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A64572 A preservative of piety in a quiet reasoning for those duties of religion, that are the means and helps appointed of God for the preserving and promoting of godliness. Namely, I. Of four Christian-duties, viz. 1. Reading the Scriptures. 2. Preparation for the Lords Supper. 3. Estimation of the ministry. 4. Sanctification of the Lords-day-Sabbath. II. Of four family-duties, viz. 1. Houshold-catechising. 2. Family-prayer. 3. Repeating of sermons. 4. Singing of Psalms. With an epistle prefixt, to inform and satisfie the Christian reader, concerning the whole treatise. By William Thomas, rector of the church at Ubley in the county of Somerset. Thomas, William, 1593-1667. 1662 (1662) Wing T988; ESTC R37887 203,614 274

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godly meditations which is more easily done that night because of the help we have had for better thoughts the day before Yea I shall not fear to say further that in them that have observed the day as they ought there will be such an holy habit and frame of heart left behind as that though they sleep and take their rest yet even the dreams of that night I do not say alwayes will but divers times will be like to relish of the holiness of the day which though some are willing to make sport with and to count worthy of derision yet herein they call in question not only their Piety but their Reason for Nature it self and common Experience teacheth that things acted and most affected in the day leave such impressions as that they are ordinarily represented by the phansie in the dreams of the night I have thus far enlarged in describing the Sabbath out of a desire to establish the holy observation of the Lords day which will best be discerned by that respect reverence and observance that is due to the weekly Sabbath according to the fourth Commandement Now when we know what is meant by Sabbath and by the observation of it it 's easie to know what is meant by the profanation thereof mentioned before which is the applying of it to common use as we do the other six dayes when God hath set it a part for holy and heavenly imployments see Act. 10.15 This profanation must needs be as I have said an evil thing because it is a transgression of the moral Law of God which Law though it be short yet the Precept concerning the Sabbath is full and large If that law be holy and just and good then the profanation opposite to it must needs be evil Hence the Lord himself said of old when that which was commanded on the Sabbath was not obeyed How long refuse ye to keep my Commandements and my Laws Exod. 16.28 Ezek. 22.18 Thou hast profaned my Sabbath is in the catalogue of their sins But because there are two things about the Christian Sabbath much disputed one the divine institution and appointment of a Sabbath day in every week for all ages by vertue of the fourth Commandement the other the divine constitution or Gods ordaining of that weekly day for a Sabbath which we now observe that is the first day of the week commonly called the Lords day I shall therefore endeavour as I am able to speak something in way of resolution to these two proposals that so Sabbath-doubts may not hinder Sabbath-duties For the former of these I propound this question Quest. How doth it appear that the Law of the Sabbath contained in the fourth Commandement continueth and is in force in Gospel times for the observing of one day in seven as a Sabbath or day of holy rest Answ. If it be not of any force then we have not now a Decalogue that is there are not now in the time of the Gospel Ten Commandements but nine only If it be said That doth not follow because something of that Commandement remains and is in force for ever to wit that some time should be set a part for the publike worship of God To this I answer That it is manifest to him that reads the fourth Commandement that the thing required in it is not a time at large which the second Commandement that prescribeth the Worship of God supposeth because nothing can be done unless there be a time set apart for the doing of it but that which is enjoyned is a day Nor is it a day at large but a day in every week for it is opposed to six working dayes Nor is it a day in a week at large but such a day as may challenge this title The Sabbath of the Lord thy God that is it must be a day of Gods appointment When a Master saith to his servant wait on me every week in the day I appoint you and lay before him great reason for it If the servant should say My Master looks for no more but that I should wait on him one time or other it would be but a poor account 2. If any of the ten Commandements be taken away it must be taken away by Christ that is by his order or by some declaration from him But he saith he came not to take away but to fulfil the Law And to prove that he instanceth in divers Precepts of the Moral Law which he presseth in the greatest height of spiritual observation Why should the fourth Commandement be taken away any more then the fifth which yet the Apostle urgeth strongly upon children and that from the moral and perpetual reason thereof which though it be delivered in a Jewish phrase relating to the land of Canaan yet for the substance of it it concerns all men that live on the earth Ephes. 6.1 2 3. Object There is this difference between the fourth and fifth Commandement That Nature teacheth men to obey their Parents but to observe a Sabbath one day in seven it teacheth not Answ. In regard of a day of holy Rest in general Nature is not silent for it granteth a God and that that God is to be worshipped and therefore that a time must of necessity be set a part for it and that a convenient time and in such a distance that we may neither neglect our God nor our affairs And taking it for granted that the Creation is known that is that God did make the world in six dayes and rest the seventh Nature hath a fair copy to write by and a glorious example before it to work upon and to take a light from to work and to rest in such a proportion of time I say to rest for Nature speaks out this fully that the time consecrated to God must be a time of rest because we cannot serve God in holiness and be about profane and common imployment both at once 2. If we take in to the light and principles of Nature the assistance of divine Revelation then Nature will say all that needs to be said for a Sabbath to wit that it is fit God should appoint his own time for his own service and therefore he in his Word having appointed a weekly time such a time ought to be observed 3. Setting aside all the natural morality that may be pleaded for a weekly Sabbath it sufficeth that the spending of one day in seven in holy Rest is enjoyned by the positive Law of God for why shall not the Law of the God of Nature revealed from Gods mouth or written in the Word bind as well and as much as the Law of Nature written in the heart especially considering that what is spoken or written by God especially by his own finger as the Ten Commandements were is pure and incorrupt as that is not which is written in mans heart though it were so when it was first written
of worship on that day 2. It is more attended because a Sabbath is a day of rest and receding from worldly works that we may better apply our selves to divine Worship And though there be a necessary use of natural supports yet the fear of God w●ites Holiness to the Lord upon them and takes care they be so used that the Service of God may be better attended 3. It is more intended or performed with more power and vigour because our minds are or should be discharged of all those creature-cares and cogitations wherewith on other dayes on which though we leave the world a little yet we do not so take leave of it as on the Lords day our hearts use to be and that in the Worship of God encumbred and weakened yea besides this the private religious Exercises of that day both before and after the publike Service namely Meditation and Prayer make us come with better affections to it lay an ingagement upon us to stir up the grace of God in us when we are about it draw from God vertue in it and a blessing of Heaven upon it Of the third Commandement Because the Sabbath is a day appointed for the honour of God and the greatning of his Name in the publike Ordinances God is greatly to be feared in the Assembly of his Saints and to be had in reverence of all that are about him Hence it is that on the day of publik and solemn Assemblies that is on the Sabbath now the Lords day the Name of God 〈◊〉 most set up because by most and among most In the multitude of people is the Kings honour and then the multitude go to the House of God to the Temple to the Congregation wherein every one speaks of his glory Thus doth the fourth Commandement assist for the performance of the first Table 2. Of the Second Table To speak to every Commandement thereof would be too long It may suffice to say what all men may see and hear That is that on the weekly Lords day all sorts of persons are acquainted with their duty towards men by the instructions then especially delivered and are also stirred up thereunto by the Exhortations added And are or may be much furthered therein by the Repetition of Meditation and Prayer for a blessing upon such Instructions and Exhortation The fourth Commandement standeth in the middle as it were between the two Tables to be a Bond of Perfection and to link together Piety towards God and Charity towards men What is said of the Magistrate may be truly also said of the Sabbath He is and It is the Keeper of both the Tables Thus of the Commodity of the Christian Sabbath 3. The Commendation The Sabbath hath a preheminence above other dayes in regard of Gods Institution of it for each Sabbath is the Sabbath of the Lord our God and that makes it glorious in it self and hath the blessing of God annexed and assured to the observers of it And that as it maketh also for the advancement of it in it self so it giveth a reason why it should be precious to us yea the very largeness of the Law of the Sabbath and the Lords using so many words about it may shew as our weakness who need it so the weight of that Law and worth of that Day in asmuch as in a Law of Ten Words so much is said of this one Word and particular Precept It is observed out of the Hebrew Doctors That the Sabbath and the Precept against Idolatry each of these two is as weighty as all other the Commandements of the Law for confirmation whereof they add this The Sabbath is a sign between God and us for ever and that other place of Isaiah Blessed is the man that keepeth the Sabbath from polluting it Aynsworth Exod. 31.13 And sure that weekly day of our solemn appearing before our God ought to be honourable in our account That is a sign and assurance that we are Gods Covenant-people and peculiar treasure for therein lies our safety our glory and our felicity Who is it that desires not to be known by his attendants that he is Kings the Servant Well may we say also that 's a blessed and glorious day that makes the observers thereof blessed yea if by keeping the Sabbath from polluting it be insinuated or described a respect to all Religion even that also makes greatly for the honour of the Sabbath that godliness in the genera●ity is thereby set forth because thereby so much set forward It 's very observable that Gods people reckoning up in their miseries Gods mercies do mention as the chief thereof Gods Commandements and among those Laws and Commandements single out the Sabbath speaking thus honourably of it in reference to their Fathers And madest known unto them thy holy Sabbath as if there were an eminency in that above other Laws as indeed there is in this regard because as on Fairs and Markets men are furnished with commodities of all sorts so on this day principally all spiritual good things are offered with an invitation to the buying and for the enjoying of them and that good knowledge of God is more aboundantly dispensed whereby all other Commandements are better performed O How little is God known to them to whom no Sabbath is made known or that will not be made to know any Sabbath The reason whereof is because on that day of Rest and Religion there is an opportunity offered of the freest fullest and highest Communion with God without those interruptions that we have on other days by the crowding in of our earthly occasions yea and that into the inner chamber and closet of our hearts which is the retiring room wherein God is pleased to communicate himself abundantly to the faithful soul when all worldly things and thoughts are had out and dismissed for that day yea charged and as it were conjured not to disturb the intimate society of the Lord Jesus with the soul that hath found him and fastened on him Thus of the Sabbath in general As to the Christian Sabbath a great glory is put upon it in the Scripture-title it being called the Lords day and that name and title being continued and applyed unto it to this day The Lord Jesus hath put his own Name and stamp upon it It is the day of that Lord who is the Prince of the Kings of the Earth Rev. 1.5 Of the Jews Sabbath and of our Lords day there is as St. Austin speaks one and the same Lord but now is the Lords-day prefer'd before that Sabbath as the same Father speaks by the faith of the Resurrection Unto this Resurrection day is that honour given to have this said of it Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee Act. 13.33 For by his Resurrection on that day he was manifestly and mightily declared to be the only-begotten Son of God
another place If thou wouldest know how great advantage ariseth from divine Scripture then diligently examine what a vast difference there is in thy heart and soul when thou standest in the Church and when thou art at a Play or standest in the Theatre It s the same soul and yet h●w well is it affected in the one place and how much corrupted in the other I am the more willing to recite these things that Christians may see in these sad dayes wherein so many slight Scriptures what a reverent and honourable account there was of them yea and of the reading of them by the most eminent men in ancient times Fourthly The examples of Gods servants recorded and recommended in Scripture is a reason of reading Scripture for we may read their piety in the reading of it the Eunuch a man of so great authority under the Queen of Aethiopia and that had the charge of all her treasure yet had another treasure for sitting in his Charet he read the Prophet I saith something no doubt he understood and read that he might understand more The noble Beroeans are commended for searching the Scriptures and how shall Christians when they have heard a Sermon search the Scriptures best but by taking a Bible into their hands and reading them there How shall a thing be searched that is not viewed Unto which we may add the example of Timothy from a chila saith Paul thou hast known the holy Scriptures which knowing was in all probability by Reading as one special means Still the Scripture hath been dear to Gods dear children as being accounted better then gold or silver though never so much better then thousands Psal. 119.72 Sweeter then Honey though never so good and which drops of it self from the Honey-comb Psal. 19.10 more valuable then their food yea then their necessary food Job 23.12 See what a Reader Joshua was though a Prince Josh. 8.34 35. And amongst us Christians heretofore though now that first love be lamentably lost were inquisitive how much they should read every day that so the Scriptures might be read over in a year which shewed they were in the way to be truly good because the Scriptures make wise to Salvation and if they did read them with reverence and delight that shewed them to be good already 〈◊〉 being used as a good reason to prove the Scriptures are the Word of God because there was never any Book that had wisdom in it but natural wise men liked it unless it were Gods Book or Books framed out of that which shews that none can like the Word of God but by the Spirit 〈…〉 and that they that like it have that Spirit yea 〈…〉 it a clearer sign of grace to delight in reading 〈…〉 in hearing Sermons viz. in this respect 〈…〉 ●ermons there is a mixture of humane sufficiency and 〈◊〉 it is not so easily discerned whether that which draws the ear and heart of the Hearer be Gods Word or mans wit but to read and to be satisfied as it were with marrow and fatness with the pure Word of God who though he condescends to Readers weakness yet never condescends to their wantonness this shews a man or woman to be much after Gods heart Fifthly The efficacy of Scripture read is an effectual argument for the reading of Scripture Famous is the story of Austin whose conversion was wrought or at least compleated in this way for he on a time full of grief and lifting up his heart to God saying How long Lord How long wilt thou be angry with me Why shall not this hour put an end to my f●lthiness at length he heard a voyce as from Heaven calling to him in these words Take up and read take up and read Thereupon he took the Book opened it and read in th●t Chapter which he first cast his eye upon these words Not in rioting and drunkenness not in chambering and wantonness not in strife and envying But put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ and make no provision for the flesh to satisfie the lusts thereof and then read no further nor was there saith he any need for as he had made an end of reading that sentence all his doubts and darknesse did as by a light cast into and clearing up his heart suddenly vanish away Upon this occasion he remembred and relates the story of Antonius who happening to read some part of the Gospel was admonished that what he read was spoken to him and it was this Go sell that thou hast and give to the poor and thou shalt have treasure in heaven and come and follow me and upon this he was forthwith converted Aug. confess lib. 8. cap. 12 But we need not go further then Scripture to be perswaded of the power of Scripture being reverently read Upon the reading of the Law by Shaphan the Scribe Josiah rent his clothes and his tender heart was much humbled for his ear affected his heart and so may their eyes that read it themselves Yea in so bad a time as that was wherein Jeremiah lived yet the Princes hearing the words of the Lord read by Baruck were afraid both one and other And after they were come out of the captivity we find that all the people wept when they heard the words of the Law It 's true the sense was given and they were made to understand the reading but that hinders not the business in hand but sheweth the power of the Word when it is read with understanding and that the better it is understood the more powerful it is Now if the Word so work upon the heart when it is read by others why may not the same effect be wrought when a man reads it himself yea rather then because he may read it over and over again and hath more time to ponder upon it Hereunto we may add that when Christians heard that read which the Apostles decreed for the Churches resolution they rejoyced for the consolation And O how many in our dayes dwelling in the dust and in a most dejected condition have found themselves strangely revived by reading some place of Scripture which the hand of Providence hath directed them unto And what did the Martyrs in Queen Maries dayes for their mutual comfort but write over and over in their Letters those Scriptures that made most for consolation and constancy that by the reading of them they might hold up and hold out in their honourable but hard condition Sixthly It makes much for reading and studying Scripture that it is Gods way to blessedness for Blessed is he whose delight is in the Law of God and that doth meditate in his Law day and night Yea Blessed is he that readeth It 's true it is not only said Blessed is he that readeth but also they that hear and keep the words of that Prophesie but yet the reading is named and hath a part in the
and destroying Armies introduced So when it is sought outward comforts are added Matth. 6.33 How hath England flourished under Gospel-dispensations and estimations And our Eclipses have arisen and will arise from despising and persecuting a faithful Ministery of which therefore let all beware that love the common peace Psal. 122.6 4. As it shall be easier for Tyre and Sidon and Sodom at the last day then for Gospel-contemners so they that receive and reverence it shall find mercy at that day when Christ shall come to be glorified in his Saints and to be admired in all them that believe and mark why because our testimon● the testimony of Labourers among them was beleived In that day shall we rejoyce in Christians and so they in us if we have not run in vain nor laboured in vain Phil. 2.16 To conclude this let it be your care dearly beloved Christians now God hath wrought such wonders for our peace and settlement to make some amends for that shameful contempt that hath been poured on the Ministers of Christ of late by your double honour And as for those many that have departed we are more willing to say have been carryed from us and against us by the distemper of the times what shall we say but as the holy Prophet sometimes did though with some alteration Lord God of Abraham Isaac and of Israel Let it be known that we are thy servants and that thou hast brought the heart of this people back again 1 King 18.36 37. CHAP. IV. Of the Observation of the Lords-day or the Christian Sabbath THe Christian Sabbath as our Church calleth it that is the Lords-day being a matter of so g●eat importance both in respect of Christians and of Christianity as that the name of the Lord of Glory is imprinted upon it And the Primitive Christians accounted it their glorious character And the Catholick Church hath still owned it and in the best of times most acknowledged it to be a day wholly dedicated to the remembrance and service of God our Saviour I shall therefore after what hath been already spoken concerning other parts of godliness endeavour according to my ability to add something briefly and summarily concerning this great day and the duties thereof and that so as to stir up Christians to the due observation of that day and performance of those duties For this purpose I shall make choice of a portion of Scripture that fully declares the danger of profaning the Lords Holy-day It is that which is written Neh. 13.17 18 Then I contended with the Nobles of Judah and said unto them What evil thing is this that yee do and profane the Sabbath day Did not your Fathers do thus and did not our God bring all this evil upon us and upon this City yet ye bring more wrath upon Israel by profaning the Sabbath It is easie here before I go any further to foresee this Objection That a Text in the Old Testament speaking of the Jews Sabbath is improper for the establishing of the observation of the New Testament Sabbath Unto which I answer 1. More generall That whatsoever things were written afore time they were written for our learning and examples of divine Justice such as this Scripture declareth to be inflicted for profaning that which was Gods holy day then are written for our admonition upon whom the ends of the world are come to terrifie all men from offending in the like kind as here from abusing and applying to common use his consecrated time and solemn day 2. More particularly The fourth Commandement being as a remarkable part of the Moral and Eternal Law of God still in force for the holy observation of a Sabbath every week of Gods appointment unto the end of the world it will from thence follow that any thing spoken in the Old Testament concerning the Weekly Sabbath in use then if it be not proper to the Jewish people nor to the Jews Sabbath day but be prescribed in the fourth Commandement as common to each weekly Sabbath of Gods institution doth still remain in its full strength to bind the people of God in all Ages briefly What belonged to the Jews Sabbath as a Sabbath and not as that Sabbath is still in force for every Sabbath I mean for any weekly day which God appoints for his day of rest and holiness Hence it followeth also that what we find in the Old Testament about the Sabbath approved that 's for our imitation what we find reproved and punished that 's for our restraint and warning This morality of the fourth Commandement and its common aspect both on the Old and New Testaments weekly day being purposely and strongly proved by others I shall not here speak further of it but hasten to a brief opening of the Scripture before recited wherein it appeareth that amongst other gross abuses mentioned in the former and latter part of this Chapter the Sabbath also was very provokingly profaned and that in Jerusalem it self the Lords City wherein the Temple was the Lords House and wherein God himself so resided that they hid their eyes from the Sabbath in his eye-sight and by the profanation thereof he was profaned among them Ezek. 22.26 If any ask How all this came to pass Nehemiah himself gives an account of it when he saith All this while was not I at Jerusalem v. 6. The presence of a good Governour prevents impiety And Nehemiah being once come Sabbath profanation is non-pluss'd and overcome They came no more on the Sabbath v. 21. But as when Moses was absent the Calf was made so Nehemiah going after his first coming to Jerusalem and the building of the walls thereof into Persia again there were in that his absence from Jerusalem many profanations crept in which he when he returneth most zealously reformeth In particular when he saw in Judah the violation of the Sabbath and that it was made a very Market-day v. 15. his eyes affected his heart and his zeal discovers it self 1. In vehement speaking for he testified and contended against the profaners of that day v. 15. and with the Nobles that should have prevented and obviated such profananation v. 17 18. 2. In resolute acting taking order 1. For the shutting and guarding of the Gates of Jerusalem against buyers and sellers within the City v. 19. 2. For restraining them that lodged about the wall who might continue buying and selling in the Suburbs v. 20.21 3. He gave charge to the Levites also to keep the Gates to wit of the Temple Nehemiah's own servants being appointed to keep the City-gates that so nothing might be wanting on their part to keep the day and house of God from profanation v. 22. The result and conclusion of all which is an humble applying of himself to the mercy of God for the remembring of him as he by the grace of God was zealous in remembring the Lords holy
day where his confidence is also implyed and this contained that The Lord will mercifullly remember them who remember dutifully the Lords day In the two verses before te●ited v. 17 18. is contained Nehemiah's contending or arguing the case by strong and solid reasons with the Nobles who either had a hand in this evil as being Acto●s in it themselves or at least were under the guilt of it for want of being the restrainers of it being it's like intrusted with the care of such things in Nehemiah's absence This contention is made good by the great evil that there is in profaning the Sabbath day which is twofold 1. The evil of sin v. 17. What evil thing is this that ye do 2. The evil of punishment Did not your fathers do thus and did not God bring all this evil upon us v. 18. The former of these sheweth that It is an evil thing to profane the Sabbath day I use the word Sabbath not as intending to speak of or to give any countenance to the observation of the Jews Sabbath now but as purposing to speak of the Christian Sabbath and to take in that only of the Jews day which sometime belonged to it in the general nature and no●ion of a Sabbath and with respect to that observation of a Sabbath which being prescribed in the fourth Commandement belongs to every Sabbath of Gods appointment Nor do I while I make use of the name Sabbath deny the Lords day to be the more Evangelical name but I call it a Sabbath because it will never be the Lords day unless it be a Sabbath day that is it will never be a day of holy Rest unless it be a day of rest which the word Sabbath signifieth Concerning which I shall mention these three particulars 1. The Rest enjoyned 2. The thing intended in that rest to wit Holiness 3. The Extent both of the rest and the holiness it is for the whole day First In a Sabbath rest is required and that so as to do no manner of work the meaning is not that we are to abstain from sinful works only which though they be eminently unlawful on that day yet are truly unlawful any day and 〈◊〉 ●●rbidden in all the other Commandements Nor is it the meaning that we should abstain f●om servile work only that is worldly works painful and gainful which are allowed on other days for howsoever such works be in special manner forbidden as being named in the fourth Commandement yet that 's but by a Synechdoche or a figure whereby more is meant for if they only were forbidden then the Sabbath might be spent in things easie liberal and ingenuous without blame and then God should have the day no more or little more then if it were spent in servile works when yet it must be a Sabbath of or to the Lord The thing therefore required is that all manner of work be forborn by what name or title soever it be called that is ours and not Gods that depriveth God of his day or is an hinderance of that holiness which is intended in the Sabbath or day of rest Of this Rest there are divers reasons As 1. The solemnity of the day for it 's one of Gods solemn dayes Psal. 81.5 that the celebration thereof may be more fair and full by laying aside all work and the whole Creation as it were to wait on the Creator Levit 23.3 2. As in point of solemnity so In point of mercy for the relief refreshing and taking breath of the toiled creature after six dayes labour which is said of God himself after his work but it is spoken after the manner of men Exod. 31.17 On the seventh day he rested and was refreshed 3. And especially In point of Piety for the sanctification of the day in the holy services thereof and that not without need For if we look to innocent Adam albeit some question Whether the Law of the Sabbath were given to him before the Fall yet there 's no cause to question but that it would have been useful to him though he had not faln because he could not at once dress and keep the Garden and have that compleat and indistracted communion with God which it was easie for him to enjoy in a time of rest and separation from all such earthly and heterogeneal imployment But now man being faln this Rest is of more absolute necessity because both humane infirmity and corruption so compass and cleave to us that we cannot with full intention of mind be in Heaven and Earth both at once that is we cannot at the same time apply our selves intirely to matters of so different a nature and operation as heavenly and earthly things are which apparently carry our hearts contrary wayes whereof there needs not further proof then the dayly experience we have of the dividing of our hearts and the withdrawing of them from things spiritual or at least the eclipsing of them by the interposition of earthly things which if they be earthly thoughts hinder spiritual thoughts and disturb heavenly meditations if they be earthly words they cool spiritual communications a man cannot speak two different languages both at once and if they be earthly Actions they weaken spiritual exercises and thrust aside heavenly transactions For this reason Play also and Sports are forbidden for God forbids not work for the thing He likes work better then play but for the end to wit because it hinders the intire imploying of the day in holy things which Play doth much more because of a greater delight in it and for that the heart is more taken up with it and stollen as the hearts of the men of Israel were by Absaloms kisses 2 Sam. 15.5 6. from the son of David the Lord of the Sabbath by it Now Albeit there might be some rest out of the fourth Commandement appendant to the Jews day and proper to them as appertaining to their Education which I conceive it will be hard to find that which is produced for it being as probably answered as urged yet all that rest which is enjoyned in the Commandement and is necessary for Sabbath-sanctification belongeth to us as well as to them for As the observation of the Sabbath prescribed in the fourth Commandement being spiritual argueth the Law that requireth it to be both moral and eternal so with respect thereto the bodily rest also becometh moral and therefore a common and continuing thing to us as well as to the Jews Nor need this rest seem tedious if we consider what works God requireth and alloweth on the Sabbath-day As 1. Works of Religion Six dayes shalt thou labour and do all thy work saith the Commandment but on the Sabbath-day we may and must do Gods work Hence it 's said The Priests profane the Sabbath that is materially by doing those works that would profane it if God had not commanded them for his service but being that he
hath so done those Priests are blameless because those works though servile in their nature yet were sacred in their end and application Such a work was the infirm mans carrying his bed on the Sabbath when Christ had healed him The bearing of burthens on that day for worldly lucre is one of the things that Nehemiah here contends against but that mans carrying his bed became a religious action by being an appurtenance of the Miracle and an open declaration to all men who on that day did more flock together of the grace and power of God by which he was cured under this head may be comprehended those bodily provisions that are truly needful and helpful for our more able and vigorous performance of religious duties or for the glory of God some other way 2. Works of necessity to wit real not feigned and present and apparent not possible only and which may be or not be To this we may refer the Disciples plucking and eating the ears of corn whom Christ excuseth because at that time they as David needed sustenance And add thereto the other plain instance of a Sheeps falling into a pit Matth. 12.11 which they that so quarrel'd with our Saviour made no scruple to pull out on the Sabbath day 3. Works of mercy as the healing of the woman bound by Satan Lo eighten years Luk. 13.15 16. A Saviour so merciful would not stand upon healing on the Sabbath day in a case so pitiful for The Sabbath is made for man Mar. 2.27 that is the rest of the Sabbath is to give place to mans relief And though God propound to us his example of rest on the seventh day for our resting yet we have his example of working also for mans benefit for saith Christ my Father worketh hitherto no Sabbath day excepted to wit in the preservation government and for the good of his Creatures Thus of the first thing belonging to a Sabbath to wit rest Secondly The thing further and chiefly required and which is intended in this rest is holiness Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy wherein is contained 1. A reverent opinion of it to wit as the Lords holy and honourable day There will never be a good observation of it in our practise without an estimation of it in our judgement Men will not leave the world with which nature closeth nor close with God in those holy things which nature is opposite to and in the best too averse from I say they will not do this on a day and that every week which they care not for on which they see no divine character and in the service whereof they expect no divine blessing 2. A dear affection to it calling it a delight and loving to be in the spirit on that day Revel 1.10 No delight is the companion of contempt but Delight is so far from despising service that it doubleth it 3. An holy imploying of the rest and bestowing of our selves in the duties belonging to such a day This is well express'd in those considerable Articles of Ireland thus The first day of the week which is the Lords day is wholly to be dedicated to the service of God and therefore we are bound therein to rest from our common and daily business and mark what followeth to bestow that leisure upon holy exercises both publike and private Publike exercises are the principal In reference to which publike worship especially the Sabbath is as I conceive said to be a Sign that is an open de●laration Whose we are and whom we serve Jona 1.9 Act. 27.23 For it doth not follow from the word Sign that the weekly Sabbath is a typical Ceremony If it were so then it should be a sin to observe a Sabbath now since all Ceremonies end in Christ in whom notwithstanding the Christian Sabbath begins as to the day and by whom it is confirmed as it is a weekly day which the fourth Commandement requireth because he declareth that he came not to destroy the Law but to fulfill it It is not therefore a ceremonial sign any more then the signs in the Sacraments are ceremonial but rather a moral and real sign and demonstration how things stand between God and his people which will further appear by looking more narrowly into that place of Ezekiel where it is called a Sign for thus the Prophet expresseth it I gave them my Sabbaths to be a sign between me and them that they might know that I am the Lord that sanctifie them which words are also mentioned and applyed to the weekly Sabbath Exod. 31.13 15 16 17. When the Sabbath is said to be a sign the meaning is as some do most probably expound it that it is a document or an instructing Sign and that between God and his people me and you saith the Lord it teacheth and sheweth that which is common to us both to wit on my part that I am your Creator and Sanctifier on your part that you are a people by Me created and sanctified And that it is thus an instructing sign appears by the words following that ye may know as if the Lord had said Look on the Sabbath as a monument of the relation between me and you I would have you know and observe it so to be Upon a nearer view of the words it will be found a teaching sign of these three lessons 1. That God is the Lord that is that Lord who is the only true God Jer. 10.10 and that because he hath made the Heaven and the Earth v. 11 12. Which the observation of a Sabbath that is resting a seventh day every week in relation to six dayes work clearly holdeth forth for it is in imitation of that God who in six dayes made Heaven and Earth and rested the seventh who can be no other then the true God and Lord of all The second lesson is that this great Lord is the God of his Church or a God in Covenant with them for thus the Lord speaks I am the Lord your God Hallow my Sabbaths and they shall be a sign between me and you that ye may know and learn this lesson that I am your God for Why do they wait upon him a whole day every week but to shew that they own him as their God and that they believe he owns them as his people Hence the Scripture saith They sit before thee as my people and hear thy words The third lesson is that he is the Lord that sanctifieth them which may be understood two wayes 1. Of a sanctification to himself by a separation from the world so as to enjoy the priviledg of his Covenant and so the Scripture speaks Ye shall be holy to me for I the Lord am holy and have severed you from other people that ye should be mine Lev. 20.26 Exod. 33.16 2. And also of an internal renovation and sanctification in spirit and
Yea Why may we not say in some respect that it is worse to disobey a positive law then a law of Nature and that because where Nature saith nothing but God saith all there 's a greater tryal whether Gods Word his naked Will and Prerogative Royal is of any weight with us or no and in the despising of such a command a greater indignity is offered to the Supream Law-giver as if a Law of his mouth were not worth the marking unless Nature and Reason open their mouths also unto which we may add that he who disobeyeth a positive law alwayes disobeyteh a natural to wit this that it is meet and necessary that God should have his will and retain his soveraignty which by transgressing a plain precept wherein Nature can say nothing is more violated Hence that first sin in eating the forbidden fruit for the forbearing whereof being considered in it self Nature had not what to say did undo us all there being thereupon this charge drawn up against all mankind in the first man Hast thou eaten of the Tree whereof I commanded thee that thou shouldest not eat The like whereof we find in the business of the Sabbath but I instance in the former because of the weight that lay upon it and because of the resemblance there is between forbidden work and forbidden fruit by which the disobedience receives a great aggravation namely thus Was there liberty for all the Trees of the Garden and couldst thou not fo●bear one upon my precise command so Have I given thee six dayes to work for thy self and canst thou not rest with me one day Object But if the fourth precept stand still established yet all it commands is the observing of the seventh day from the Creation Answ. 1. If it be supposed that the fourth Commandement enjoyneth the seventh day from the Creation which I grant not save only in that sense which I shall afterward express yet that hindereth not but that it remaineth also firm and in force for one day in seven as well as the reason of the fifth Commandement is a moral and perpetual reason though it be delivered in a Jewish phrase and concern in the first place and in the form of words the Jewish people and therefore the Apostle to extend the force of the reason to all places and persons thus explaineth it That it may be well with thee and that thou mayest live long on the Earth as was touch'd before 2. I answer That the fourth Commandement layes down and prescribes how God would have his Sabbath observed but it doth not command or institute any particular or individual day save only in the generality that is as it falls under the general notion of being a day of Gods appointment which day of Gods appointment was well known to the Jews otherwhere and before the fourth Commandement was delivered and therefore it is spoken of in the sixteenth of Exodus as a known law and the people on the sixth day gathered twice so much bread two Omers for one man when on other dayes they gathered but one as being accustomed to observe the Sabbath at least as knowing that God required it should be observed that day being set a part for a Sabbath ever since and by reason of the Creation of the world Gen. 2.3 Heb. 4.3 And as the day the Jews observed and spent in holy rest was known otherwise and needed not to be expressed in the fourth Commandement so also the day that we Christians observe though it be not mentioned in that Commandement yet is otherwise sufficiently made known to be the day that God hath ordained for his weekly Sabbath in Gospel-times as shall appear hereafter 3. This being premised I shall grant as others do who have with much diligence and satisfaction searched into this argument that the seventh day Sabbath was to be observed by vertue of the fourth Commandement yet not as instituted there directly but as belonging to it reductively that is by way of argument and consequent namely thus One day in seven of Gods appointment is directly and for ever required to be observed as a Sabbath by the fourth Commandement Now the seventh-day-Sabbath that is the seventh from the Creation is that one of seven that God appointed from the foundation of the world till our Saviours coming suffering and rising again It therefore followeth that that seventh was for all that time to be observed as the Lords Sabbath and that by necessary collection from the fourth Commandement As in like manner our first-day-Sabbath is grounded on the fourth Commandement because it is that one of seven which God hath appointed to be observed since Christs Resurrection The sum is The genus or general name of Sabbath is common to each Sabbath day of Gods institution and so comprehends both the Jews Sabbath and ours 4. I answer as before that otherwise then thus the fourth Commandement requireth not any particular day but that which it commandeth is to come more closely to the question one day in seven in relation to six working dayes as the Commandement it self expresseth saying Six days shalt thou labour but the seventh is the Sabbath as if it had been said Divide the week and there being seven dayes in it take thou the sixth and give me the seventh and namely that seventh which I appoint and give order for And that the Commandement is thus to be interpreted may appear both by the first words thereof Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy he saith not the seventh day but the Sabbath day as also by the last words wherein it is said the Lord blessed and hallowed not the seventh day but the Sabbath day which sheweth that the main drift and intent of the Commandement was not the institution of the Jews seventh or any other particular day but of a weekly Sabbath or of one day in every week such as then was or afterward was to be specified and declared of God to be his day of rest yet such as may be called the seventh day because it must be the seventh part of the weekly time Object But it is said in the latter part of the Commandement and brought in also as a reason to observe it that God rested the seventh day whence it is thus argued That day is meant in the body of the Commandement as the day enjoyned to be the Sabbath or day of Rest wherein God himself rested But that was the seventh in order from the Creation Therefore that 's meant by seventh day in the body of the Commandement yea in the whole Commandement for God blessed and sanctified that day for the Sabbath whereon himself rested Answ. I grant that God rested that seventh day and that he blessed and sanctified it but How Not meerly as that particular seventh but as a Sabbath for so as it was but now said the Commandement expresseth it only the
but rather consider that Whatsoever things were written or acts of divine Justice recorded aforetime were written for our learning and all those things that which befel the transgressors of the Law of the Ten Commandements in former ages of the World happened to them as Types that is they are our examples and warnings and plainly lay before us what we also must expect to suffer if we do as they did even we upon whom the ends of the world are come for like sin like judgement Nor can any just reason be given why judgements of old for the breach of the fourth Commandement should not be our admonitions as well as those for the breach of the second Commandement which Paul mentioneth because there is not only much of that which is positive and not so clearly natural belonging to the second as well as to the fourth Commandement but also it is evident that as the second Precept for the way of Religion so the fourth for the Day is written among the Ten words of the Moral and ever-abiding Law of God with the finger of God himself Ex●d 31.18 That which remaineth to incite to Sabbath-sanctity is 5. The blessing and promises of God ann●xed and assured to that Day and the Observers ther●of It is said in the Command●ment The Lord bless●d the Sabbath day It 's true that he blessed that seventh day whereon he rested but not as a Seventh day but as a Sabbath day and so the blessing is entailed as it were and passeth from the Jews Sabbath on the Christian Sabbath Now what is the meaning of this blessing but that it was Gods mind that it should be honourable and glorious amongst and have singular priviledge preheminency above other days for which end therefore he sanctified it that is set it apart to be wholly consecrated to Him and to his holy Service In which way it is not only lift up and honored above other dayes and so a blessed day but is a blessed day also to the people of God by the use and benefit of his Ordinances Psal. 65.4 wherein a blessedness is laid up In regard of this Prerogative of the day of Rest and Holiness a Christian seeing that day approach hath great cause to say with an holy chearfulness Come in thou blessed of the Lord And they that appear before God on that day to receive soul-sustenance from him may say within themselves as David's servants that sought bodily relief Let us now find favour in thine eyes for we are come in a good day in the Lords great Feast-day wherein they of his Family even the whole Houshold of Faith are abundantly satisfied with the fatness of his house and are made to drink of the river of his pleasures It 's a day wherein we may be spiritually enriched for it is a blessed day the blessing of the Lord maketh rich It is a day wherein the people of God meeting and being united together in his service God commandeth the blessing Psal. 133.3 And wherein from our great Lord and head glorious high Priest the Oyl of Grace runs down abundantly as Aarons Oyl sometimes did to the very skirts that is to the very lowest of his true Members to make them joyful for it is the Oyl of gladness Psal. 45.7 and as the dew of Hermon to make them fruitful Psal. 133.1 2 3. The pre●ious promises inviting to and incouraging in the Sanctification of the Sabbath are presented to us from the mouth of the Lord by the Prophet Isaiah chap. 58.13 14. which Text of Scripture is so often made use of in this argument of the Sabbath that I cannot leave it though I have spoken much more then I thought to have done already without looking a little into it For which purpose I shall 1. Speak something to both the verses in general 2. And something to that Sabbath-Piety described v. 13.3 And then come to the Sabbath-promises v. 14. 1. Of the Text in general Wherein two things lie in the way to hinder the use that divers godly and learned Writers have made of it for establishing the Lords Sabbath-day now the Lords day 1. Some hold that the Sabbath is here named by way of allusion and by a Synechdoche and that the thing intended and designed in that description v. 13. and so in the promise v. 14. is to take men off from their own wits and wayes and to stir them up to obedience and holiness in the whole course of their lives And the truth is that in the Sabbath all Religion is wrapt up for God is eminently acknowledged worshipped professed and praised as the three first Commandements require upon that day And all other Commandements are better observed by the good knowledge of God dispensed and dispersed then especially in the Ministry of the Word acquainting men with their duties towards God and Man But we may not mistake here for albeit it be supposed that all Religion is spoken to yet it doth not follow from thence that the Sabbath day in the setting forth whereof the Text is so full is to be excluded nay rather it is thereby the better established As when a Father takes order in his last Will that his Son shall go to the University his meaning is that his Son shall be a Scholar but withall his mind is that he shall go to the University because that 's the way to make him a Scholar and therefore he expresseth nothing but that for that contains the other So it is here We may observe casting our eye upon this whole chapter that as in the former part of it the Prophet shewed their Religion was not to be placed in fasting so here he declareth that the observation of the Sabbath is not to be placed in resting to which the Jews used to ascribe so much but in the spiritual sanctification of that rest which indeed hath and ought to have an influence and to extend its vertue into our whole life to make it the more holy But now mark that as the Prophet before in his Doctrine of a Fast and his disciplining of their Fast did not exclude the day of their Fast and the observation thereof but saith plainly In the day of your Fast v. 3. so neither doth he here where he delivereth the doctrine of the Sabbath shut out the day of the Sabbath but only sheweth that the Rest and leisure of that day is to be bestowed in spiritual things appertaining to the substance and tending to the furtherance of true Religion 2. Some others may say that if the Text to be understood of the weekly Sabbath yet it speaks to the Jews only not to us and of their day not of ours Unto which it may suffice to say that as the fourth Commandement belongs to us as well as to Jews and the holy observation required there belongs to us in regard of our Sabbath as well as to them in regard of
upon the Throne of his Kingdom he shall write him a Copy of this Law out of that which is before the Priests the Levites And it shall be with him and he shall read therein all the dayes of his life Object That Command is for the King not for me Answ. 1. It 's more wise to say If a King must read the Law whose imployments are so many and weighty then I much more who may gain time better 2. Wheresoever a command is confirmed by a general reason that binds all there the command it self hath a general binding force and reacheth as far as the reason doth Now the reason of the Kings reading the Law is of that nature for this it is That he may learn to fear the Lord his God to keep all the words of the Law and the Statutes to do them that his heart be not lift up above his brethren which though it concern Magistrates more then others yet all have need enough to nourish humility especially that are in any higher place and order and that he turn not aside from the commandement to the right hand or the left These being the reasons why Kings are required to read Scripture Who shall exempt himself from it for Are not all bound to fear the Lord yea all the Inhabitants of the world are to stand in awe of him And doth not the Scripture require of all to walk in all the wayes that God hath commanded without turning aside to the right hand or the left What is spoken therefore to the King doth for the same common reasons concern all as if a King be perswaded to eat and drink that he may have strength when he goeth on his way as Saul sometimes was no man sayes That belongs to a King and not to me but every man for the same reason eats and drinks likewise This is put out of question because there is an express command to gather men women and children to hear the Law read upon the very same account that the King is called to read it that is that they might learn to fear God and observe to do all the words of that Law It 's true that Great-men and Gentlemen have some greater cause in regard of their greater tentations to exercise themselves in the reading of Scripture as that their hearts may not be lift up though God knows that divers of them who need it most use it least the more they have to answer for but it no way followeth that because a man that hath a great journey to go had need to eat more as Elijah had that therefore he may let eating and drinking alone that stayes at home 3. It may further be added that a motive to perform a duty if it be common to all is a good plain proof that the duty belongs to all and so it is here for the King is encouraged to read the Law and to observe it by proposing to him this end That he may prolong his dayes in his Kingdom he and his children in the midst of Israel which is otherwhere assured to all the people of God on the same ground according to their place and quality and in the land which they possess Deut. 5.33 6.2 Secondly The reading of Scripture is enjoyned on Ministers for to them it is said Give attendance to reading It is not said indeed to the reading of Scripture but though that be not expressed yet that it is meant appears by the following words to exhortation to doctrine that therefore is the reading principally at least intended which is helpful to a Minister for the two great parts of his Ministery Exhortation and Doctrine and what that is we find by the Apostle writing to Titus which applyeth it to the faithful Word and tells him that that Word is to be held fast and therefore to be read that he may be able by sound doctrine both to exhort and to convince the gain-sayers Object Great reason a Minister should read Scripture but that proves not that People are bound to do it His work lies there theirs other-where Answ. It proves not indeed that they should give such and so much attendance to reading as a M●nister ought to do but yet it proves sufficiently they should attend it because it belongs to all Christians as well though not as much as to a Minister to exhort and admonish which is done best in the words of Scripture yea they that have spent some good time in Religion ought to be teachers of others also I do not mean as intruding to the office of Preaching but in a way of charity and brotherly assistance And moreover since it belongs to Saints to contend for the faith committed to their trust it will follow from thence that they should have some convincing skill also for the better maintaining of the truth of God which is to be had by reading and searching the Word of God by which Aquila and Priscilla were enabled to instruct Apollo and that old Confessor spoken of in the Ecclesiastial Story to convince that subtile Philosopher that opposed Christianity in those times Thirdly The reading of Scripture is commanded the People of God generally for unto them it is said Remember the Law of Moses my servant which I commanded unto him in Horeb for all Israel with the Statutes and Judgements The intent of which Scripture is this that since they were to be many years without Prophets to preach to them Malachi being the last Prophet of the Old Testament therefore that they might neither lose their Religion nor forget their consolation they should diligently read and study the Scriptures which are called the Law of Moses not as excluding the Ptophets for under the name of the Law the Prophets are also contained insomuch that what was written in the Psalms and in the Prophet Isaiah is said to be written in the Law but as making the Law whereof the Prophets were the Interpreters and Appliers the sum of the Old Testament-doctrine to be remembered and therefore to be read the often reading thereof being the best way to keep it in mind and that by the generality of Gods people when their Teachers were gone Unto this we may add that when there were again Teachers in Israel yet our Saviour saith and he saith it to the Jews generally Search the Scriptures Joh. 5.39 meaning the Scriptures of the Old Testament And they that are bound and commanded to search a Book are sure therewithal bound and commanded if they can to see and read it We say He 's well read in a Book that hath well searched it And for the New Testament and Gospel-Word the Apostles counsel and command to Christians is Let the Word of Christ dwell in you richly Now though the Word may dwell plentifully in a good Hearer yet by hearing and reading both it must needs
God should take away Sabbaths from us I doubt not but that in all good Christians the grief would prove the delight for no man is grieved to lose what he never lov'd nor took any pleasure in I say it is thus in all good and truly godly and especially greatly-godly persons for as the man is so is his delight No marvel if the men of the world say When will the Sabbath be gone No wonder if the holy and strict observation thereof be unto carnal people and persons that savour not the things of God like Saul's Armour to David they cannot tell how to go with or undergo matters of so spiritual a nature for they never prov'd them they were never us'd to such things But on the other side the same spiritual observation of the Lords-day unto a spiritual Christian is like Jonath●n's robe and his garments even his Sword his Bow and his Girdle to the same David which no doubt he us'd and wore with much delight they being great testimonies of Jonathan's singular love to him and signs and symbols of the Covenant made with him as also the Lords-Sabbath and the Ordinances thereof are great tokens of his speci●l love to us and a sign of his holy Covenant made with us Ezek. 20.12 O why should not the Lords-day be our delight Is there not full joy in fellowship with God the Father and with Jesus Christ in the Preaching and with the Preachers of the Gospel Is not Christ who is observed to appear on that day again and again to his Disciples after his Resurrection and is still in the Assemblies of the Saints and in the Ministry of his Servants I say Is not He the desire and the delight of all Nations And who is it that is the Comforter and solace of Saints but that holy Spirit with whom the Servants of God have much to do on that day in heavenly Meditations So that if the whole Trinity Father Son and Holy Ghost can minister any delight unto us then may we call the Sabbath a delight for therein God our Creator Redeemer and Sanctifier doth eminently appear and operate This is a day very useful and subservient to all the necessities of our souls If we be ignorant in any thing or in many things on this day we are all taught of God It 's a Soul-enlightning day If we be as we are Strangers in the Earth on this day we are most taught the way to our Countrey It 's a Soul-guiding day Psal. 73.17 24. If we hunger and thirst after Righteousness the spiritual Manna falls from Heaven and water comes out of that Rock which is Christ principally upon this day It 's a Soul-satisfying day If we languish under spiritual diseases or lie low under outward calamities on this day the Lord offereth Medicines in the Ministry for all our Maladies It 's a Soul-restoring-day Christ heals still on Sabbath-days And that I may once conclude could we be in the Spirit upon the Lords-day as we ought to be or as we might be for I do not mean extraordinarily as John was but having our hearts taken up with and heightned in the pure spiritual observation of it we might have then a fair sight yea a sweet sense of that unspeakably glorious Sabbath which right and real Saints shall shortly celebrate all-together in the heavenly Canaan where there remaineth a rest or the keeping of a Sabbath to the people of God Heb 4.9 The Second Part. CHAP. I. Of Family-Duties AFter the four Christian-duties spoken of in the fore-going part I shall now proceed to four other Family-duties the first whereof because Religion is rooted in knowledge may well be Family-Catechising I say Family-Catechising for I shall not here speak of Catechising in its general extent but only apply my self to it as it is a duty belonging to Christians in their several Families which godly Exercise I shall endeavour to assist and perswade unto by Texts of Scripture first and some Arguments and Motives after Texts of Scripture to prove Catechising in Families a duty It is not my purpose here to mention every Text of Scripture that gives strength to this necessary duty but shall content my self with the naming and with the opening of two Texts in the Old-Testament and one in the New The first in the Old Testament is Deut. 6.6 7. These words which I command thee this day shall be in thy heart And thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house and when thou walkest by the way and when thou liest down and when thou risest up For the opening of this Scripture and the awakening of Conscience to a due consideration of it there comes to be considered in the first place Who it is that speaks in it even the Eternal God by his Servant Moses that was faithful in all his house Remember that it is He that saith Keep these words that I command thee this day But How must Parents keep them For to Parents and every Parent God here speaks and in answer to that question saith These words shall be in thine hea●t yet are they not only to be in the hearts of those that have Families but in their houses therefore it is added Thou shalt teach them thy children Nor was this a Ceremonial P●ecept or a Commandement given peculiarly to the Jews for their assistance in the remembrance of the Law of God as their Phylacteries-fringes and fastning the Law to their door-posts but it was and is a moral and perpetual Precept binding us in Gospel-times as well as them and therefore the very same things that we read in this Text we find also in the New-Testament That is 1. That the Word of Christ must dwell in us which is all one with this here Let it be in thine heart And 2. That it must be in our houses also for Parents are required to bring up their children in the nurture and information of the Lord In obedience therefore to this standing Command they to whom God hath given children should say as the Psalmist doth Come ye children hearken to me I will teach you the fear of the Lord And when the children be come together the Spirit of God in the Text we have in hand teacheth in what manner they are to be taught saying Thou shalt teach them diligently and in the margent of our Bibles it is Thou shalt whet or sharpen which is well and plainly expressed in the Text by teaching diligently but yet the word in the Original doth more particularly note out a teaching by way of repetition and going over and over again as men do with Knives when they whet them that so as the Knife by such whetting is more keen and fit to cut so religious Instructions by often turning and returning them on the ears and tongues of children
they shall be fat and flourishing Psal. 92.14 By these things it may somewhat appear that it is suitable to religious reason as well as to Scripture to urge those that have children and charges to instruct them in the things of God in their tender and youthful time But if there were no other argument yet conscience might be hereunto moved and perswaded by the great unwillingness which we find in our evil natures to spend half an hour in Catechising and the many devices that the Devil hath to divert it when many half hours are wasted either in vanities or impertinencies and yet we cannot but know if Religion be of any value with us that no time can be better spent then that which is bestowed with young ones in bringing them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. But to drive this further home I shall add the second branch of this Argument and that is the benefit that ariseth from this Exercise to the Church of God for therein Religion is preserved and increased by this labour of Love in respective Families Hence it was that God commanded the Fathers of old to make known the Law of God to their children That the Generation to come might know the Law and Testimonies of the Lord even the children which should be born which should arise and declare them to their children and so successively That they might set their h●pe in God and not forget the works of God but keep his Commandements It hath been an old saying Rex non moritur though Kings die yet not the King whereof we may make this use that though godly persons die yet godliness should not die and the Instruction of young ones in Families is the way to keep it alive for thereby Children and Servants being bred up in Religion themselves and setting up other Families spread it abroad and keep it up in their Families also and by them in those that come of them And this God observed in Abraham that he would command his Children and his Houshold after him that is so as that the●e might be a Religion after him and surviving him for it is added and they shall walk in the way of the Lord to do justice and judgement even as men plant Trees for Posterity ●o in every Family there should be a Nursery and religious Plantation that when they are glorified in Heaven God may be glorified on Earth by those young Plants whom they nurse up in Piety And so I come to the Motives Motives and Perswasions to the duty of Catechising 1. The example of godly Parents all along the Scripture A learned man observes that Gods Instruction of our first Parents in the knowledge of Christ in that first Gospel-promise Gen. 3.15 I say he observes that that was the first Catechism in pursuance whereof the succeeding Fathers of Families persisted whereby he proves the antiquity of the true Christian Religion This eftsoons appears in Adam whose sons Cain and Abel we find sacrificing which could not have been done in faith as ●n Abel it was but that it was bottomed on a Word and How came they to be acquainted with that Word but that Adam unto whom it was revealed in that first promise of Christ the true Sacrifice repeated it to them and instructed or catechised them in it The example of Abraham is famous who as he instructed and trained up his Servants every other way as for Civil affairs and War if need were so we are sure he taught and informed them in the ways of God How careful and fearful Job was of his children appears by his sending and sanctifying and sacrificing for them and solicitousness lest God should receive any dishonour from them all which we cannot in reason conceive to be done without his acquainting them with the knowledge of God and of Jesus Christ by whose real Sacrifice alone all those ritual and ceremonial Sacrifices were made effectual Now as Chrysostom speaks If Job were so careful before grace How inexcusable shall we be if we be careless of his Piety living under grace and having the helps that we have in Gospel-times If we pass on to Joshua his resolution is that his Houshold shall serve God with himself which serving of God hath the knowledge of God going before it as we see in David's counsel to his son Solomon it 's presupposed therefore that Joshua did therein instruct them And how came Ruth to be so deeply in love with the God of Israel but that her Mother in law Naomi brought her into acquaintance with that God when she was bred up to worship the gods of Moab But this is more manifest in the example of David that with all wisdom and gravity tenders to his Son Solomon the admonition of the Lord saying And thou Solomon my Son know thou if he ask What God the God of thy Father if he ask Is that all No but and serve him if he ask In what manner with a perfect heart and willing mind If he ask Why with such a heart and mind the answer is for the Lord searcheth all hearts and understandeth all the imagination of the thoughts lastly If he ask What shall I win or lose if I take or take not this counsel and course the conclusion and confirmation of all is if thou seek him he will be found of thee there 's the gain nothing succeeding ill but when God is out of the way but if thou forsake him he will cast thee off for ever there 's the loss which comes at last unless there be a timely return to a forsaken God to that punishment of loss and that Depart ye cursed which shall for ever grate upon the spirits of lost souls and cast-aways in the place of torment Having digressed thus far because this may serve in Families as a short and summary Catechism I return to David again and come to another clear testimony of his Instructing care for of him it is that Solomon speaks when he saith I was ●y Fathers Son tender and only beloved in the sight of my Mother He taught me also David had many sons but we find not any so much taught as Solomon and that because he was most tenderly loved to shew that the child that is loved best should be taught most and that Parents do not love their children if they leave them in the dark without helping them to the light of the knowledge of God which should guide their feet in the way of peace Besides we find here that Instructing Parents are Patterns to teach their Children by their example to be Instructing persons for Solomon brings in his Fathers Instruction with a for and as a reason why he now instructs others Nor was Bathsheba the Mother wanting in this duty but is for the same reason that is because Solomon was the dear and most desired Son of her Womb very