend a voyage to Sea they put off the ship from Land so if we mean to serve God on the Sabbath our hearts and minds must be off from the world Put off thy shooes saith God to Moses for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground We must put off earthly affections Exod. 3. 5. for the day we are approaching to is a holy day A Bird saith Musculus That she may fly she fluttereth with her Musc Loc. Com. Praecep Quarto wings and frees her self all she can from what may hinder her flight And shall not we throw off before-hand what may hinder our flight upon a Sabbath or stop us in our careire to Jesus Christ The Jewes were angry with the man who carried his bed upon a Sabbath day How many carry their Joh. 5. 10. beds before the Sabbath lie sleeping on the downe of carnal pleasures and temporal profits and do not awaken to compose themselves for the Glorious Sabbath of God they lie snorting in carnal ease and prepare not for spiritual enjoyments That Christ might make us a Sabbath to keep in body he first rose from the earth In heart we must rise from the earth before we can well keep the Sabbath Christ hath made One well observes That a total sequestring of Mr. Walk our selves from all worldly business and putting away all earthly thoughts cares and delights will cleanse the affections from dross and make room for the entrances of holiness for spiritual Praeparemur ad Sabbatum ne spinis ac curis hujus seculi quibus cor hominis eo tempore obsidetur incrementum et fructus verbi divini in●er●ipiatur et evellatur ex animis nostris ut Christus in Parabola seminantis abundantèr docet Wal. devotion and the motions of the Holy Ghost and he gives this reason For no man can serve two Masters at once God and the World Let us therefore by way of preparation cast out earthly and carnal thoughts and spiritual and heavenly affections will the more easily enter and be predominant So then in the first place we must set apart some time for the trimming and rigging of the soul to be fit to launch into a Sabbath we must come off from the stage of the World into the tyring room quietly and spiritually to compose our selves for the heavenly employment of the subsequent day there must be a pause and cessation from the entangling warfare of the world And we must enter into our Closets and commune with our hearts and be still that so advisedly we may enter upon the souls harvest day
but in our houses there must be a meeting of Relations there must be Parents and Children Masters and Servants those who are born at home and the stranger Exod. 20 10. Comm●ni s●nctifi●●ndi S●bbathi lege ●onstringuntur omnes ex aequo herus serv●● peter liberi mas f●●mina s●per●●res et infer●ores Musc within our gates and all these must joyntly keep Gods Sabbath in holy duties and no less God commands in the fourth Commandment the Son and Daughter must remember to keep the Sabbath holy as well as the Parents the Man-servant and the Maid-servant as well as the Governours of the Family nay the stranger within the Gates On the Lords day we must by a conscionable and constant performance of holy duties turn even our private house into a little Church and thus we shall intail Gods presence to our houses as he vouchsafed his blessing on the house of Obed Ed●m we must not onely act secret duties on the Sabbath 2 Sam. 6. 12. but likewise Family duties What those duties are shall be more copiously handled hereafter But Thirdly we must act publick duties on Gods holy Sabbath we must not onely open the doors of our closets and of our chambers to come down into our houses but Ex hac com●●●i●●e tum Regnum 〈…〉 Zanch. we must open the doors of our houses too to meet with Gods people to celebrate the Lords day The Sabbath is the day wherein the Saints visit God and one another they then begin that society which shall be perfected and eternized in Glory David rejoyced when he went with the multitude to the House of God The great Apostle taught every where in Psal 42. 4. every Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He taught when the people 1 Cor. 4 17. were called together The Corinthians came together in one place to eat the Lords Supper Nay Christ himself will declare 1 Cor. 11. 20. the name and praises of God to his Brethren in the midst Luke 8 19. of the Church We must therefore serve God on the Sabbath in the Assemblies of Gods people not in our houses onely but in the Church i. e. in the Congregation of the faithfull Moses speaks of a holy Convocation Exod. 12. 16. Exod. 12. 16. and the Psalmist makes mention of the Assembly of the Saints Psal 89. 7. nay the promise is intailed on the Congregation of Gods people Isa 4. 5. The omission of this our assembling of our Isa 4. 5. selves is by the Apostle sharply rebuked Heb. 10. 25. One commenting on this Text hath divers things remarkable Heb. 10. 25. and worthy of our observation As First By this assembling the Apostle intends no other but the meeting of Believers to hear the Word of God and Per collectionem hanc Apost caetus ecclesiae et conventus fidelium ad sacram synaxin ad verb●m dei p●e●esque publicas intelligit Secundò Hos caetus vult Apost ut Ch●istiani fidem profi●●●ntur gratiarum actiones perso●ent et se invi●em excitent ad veritatem et bona opera Ter●● illi catus et mutui congressus mirè sovent fidem quae in secess● et separatione diuturniori l●ngue scit Quartò Qui ecclesiae ●ae●●s negligunt et deserum facilè urgente perse●utione ecclesiam ipsam et fidem Christi deserunt et abnegant Alap to pour out their prayers before God Secondly The Apostle injoynes the Assemblies that Christians might meet publickly to profess their faith in Christ and to sing the praises of God to stir up one another to love and good works Thirdly The same Author observes that these Companies and Assemblies do exceedingly foment and cherish faith which by a perpetual recluse and separation quickly would languish and be infeebled Nay Fourthly He observes That those who forsake the Assemblies of Gods people will easily in the urgency and heat of persecution desert the Church of Christ thus far that learned man And what a rare promise doth the Apostle mention 2 Cor. 6. 16. the words are these For ye are the 2 Cor. 6. 16. Temple of the living God as God hath said I will dwell in them and walk in them and I will be their God and they shall Lev. 26. 12. be my people Christ when he was upon the Earth he goes into the Synagogue on the Sabbath day Mar. 1. 21. and Mark 1. 21. taught the people Paul and his Company go into the Synagogue on the Sabbath and Paul preacheth there Nay Acts 20. 7. afterwards Paul preacheth to the Christian Assembly in a house on the Lords day Acts 20. 7. In a word where doth Christ walk but in the midst of his candlesticks which are the Churches Rev. 1. 20. Cornelius Alapide observes that Rev. 1. 20. Alapide holy Ignatius who was the Disciple and follower of the Apostle Paul adviseth in his Epistles those of Smyrna and Ephesus to frequent the meetings of the Saints and gives this reason because they will wonderfully confirm us in the faith so then the whole duty of a Believer on the Lords day lies not in the Closet or the Family but likewise in the Societies of Gods people met for divine worship Coals put together make the warmer fire When the Christians were Assembled Acts 10. 44. to hear Peter then the Holy Ghost fell upon them The Saints in Glory are the Assembly and Church of the first-born Heb. 12. 23. and therefore we must act publick duties on Heb. 12. 23. Gods holy day in the publick Assemblies But now what these publick duties are and how we must demean our selves in the performance of them shall be more largely discussed hereafter We had need rise early on the Sabbath for as we have many Duties to perform so we have many Graces to act The Sabbath is both the field to exercise Grace in and the treasury 2 Tim. 2. 1. to supply grace with Ordinances are both the breathing Gr●●i● non soli●●est s●v●r ●●i 〈◊〉 q●od ex eo s●q●●t●r Alap and the breasts of grace In prayer we act and we augment our graces and so in other Ordinances The Sabbath is the Believers resting day but Graces working day it is love which sweetens the work of a Sabbath Faith makes eff●ctual the Ordinances of a Sabbath Repentance reconciles H●b 11. 6. Jer 31. 19 20. Rom. 12. 11. Isa 57. 15. H●b 4. 2. Jam. 5. 16. the God of the Sabbath Zeal makes acceptable the duties of a Sabbath Humility ingages Gods presence on a Sabbath We cannot hear the Word profitably on this holy day without we mingle it with Faith nor address our selves to God in prayer without we inflame the duty with fire with the fire of zeal In our prayers we must get our affections fired by the Holy Ghost that they may flame up towards God in Devout and Religious ascents Broken-hearted and penitent Isa 23. 16. believers