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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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46. Thirdly God hath made his promises to the Assemblies of his Saints Mat. 18. 20. 2 Cor. 6. 16. He will not neglect a Mat. 18. 20. weeping Hannah who prays and sobs alone 1 Sam. 1. 13. but will give her not onely a Child but a Samuel But yet God will create upon the Assemblies of his people a cloud which was the sign of his presence Isa 4. 5. And Isa 4. 5. Fourthly The prayers of the faithfull Congregation receive Deus quasi columna ignis praefulget et ostendit suis viam salutis et quasi nubes calig●rosà obumbrat refrigerat et proteg●t eos ab aellutentationis Basil Jon 2 7 8 9 10 strength from their union When all Niniveh intreated the Lord and put on sack-cloath God repents himself of that intended and threatned evil and puts his Sword into the scabbard though drawn by an open denuntiation of Judgement Jon. 2. 7 8 9 10. Prayer is the souls battery of Heaven and when these petitions are the common breathings of the whole Assembly the force must needs be the stronger and the answer must needs be the surer Though a file of Souldiers cannot take the City an Army may But Fourthly We must converse with our Families upon Gods holy day then Parents should draw out their softest bowells towards their Childrens souls and Masters discharge their most faithfull duty towards their Servants eternity But of this more hereafter We must rise early on a Sabbath for we have many good things to pursue and usually the richest lading requires the longest voyages where we look for great gain we must spend much time Now this holy day is Gods market day for the weeks provision wherein he will have us to come to him and buy of him without silver or money the Bread of Angels Rev. 22. 1. Isa 25. 6. 2 Pet. 2. 2. Rev. 3. 18. the Water of Life the Wine of the Sacraments and the Milk of the Word to feed our souls tryed Gold to inrich our Faith precious Eye-salve to heal our spiritual blindness and the white rayment of Christs Righteousness to cover our shamefull nakedness And now all things being laid together that hath been suggested how should both interest and duty awaken us right early on the Lords day for these holy pursutes that no time be drowned and lost in unnecessary sleep and sluggishness A fifth Argument to raise us betimes on a Sabbath is seriously to consider the heats of worldly men With what wakeful diligence do they prosecute the meat that perisheth John 6. 27. they rise up early and go to bed late and eat the bread of carefulness and all to grasp the shadow of a few flying and Psal 127. 2. dying enjoyments when as one saith we should be careful to rise sooner on this day then on other dayes by how much the service of God is to be preferred before earthly business There is no Master so good as the Lord is and in the end no work shall be better rewarded then his service Dr. Twisse Dr. Twisse Moral of the Sabbath 147. Reports that at Geneva they have a Sermon at four of the clock in the morning on the Lords day for the Servants and Bishop Lake wished That such a course was general as was in his Majesties Court in his time to have a Sermon in the morning for the Servants on the Sabbath day How did this holy man breath after holy Services on the morning of a Sabbath And let every one of us say seek the Lord O my Soul seek him early on his holy day Let us do as Mary Mat. 28. 1. Mark 16. 2. John 20. 1. Magdalen she was early up to seek him whom her soul loved she was last at the Cross and first at the Sepulcher in the dawning while it was yet dark very early in the morning say the Evangelists O that our love to Christ could keep pace with hers Shall we love the World better then Christ O that we were as wise for our souls as we are for our bodies Let not sleep that devourer of time beguile us of our golden hours in the morning of a Sabbath when we might have the softest and sweetest converse● with God Let the sinfull sluggard who sleeps with the Sun beams in his face this day remember the saying of Augustine If the August Sun could speak how roundly might it salute thee with this reproof I laboured more then thou didst yesterday and yet I am risen before thee to day But this is too low an Argument behold the Sun of Righteousness is risen let us not sleep as do others but say and sing with the Church Isa Isa 26. 9. Sanctus ad beatos aspirans dicit se velle jugiter deum mente et animo gerere ill●m desiderare tam nocte tam interdiu Psal 139. 9. 26. 9. With my soul have I desired thee in the night yea and with my spirit within me will I seek thee early In a word it must needs inforce us to a blush to think that the Labourer who toyles in his earthly employments should take the wings of the morning to muddle in the World and we should let the morning fly away by our sloath and carelesness and not overtake it to meet with God upon his owne holy day And sixthly let it be considered the gracious soul will long to be with God The Spouse sought Christ upon her bed and the Saint will leave his bed betimes on a Sabbath to Cant. 3. 1. seek Jesus Christ the Spouse would pursue her beloved in Sponsa interim evigilans speciebus illis non satis discussis motu brachiis expansis spon sum complaecti conata fuit Del rio the night and the Saint will not omit to follow hard after the Lord Jesus in the morning as soon as she is awake she is with God especially on his own day Psal 139. 18. Our heart is where our treasure is as our Saviour speaks Luk. 12. 34. And if Christ be our treasure our spiritual love will prevail against our carnal sloath Let us take notice of holy David with what extasie of love he was transplanted Psal 63. 1. O God thou art my God early will I seek thee my soul thirsteth for thee my flesh longeth for thee in a dry Psal 139. 18. Luk. 12. 34. and thirsty land where no water is Where there are thirsts after God there will be early enquiries for him The gracious Psal 63. 1. Soul pants after God as the Hart pants after the water brooks Now the thirsty Hart will not be so taken with Psal 42. 1 2. the green and pleasant Grass where she is lodged so as to forbear the brooks which must quench her thirst nor will the Saint be so toyled and fettered with sleep or sloath so as Psal 122. 1. to suspend his communion with God on his holy Sabbath he will tear those drowsie wit hs his
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
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
of Job 5. 15. them not one can be wanting but the defect will soon appear he hath an exact muster roll of them He calls them Job 5. 10. over continually and every Star must answer to its Name He convocates the Clouds he summons them and then m●lts them into showers and every drop of Rain alarms the Psal 147. 8. grass to rise and spring not only in the Fields Job 5. 10. Tolle animam e corpore quid fiet de corpore Peribit dissolvetur Quan●o magis si gubernationem de mundo tollas but upon the lofty mountains Psal 147. 8. So God preserves the Earth not only in its poyse and Being but in its feracity and plenty And its observable if God contract our time in the world there is no warding off the stroke of death Luke 12. 20. And if God lengthen out our days beyond what nature promises then death hath no stroke to give Isa 38. 5. In a word he that made us in the womb Job 31. 15. keeps us in the world fixes our time both for our Job 31. 15. Psal 31. 15. abode and departure Psal 81. 15. All things depend upon A deo mundum regi fateri oportet etiamsi nulla haberemus sacrarum literarum testimonia Deus est quasi anima illum sustentans Gods b●ck hang upon his hand live upon his bounty If he hide his face they are troubled and if he take away their breath they die Psal 104. 28 29. It is Jehovah who is the pillar to support the world who is the first being to give life to the world who is the Soveraign to rule and govern the world and who can not only untile but cast down this beautiful fabrick when he pleases Upon the Basis of Divine All-sufficiency the Universe resteth And Gods supporting power is not only evidenced in the world in generall but his care and preservation is most illustrious and conspicuous in the keeping and defending of Haec est illa ecclesia cujus causâ reliqua omnia condita sunt gubernantur his Church Let us observe this First In single persons Daniel is preserved in the Den Dan. 6. 22. Jeremy in the Dungeon Jer. 40. 4. Paul and Silas in the Prison Acts 16. 39. Lot among the Sodomitical Rout Gen. 19. 11. Secondly In lesser numbers the three Children are preserved in the fire Dan. 3. 25. O the admirable providence 1 Cor. 12. 6. Rom. 11. 35. of God! The Furnace shall be a field to walk in and the flames shall suspend their unkind heat and not disturb their recreation Gods providence can shadow and shelter his precious ones when designed for fuel and destruction Thirdly In particular Churches Rev. 3. 10. Temptations Rev. 3. 10. troop together and besiege the Saints but God in that hour breaks their ranks and routs them and rescues his people from those destructive Onsets Fourthly In the Church in general The Church of God was upon the brink of ruine in the time of Haman the Bill for their execution was signed and sealed Esth 3. 12 13. But then God tore the Bill and brought the promoter of it Est 3. 12 13. Esse in Deo Providentiam 〈…〉 su● 〈…〉 gare 〈…〉 qui● Ratio ejus ita cum Divinitate conju●cta est ut nullo pacto possu separari Leid Prof. to shameful ruine and destruction Esth 7. 10. God wounded the hairy scalpe of the Churches enemies Let us further trace the providence of God towards his people and it will appear nothing but a stock and treasury of wonders First His earliest thoughts of love to his people how are they a Morning star to cast light on the excellency of Divine providence He loved his own f●●m Eternity Eph. 1. 4. Every Saint lay in the womb of Eternal love before he lay in the womb of his Mother God from all everlasting laid his people near his heart Josh 21. 45. 2 Kings 9. 36. 2 Kings 10. 10 Jer 31. 3. Secondly In time God gives his precious ones a Being to capacitate them for future good things Non-entiti●s are incapable of good or evil God creates his people and so brings them upon the stage of the world to act those parts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of honor he hath designed them unto He who hath reserved love for his Saints must give them a Being to be receptive of it Thirdly In process of time God calls and converts his people and brings them home to himself by a work of Regeneration They are not only born by Gods power but Psal 113. 7. Luke 1. 52. ●ob 5 12 13. John 3. 5. new born by Gods grace and so God qualifies them for glorious things which shall be revealed 1 Pet. 5. 1. He gives them faith John 1. 12 13. And faith gives them power to be called the Sons of God Now he adopts them In toto mundo nihil est ● divinae providentiae legibus exemptum fatendum tamen est Major cura est de hominibus maxim● de Sanctis into his own Family God doth not only bring them into the outward Court of the world but into the inward Court of his own peculiar Houshold Gal. 6. 10. Eph. 2. 19. They are now his friends John 15. 15. His Jewels Mal. 8. 17. His Spouse Cant. 4. 9. The beloved of his Soul Jer. 12. 7. His chosen ones Isa 41. 8. Kings and Priests Rom. 1. 6. Thus glori●us is Gods providence towards his people Fourthly Further to trace Divine providence in reference to the Saints God preserves them in the world as a spark in an Ocean When the whole world was drowned God prepared an Ark for Noah and his F●mily and when the Gen. 7 1 Inhabitants of the world had no peni-house to secure them God provided a shelter for this holy Family When all perished in the storm they had a Haven to put into The Church of God in Egypt they were in bondage but they were in Being The Task-masters had a hard hand over them Annon hae mirabiles ecclesiae conservationes aperte declarant Deum singulari Providentiâ illam tueri but God spread a large wing over them and brought them in time out of their servitude in glory and triumph and made their way through the waves when the waters were their walls their security not their ruine When God sent his people into Babylon it was to chastise them not to confound them to humble them under their sin not to sink them under their burden these Captives at last were Conquerors Exod. 14. 29. and erected their Trophies in Jerusalem For he had thoughts of peace and not of evil to give his people an Jer. 29. 11. expected end saith the Prophet Jeremy And God seems to have tears in his eyes when he hath a rod in his hand And indeed how would Christs little flock survive if God by a Luke 12. wonderful act of providence
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
contr Valent for the gain we acquire in publick Ordinances will easily be lost if not followed with private duties It is private meditation private repetition and private devotion must fasten truth on the soul which we have heard in publick The fruit we have enjoyed in publick will presently be blasted by pastimes and sports which withdraw and James 1. 23. In Sabbato occupari nos debemus in la●dando dei nomine usque ad vesperam Concil Turon alienate the soul from the very duties it had newly been employed in Happily in the publick Ordinances we saw the face of Christ in some measure if presently we fly to vain Recreations we shall as the Apostle James speaks straightway forget what manner a beloved our Beloved was What was delivered in the Pulpit is best impressed on the soul in the Closet and secret approaches can best set home publick ordinances Our tears we shed at home must importune a Nihil efficacius est ad verbi divini fructus et spiritus sancti igniculos in n●bis suffocardos quam vel profana vel nimis mundana oblectamentorum consectatio Wal. blessing upon truths we have heard abroad It is the Observation of a Learned man Nothing more effectually quencheth the sparks of the divine spirit kindled in Ordinances then the pursuance of earthly and worldly Delights and therefore he thinks the safest manner of observing the Sabbath is not onely to sanctifie it in the publick Congregations but in our private Houses not onely in solemn Ordinances but in private Duties And if we pursue publick private and secret Duties which yet are so necessary on a Sabbath what time will be left for labour or sportfull refreshments So then the whole Sabbath must be spent with God And if the Jewish Sabbath was to consist of twenty four hours much more the Christians But the first is most true for the whole time of a Sabbath was required of them to be Exod. 20. 8. sanctified in holy duties in opposition to their own works As for the nights we dispute it not they were allowed to Mysteria Evangelii in aeternum adoranda contemplanda rest that night as well as we Now then if the Jews were bound to spend a whole day all their waking time in divine and holy services much more we Christians for we have received greater benefits we have greater mysteries of Godliness to contemplate and greater means to help us in the 1 Tim. 3. 16. contemplation Our field is larger our light is clearer our service is sweeter we have our Sabbath to behold the face Cant. 5. 10. of our Beloved and what work more engaging and complacential The very Heathens by the light of Nature gave their Gods no less then a whole day and would not suffer any work to be done on those holy dayes So Macrobius tells us Macrob. de diebus festis That the services of their Gods were partly diurnal and partly nocturnal and that the Flamines were to see to it that no works were to be done on their holy dayes Nay one of our Adversaries in this particular confesseth freely As the time in which such Religious Actions are done so that some day C. Dow p. 21. or dayes should be destinated for the more solemn performance of those actions may seem to be a dictate of the Law of Nature 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Alex. Lib. 5. Stromat inasmuch as the Heathens who had no other Guide had their solemn Feasts and set dayes in all Ages consecrated to the worship of their Gods And therefore for Christians to give less then a day is to fall short of an Heathen Nay Scaevola an High Priest among them affirmed That the wilfull Offender who observed not strictly three dayes consecrated to their Gods could have no Expiation And what a shame is it for Christians that Jupiter should have more solemn and constant worship then Jehovah that an Idol God should have a whole day but the Almighty must onely have a part the rest to be drowned in sensual pleasures or worldly toyle Heu facinus Is not this to let the light of a glow worm out-shine the light of the Sun the light of Nature out-vie the light of the Gospel Never let those Gods who have eyes and see not have more durable and continued worship then our God who is Omniscient those Gods who have ears and Psal 115. 4 5 6. hear not have more solemn adorations then our God who is a God hearing prayer those Gods who are Silver and Psal 65. 2. Gold be better served then the blessed and Holy One the God of Jacob who is an infinite spirit Obj. But if it be objected it is very tyring and tedious to pass the whole current of a day in holy services and spiritual communion and this might make us cry out with the holy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 2. 16. Apostle in another case Who is sufficient for these things To this it may be briefly replyed God because of our infirmities doth afford what may refresh and the better to bear up our bodies allows moderate sleep in the night and temperate food in the day True it was in Tertullians time a dispute whether it be not a duty Tertul. de Coronâ militis Cap. 3. to fast on the Lords day but our Saviours Apology for his Disciples in plucking and eating the ears of Corn on the Sabbath day may easily quiet that Question and blessed be the Mar. 2. 25. Lord for his allowances of love Nature even on the Sabbath hath both its Nurse and its Caterer its sleep and its provisions Men do not complain of whole dayes for the world they rise early and go to bed late and eat the bread of carefulness Psal 127. 2. they do not say all the week when the morning is would to God it was evening but rather in the evening wish it were morning again to go after the world afresh Nay we find many in their sinful wayes are unwearied and when Isa 56. 12. 2 Tim. 4. 8. Rev. 3. 21. Cant. 8. 14. Montes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sunt sedos Angelorum Beatorum coeli sunt mansiones civium Coelestium Del. Rio. one day is past they fix upon the very next day with enlarged resolutions And shall Heaven with its Crown of Righteousness its Throne of Glory its ravishing Felicities and mountains of Spices no more influence us but that one day spent in the pursuance of it should seem tedious and burdensome and we should impatiently wish would the Sabbath was over that we might again busie our selves in in the affairs of the world It is strange that neither divine command nor divine rewards should clip our wings but that we will be flying even on the Lords day into the pleasing embraces of a sensual delight or secular emolument Many of Gods Servants the Excellent of the earth and the darlings of
mention of Kings and Magistrates of Publick Authority Cities places of publick Receit The good keeping of the Sabbath procures publick benefits opens the store-houses of blessings to Cities and Nations it is the rise and spring of Epidemical happiness And our own Nation formerly in the strict observation of Gods holy day did tast the sweetness of these Cataracts of mercy it lay under national happiness and prosperous abundance to the wonder and astonishment of all the world nor was our felicity in the wain till the Inhabitants of this Land grew loose and careless on Gods holy day and then it fell under the shadows of sore and dismall afflictions and our Sun was darkned and made the world wonder gazing at its Eclipse They are full of stability so the very words of the Text And this City shall remain for ever Mercies they are more Heb. 7. 25. Christus in coelo orat pro nobis tanquam Pontifex Hap. sweet by how much they are the more stable Duration it felicitates and enriches every possession Christ is the chiefest good because he ever lives to make intercession for us Those sweets are pretious which are permanent and therefore the grace of the spirit is more valuable then the Gold 1 Pet. 1. 7. of Ophir for Gold is perishing Gold Now these promises 1 Pet. 1. 18. are of permanent good things and so the more transcendent The holy observation of the Sabbath it intails Vrbi erit salva sivere et piè colat deum idque testatur observatione Sabbathi Calv. mercy and blessings on a Person upon a Family or a City Mercy shall not be our physick but our food It lengthens our dayes of prosperity If thou wouldest put thy owne name and the names of thy Family into a long lease of Grace and Favour be very strict in Sabbath Observation They are full of impartiality Sabbath-holiness shall shed a blessing on City and Country so the Text They shall come from the Cities of Judah from the places about Jerusalem Jeremias hic planè signifi●at communem f●re hanc b●atitu●inem tot● populo from the Plain from the Mountanes c. This blessed performance of Sabbath sanctity it shall prosper the Citizen and the Country man the Shop the Farme the Cottage nay the poor inhabitant of the mountanes who hath but a shed or a Cave to shelter him shall not be exempted the dewes of this benediction The holy observation of Sabbaths knows no distinction of persons They are full of spirituality They shall bring burnt offerings and sacrifices and meat offerings and incense so the Text. The due observation of the Sabbath shall procure soul-mercies affluences for our better part the sweets of Ordinances divine Influences rich Graces coelestial Communications not onely the redundancies of outward prosperity Jerusalem florebit templu●que mirè frequentabitur but the participations of better prosperity It shall fill our understandings with light our minds with refreshment and our hearts with joy They that have delight in the Sabbath of God shall find delight in the God of the Sabbath Christ shall be their Paradise We have now seen what treasures of temporal and spiritual riches are laid up in this blessed Scripture and what need there any other bait to catch our affections to love and keep Gods holy Sabbath This duty is an heir of the sweetest promises such a duty as may seem to carry the Key of Gods choysest treasures about it God saith to him who holily observes his day as once Ahasuerus said to Hester What is thy request Esther 5. 3. and it shall be given thee Indeed not a holy sigh not an affectionate prayer not a savoury discourse not a heavenly duty not a divine meditation which is shot up to Heaven on a Sabbath day shall lose its reward Holy sacrifices are then more especially a sweet smelling savour in the nostrils of Gen. 8. 21. God It was a rare promise God made to the Eunuch who kept his Sabbath Isa 56. 4 5. the words run thus For thus saith the Lord to the Eunuchs that keep my Sabbath and choose the things which please me and take hold on my Covenant Isa 56. 4 5. even to them will I give in my house and within my walls a place and a name better then of sons and daughters and I will give them an everlasting name that shall not be cut Nomen i. e. memoria fama gloria Hanc enim filii parentibus conciliant off Thus if Eunuchs keep Gods Sabbath God will repair all their contempts in the World and they shall be had in everlasting remembrance and though their grave bury all the memory of them in silence because they have no progeny to bear up their name yet their name shall be engraven in Gods house which shall out-vie the duration of the most numerous off-spring Nay the Lord as if he was unwearied in making bonds of love to the holy observation of his Sabbath makes a rich promise to the very strangers so Isa 56. 6 ● the Text Isa 56. 6 7. the words are these Also the sons of the strangers that joyn themselves to the Lord to serve him and to love the Name of the Lord to be his servants every one that keepeth the Sabbath from polluting it and taketh hold of my Covenant even them will I bring to my holy Mountane and make them joyful in my house of prayer their burnt offerings and their sacrifices shall be accepted upon my Altar Here God makes a three-fold promise of the best kind viz. spiritual to the very strangers who keep his Sabbaths undefiled First They shall enjoy the Ordinances I will bring them to my Holy Mountane saith God Those who sanctifie the Sabbath they shall not want a Sabbath to sanctifie they shall Isa 25. 6. Per convivium medullatorum ●en intelliguntur carnales sed s●irituales deliciae et summae voluptates enjoy seasons of prayer opportunities of love means of grace and feed upon the fat things of Gods house Gods Sabbaths are fastned by an holy improvement and fledged to be gone by a careless abuse Nothing so ensures our Sabbaths as a conscientious observation Secondly They shall be refreshed by Ordinances I will make them joyfull in my house of Prayer Prayer shall be their Paradise hearing their Heaven meditation their Triumphant flight Sacraments their savoury meat which their souls shall delight in All the Ordinances shall be as the holy Alymbecks Gen. 27 4. to drop sweetness into the soul of him who undefiledly keeps the Sabbath Thirdly They shall be accepted in Ordinances God will fill the Temple where they meet with smoake they shall have sure signs of his presence fire shall fall down upon their 1 Kings 8 10 sacrifices as a testimony of Gods acceptation And all this the very strangers shall enjoy those who are not inoculated into 1 Kings 18 38. a Jewish stock but
Shall we prepare no more for a Sabbath that bright spot of time God gives us for our souls then for another day Will we approach the Princes presence with the same disregards we will converse with the Peasant Esther purified Est 2. 12. and perfumed her self with Oyle of Myrrh and sweet Odours before she came into the prefence of Ahashuerus and shall our Families have no holy anoynting no divine quickning before the day come we must enter the presence of the King of Kings nay the God of Kings Shall there be nothing to put a Selah upon a Sabbath Eve Let us take some time the evening before the Sabbath to teach our little ones the holiness and Solemnity of a Sabbath let us tell them how jealous God is of his Sabbaths what severe punishments he hath overtaken Deut. 6. 7. those with who have violated his holy day Let us Numb 15. 36. bring up our servants in the Holy Trade of Sabbath observation let us leave it upon their Consciences the night before the Sabbath how accurately and carefully God will be served on his own day and inform them what it cost Aarons Sons for offering strange fire Governours Lev. 10 3. of Families should take pains with those subordinate to them in begetting an awe upon their hearts and so fit them for Sabbath duties Surely we should more solemnly prepare for the day of the Soul then for the dayes of our Calling for the services of the Sanctuary then for the gains of the Shop God's day gives us a more solemn summons then mans day doth And now having thus prepared our selves in the discharge of the forementioned duties let us retire our selves to our rest and let the hand of faith draw the curtains about us and so quietly repose our bodies till the approaching Psal 4. 8. morning of Gods holy day and how that must be passed and solemnly observed comes next under our most serious discussion CHAP. XII It is most advised and necessary to rise early ●n Gods Holy Day DIvine providence unclasping our eyes in the morning of the Sabbath let us lose no time as we lye on our beds let us think now the Lord looks down from Heaven and bids us make haste get you up for this day I must Luke 19. 5. abide in your hearts and this day I must transact with you about the great importances of your souls When Abraham was to offer his Son in sacrifice to God He rose early in the morning and sadled his Asse and took two of his servants and Gen. 22. 5 6. Isaac his Son with wood cleav'd for a burnt offering and went to the place of which the Lord had told him And shall not we on a Sabbath morning be early up our selves and our families to go to the place where the Lord hath appointed and offer up our bodies and souls in service to God The Israelites who lay in siege against Jericho upon the seventh Josh 6. 15. day they being to compass the City seven times the text saith And it came to pass on the seventh day that they rose up early about the dawning of the day and they compassed the City after the same manner seven times Upon the Lords day we are today siege to Heaven and to compass it many times and to plant our batteries by holy and invincible prayer and therefore we should be early up And there are two things which would much advantage this duty viz. rising early on the morning of the Sabbath First A timely going to rest the night before It is too common a fault among Christians and Professors too for them to clog themselves the night before the Sabbath with a multitude of worldly busin●sses which causes them to sit up late hence in the morning when they should be up with God they lye sleep-bound in their beds Secondly An intire love to the work of the day that follows Alas we have too little love to the Lords day work and so but little list to be at the work of the day Were there love to it we should long to be at it Our minds run Pius se paritè● velle jugiter deum mente animo ge●ere illum colere illum desiderare tum nocte tum interdiu Alap upon the things we love We should think of the Sabbath even in the night time and we should catch the very first hour of the day with my soul have I desired thee in the night and with my spirit within me will I seek thee early saith the Prophet to God Were we for several months kept without a Sabbath how would our spirits spring at such a days appearance Why should the Commonness of the Sun-shining Isa 26. 9. and the Sabbaths coming diminish the mercy How should we every Lords day morning have our minds mounting and say behold the Sabbath of the Lord it is come it is come Now there are many Alarums to awaken us betimes on the morning of a Sabbath and to throw off carnal sloth and fleshly case Let us eye Christs pattern he rose early from the Grave even while it was yet dark before the Sun had guilded the World with its bright appearance On the morning of his Joh. 20. 1. Resurrection the Sun of Righteousness prevented the Sun of Mal. 4. 2. Mar. 16. 9. Nature Can we indulge our sloth on the Sabbath morning and think of Christs Resurrection He was up early to save us and shall not we be so to serve him shall not we take the wings of the morning as the Psalmist speaks and Psal 139. 9. retaliate this kindness of our Redeemer That Christ arose from the dead there was the truth of our redemption that he arose early there was the love of our redemption Christ's longing to arise and finish our work should enforce us to rise betimes to set upon his Job saith the morning stars sang Job 38. 7. together Our meeting with Christ on a Sabbath morning will make the sweetest musick When carnal sloth surpriseth us let us survey the History of Christ and as he left his tomb let us leave our down betimes Let not the Sun of Ortos●le i. e. ad or●um appropinquante Cyr. Righteousness shine in our faces with our curtains drawn about us May I not here expostulate Is the Disciple greater then his Master Betimes he left his lodging and shall not we The Master among us doth not usually rise before the Servants In a word Love to the Spouse to the Church made Christ betimes draw the curtains of his grave and let love to our Husband to our Duty to our Souls cause us betimes to draw the curtains of our beds so shall we seasonably Orientem solem adorant Persae adore this morning Sun Let us hear the clamours of the soul The Lords day is the souls market day the souls fair day its term time its Mr. Rogers busie opportunity for the
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.
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
Son too He takes upon him the rags of our flesh and they are farther torn by sorrows and afflictions and at last dipt in bloud How Christ glosses upon his own love Joh. 15. 13. and sheweth us that death was the most sincere testimony and the most superlative Character of entire love his wounds dropt more love than bloud his arms spread upon the Cross were stretched out for amicable and Cùm inimici essemus reconcil●ati sumus deo per sanguinem filii sui et Christus mortuus es● pro ●●●cis et si nondum q●i●●m amantibu● sed tam●n jam amatis Bern. amiable embraces There was a threefold Inscription upon the Cross of Christ I will only a little invert it let it be this The wisdom of the Father the love of the Son and the Salvation of sinners Christs heart was full of love Joh. 10. 15. He lays down his life it is not forced from him Ioh. 10. 18. he deposits it as the pawn of his affection Christ dies for his friends saith Bernard happily not yet loving him yet already beloved by him The mercy of God did most illustriously shine in the glorious work of Mans Redemption The Apostle Rom. 5. 10. Rom. 5. 8. assures us that Christ died to reconcile enemies to his Father and what would have been the issue of enemies how bitter Coristus ex charitate suâ et Patris pro ●ohn injustis et malefactoribus peccatoribusque mori voluit Christus ergo longe omnem omnium hominum charitatem superat et transcendit Alap in Rom. Ezek. 16. 6. their portion how full of wrath their Cup how sure their slaughter Luke 19. 27. But Christ comes to die for us in this low and lost condition Ezek. 16. 6. when we were ready to receive the reward of enemies when we were falling by the hand of Justice as so many enemies How sweet and seasonable was this pity and compassion we had all the Characters of misery upon us which are fastned upon the Church of Laodicea Rev. 3. 17. we were blind miserable poor and naked both helpless and hopeless then Christ redeemed this dying Captive crew by the ransom of his bloud and as the price of his death Our Messiah must die for us when nothing else can help us and his wounds must bleed to stanch ours his bloud must be our balsam his Corrosives our Cordials his fresh wounds must cure our festred ones Heart-breaking pity and mercy brings our beloved to the slaughter when mankind was ready to drop into the flames Alapide observes There was more charity Gen. 42. 25. ●en 44. 1. and pity in one Christ dying for sinners then there can be bowels in all mankind Joseph in pity preserves his Family from famine Christ in softer bowels preserves his people from raine The wisdom of God was greatly seen in the work of mans Redemption in this work there was apparent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 3. 9 10. the manifold wisdom of God as the Apostle speaks all the embroydery and artifices of rare contrivance and wisdom Omnes illae ●ultae variae e●p●gnantes inter s●r●tiones quibus us●s ●●t deus in redimendis elect●s Christo conjungendis omnes haerationes ab aeterno definitae fuerunt in divino consilio admirabilem vere 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fuisse aeternam Dei sapientiam Zanch. in Eph. Zanchy observes that many seeming contrarieti●s and contradictions were reconciled in the Redemption of mankind Jew and Gentile dissevered in Name Nature and Priviledge are copulated in the same Gospel with the joyful news of our Redemption by Christ God and Man at an infinite distance united in the same person of Christ who is our blessed Redeemer Justice and Mercy in a mutual antipathy one to the other meet and kiss each other in the same work of our Redemption What an efflux of wisdom was this that the Son of God should die to free the Sons of men that so the Sons of men should become the Sons of God what rare contrivance of divine wisdom That justice should be executed and yet mercy no way impaired that justice should over-take the surety but mercy should be displayed to the sinner that our pardons should be written in anothers bloud our favours should lie in anothers smiles our persons clothed with anothers robe of spotless righteousness Rom 13. 14. 2 Cor. 5. 19 20 Heb. 7. 25. Rev. 1. 5. Christus jam vivit non sibi sed nobis nostram causam agens in conspectu dei that our Prayers should be heard upon the account of anothers intercession Heb. 7. 25. That our souls should be cleansed in the bath of anothers bleeding Rev. 1. 5. All these methods of interwoven wisdom may be both our wonder and meditation Christ is the wisdom of his Father 1 Cor. 1. 24. not only as he was his Son and his Character but as he was our All-sufficient Redeemer The power of God did eminently appear in the work of our Redemption Love brought Christ to the grave but power Heb 9. 14. brought him out of the grave Justice laid the weight of sin upon Christ but power sustained him under that burden Simplicius est res postulat de ipsâ Christi divinitate intelligere hunc phrasm aeternum scil spiritum quae nisi aeternam fragantiam humanae Christi victimae ospirasset utique satisfactoria pro mundi peccatis aeternaeque justitiae meritoria esse non po●●isset Par. which would have crushed men and Angels into nothing It was nothing but Almighty power which supported Christ and carryed him effectually and gloriously through the work of mans Redemption which must necessarily be exerted to sustain Christ under those effusions and chataracts of divine wrath which were poured out upon him and to raise him from that grave where he lay breathless for an appointed time What but omnipotency could break the bonds of death and petarre the Sepulchre to make way for the Resurrection of a glorious Redeemer CHAP. XXI God exceedingly to be praised in his works of Grace and Glory LEt us meditate on the morning of Gods holy day upon the works of grace Now divine grace may be taken in a Rom. 8. 28. Rom. 9. 11. Eph. 1. 11. Eph. 3. 11. double sense First Either for grace the cause which is nothing but the favour and good-will of the Lord his rich grace and mercy folded up in purposes of eternal love and therefore the Apostle 2 Tim. 1. 9. joyns Gods purpose and his grace together Gratia ab aeterno data in decreto scil Dei praedestinatione et haec donandi voluntas absoluta est et irrevocabilis Alap to evidence his gracious purposes of favour which he had from eternity towards his dear Saints These methods of grace are various and admirable The rejection of the Jews and the calling in of the Gentiles the different dispensations used in the Church before the Law under the
spirit who is our intercessour within us And in correspondence to this blessed Trinity there Rom. 8. 26 27. are three species of beings who enjoy glory the glorious God the holy Angels the glorified Saints and thus meditation may tune the morning of a Sabbath and the musick may sound all the ensuing day CHAP. XXII God is most illustrious in his Bounty and Presence WE must meditate on the morning of a Sabbath not onely on the nature of God on the attributes of God and on the works of God but likewise on the bounty of God and his indulgence in giving us his Sabbath Our very work on this day is our reward our spiritual duties are our greatest dignities O what an honour what a favour what a happiness doth God vouchsafe us in giving us this golden season David though a King and the Head of the Psal 84. 10. Psal 42. 2. best people in the world esteemed it an honour to be the lowest Officer in Gods house Psal 84. 10. The ordinances Psal 63. 2. of God are called our appearing before God Psal 42. 2. The fruition of them is as the seeing of his face Capernaum Deut. 4. 7. because of them was lifted up to heaven Mat. 11. 23. Who can tell what honour it is to appear in the presence of this King Or what happiness to see his lovely countenance In the ordinances of God the Christian hath sweet communion with ravishing delight in and enflamed affection to the blessed God if in them he tasts God to be gracious and hath the first fruits of his glorious and eternal harvest Well might the Protestants of France call the place of their publick meeting on Gods holy day Paradise Ordinances are heaven in a Glass and the Londs day is heaven in a Map O the bounty of God in giving us this blessed day This day is to be valued at a high rate therein we enjoy fellowship with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ we have tasts of the Spirit and feel the influential impressions of his grace we are going up the stairs till we come to the highest loft of 1 Joh. 1. 3. Psal 34. 8. glory The Jewes call the week dayes prophane dayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but the Sabbath a holy and precious day The Greeks call week days working dayes but the Sabbath is a day of sweet rest Other dayes are common and ordinary dayes but this holy Sabbath is the chief of dayes Many daughters have done vertuously but thou excellest them all Many dayes as Lecture Prov. 31. 25. dayes Fast dayes Thanksgiving dayes have done vertuously but thou O Sabbath excellest them all Well might the good soul run to meet thee in the morning and salute thee with a Come my sweet spouse thee have I loved for thee have I longed and thou art my dearest delight How far then Honos ne sit onus nec verba spiritus verbera carnis should we be from accounting the Sabbath our burden and our attendance on Ordinances upon that blessed day our task or bondage O let us not esteem spiritual opportunities our fetters but our freedom Think what the Phaenix is among the birds the Lyon among the beasts the Fire among the elements the Prince among the Subjects that is the Lords day among other dayes Wax in the shop is worth something but wax put to some Deeds is worth thousands Ordinary dayes are wax in the shop but the Lords day is wax put to the deeds Upon this day Christ carries the soul into his wine-Cellar and his banner over him Cant. 2. 4. is love Can. 2. 4 5. Upon other dayes Christ feeds his members but on this day he feasts them on other dayes they have their ordinary dyet but on the Sabbath they have their exceedings on this day Christ brings forth his living waters Gen. 43. 34. his best wine Joh. 2. 10. His finest bread his Benjamins Haec visio non est personalis et Jacobi solummodò consolatio sed commune piorum solamen ut de praesentiâ et divino auxilio dubitemus Par mess On the Lords day Christ pitches his Tabernacle among us we are as it were taken up into the mount with God there to be transfigured before him Mat. 17. 2. When the Lord appeared unto Jacob in a vision by night he saw a Ladder erected between Heaven and Earth and the Lord on the top of it the Angels ascending and descending by it and when he awoke How dreadfull saith he is this place the Lord was here and I was not aware surely it is no other Gen. 28. 16 17. then the house of God and this is the gate of heaven Are not Hos 11. 9. our places of assembling the very gates of heaven In our Deut. 33. 3. solemn assemblies is there not a ladder erected between earth and heaven and is not the Lord at the top of it The gracious Sicut deus sanctus est sic etiam populum sonctificat et servat et in medio eorum est et apparet Riv. instructions which we receive are they not so many Angels descending The gracious motions which arise in our hearts upon meditation on Gods word upon thanksgiving to God or rejoycing in him or else sorrowing for our sins are they not as so many Angels ascending And have we not then great cause to be filled with admiration and holy gratulations to God for Sabbath indulgence for his rich bounty in the donation of his blessed day On the morning of the Sabbath let us meditate on the presence of God Many miscarriages are acted by man and many miseries do seize upon man for the neglect of this ever Deus totus oculus est et minima videt August seasonable meditation A solemn consideration of Gods presence would restrain us from sin would quicken us in duty would draw out our graces would compose our spirits and cast a holy awe upon us which things would be inductive of much fruitfulness and piety When we sin we forget Gods eye is upon us when we flag in duty we do not think God is nigh to us when we trifle away Sabbath we do not remember Gods hand will certainly be against us Now there is a two-fold presence of God There is a more general presence and God is present every where Deus presens est 1. Per Essentiam Psal 139. 12. 1 Chron. 28. 9. First By his Essence and so he fills all things 1 Kings 8. 27. and thus he fills heaven with his glory Earth with his goodness and Hell it self with his power and justice Secondly God is present every where by his knowledge so he beholds all things 2 Chron. 16. 9. Light and darkness 2 Per Cognitionem night and day are all one to him Psal 139. 12. He seeth the very imaginations of our hearts His eyes behold and his eye lids try the children of men Psal 11. 4.
souls benighted by darkness by the appearing of the true morning star Rev. 22. 16. are lead out of this darkness into his marvellous light 1 Pet. 2. 9. and being fettered before are loosned and enfranchised into the glorious liberty of the Sons 1 Pet. 2. 9. Rom. 8. 21. of God Rom. 8. 21. The rich and rare benefit which we commemorate on our Sabbath is Christs rising from the grave when he conquered death pinnion'd Satan locked Necte natus est Christus nocte captus et sole obtenebrato mortuus est sed illucescent die resurrexit ut ostenderet quòd gloriosâ suâ resurrectione c. up the gates of Hell perfumed the grave and became the powerfull cause and great exemplar of our resurrection I cannot let slip the Elegance of a learned man who takes notice That Christ was born in the night apprehended in the night died when the Sun was darkned and wrapt up in Cypress and Sables but rose at day break when the light began to appear to intimate that the dark shadows of our sins were put to flight by his glorious resurrection and eternal light of righteousness did compass us as with a garment The Jewish Sabbath and the Christian agree in this That holiness to the Lord is written upon the breast-plate of Exod. 28. 36. both both must be inviolably and spiritually observed to God Purity and sanctification is the beauty and comliness the end and answer of b●●h There was a time when the Jews were so exact in the observation of the Sabbath Ex Rabbinis refertur quod in die Sabbati non licet pomum admovere carboni aut vinum super sinapi pulverem mittere aut allium quod edere velit decorticare c. Munster that they screwed up the pag ●oo high and the string broke into superstition their own Ra●bins aver that to put an Apple to the fire to take a Flea which was skipping from one part of the body to another to peele Garlick to eat to climb a tree to break down a bough c. was reputed amongst them altogether unlawfull nay such minute trifles which the learned man gravely asserts are more foolish then the toyes and jests of Sicily Indeed these over-zealous Rabbins thinking to make the Sabbath more specious made it more ridiculous and put black spots upon it instead of making it more beautifull yet thus much we may learn that the over-plus of Ceremonies implied their exact observation and their niceness and superstition did strongly imply there was much religious devotion as the guilding of the frame speaks the choiceness of the picture However we may confidently conclude that the Jewish Sabbath was encompassed with a hedge of thorns that neither secular labour nor sensual pleasure nor sinfull practice was to break in to prophane Ter paenam capitalem infligendam violatoribus Sabbatum exprimit deus per Mosen Riv. it And God was very zealous of his Sabbath that it might not be polluted when the transgressour was to be punished with no less penalty then death Exod. 31. 14 15. And which is observable not riot but work on the Sabbath not lust but sweat was punishable with the loss of life Nay God did see the least wrinkles in the face of the Sabbath Nec est quod quis de supplici● gravitate conqueri debuerit quia contemptus dei nunquam potest nimis gravi supplicio vindicari Riv. and took notice of the least defilements if it was but the gathering of a few sticks Num. 15. 32. And this example was in terrorem for greater dread and terrour to others And Rivet animadverts That eternal death in the Scripture mentioned is threatned to obstinate sinners But to slide down to Gospel times Holiness doth not less become the Christian Sabbath we may hear by the thunder and see by the lightning of Gods judgements upon Sabbath breakers how jealous God is still of his own day the change of the day from the seventh to the first opens no gap to looseness gives no dispensation to sin or sensuality The day is changed but the bonds are not broken our tie is as strong as that of the Jews to the strict and holy observation of Gods blessed Sabbath If the Sabbath was to be kept holy in the times of the Law much more in Gospel-times The fourth Commandment binds us as forcibly as them and it is our Obstinatis autem ut in omnibus peccatis eternam mortem fuisse denunciatam non inficias imus Riv. glasse as well as their directory our chain as well as their bond it is still Remember to keep holy the Sabbath day Exod. 20. 8. whether it be the seventh day or the first Gospel light may make sin more shameful not more venial more hateful and not more excusable And if Sabbath-pollution was matter of complaint heretofore in legal times Ezek. Ezek. 20. 13. 20. 13. To act the same sin under Gospel-grace is a more prodigious crime Purity certainly is the decency of the Lords day The love of Christ in rising for our justification Rom. 8. 34. should in no wise make us more wanton but Rom. 8. 34. more obedient And as the Jewish Sabbath agrees with the Christian in many particulars so in several things we may discern a difference First They differ in this There was a multitude of appendices and impositions which did clog the Jewish Sabbath Exod. 16. 22 27. Exod. 35. 3. Numb 15. 32. Exod. 16. 29. Acts 1. 12. all which are taken off from the Christian to make the yoak more easie and lightsome to the bearer The Jews on their Sabbath were not to gather Manna nor to pick a few sticks or to kindle a fire nay they were not to stir out of their places And in after times they were only indulged to travel a Sabbath days journy which some learned Expositors Buxtorf lib. 3. p. 100. confine to a mile and others stretch it out only to two Thus God was pleased to pinnion and streighten the Jews Sabbath with a multitude of burdensome circumstances and Communio nostra est cum Patre Filie ejus In Patre in Christo sunt omnia vera Caelestia bona Zanch. a failure in any one of them was very prejudicial to the offendor But Christ rising from the dead did not only loosen the bonds of the grave but of the Sabbath too Those circumstances which did load the Sabbath of the Jews are now like knots plained off like darker shades which are now blown away And the Lords day is freed from those fruitless ceremonies and is wholly to be spent in sweet communion with the Father and his Son Jesus Christ John 1. John 1. 1 3. 1. 3. Our Christian Sabbath hath not its fetters on but holy liberty is its character and Shibboleth Our stages are not laid how far we shall go on the Sabbath if pure Ordinances are our errand Holy Christians went many
cares the body shall not be wasted with toyle nor the spirits spent with labour or the heart torn with griefs but soul and body shall be calmed into an eternal quietation The Apostle saith Heb. 4. 9. There remains therefore a rest to the people of God The Greeks call it a Sabbatism our future Sabbath and Rest being all one When the Apostle wrote his Epistle to the Hebrews the rest of the legal Sabbath was over and the rest of Canaan was first disturbed by Nebuchadnezzar and upon overthrowing and quite taking away by Titus the Roman so now then there remains onely a rest in Heaven a heavenly Sabbath for the people of God In this life our Laudabile Sabbati otium sanctorum vitam requie et sanctificatione exprimit tum futuram ostendit cùm omni hujus vitae curâ de positâ bonis aeternis fruimur Cyril Alex. Sabbath it self is disturbed sometimes with vain thoughts with deadness and coldness in duties it is disquieted with the iniquity of our holy things we cannot pray as we would and we do not hear as we should we often displease Christ at his own table when we come with polluted hands and unprepared hearts and when duties are over we either dash upon sins of omission or rush upon language or practices unbecoming the Lords day there is still something to discompose our spirits our hearts are sad and our moans are great but however the week treads upon the heels of Sabbat●m Coeleste est requies illa Coelestis patriae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our Sabbath and then like the Sons of Adam we get our livelihood in the sweat of our brows then we toyle our brains harden our hands and weary our bodies and all for that which is not bread Isa 55. 2. And besides as Master Herbert that sweet and excellent Poet observes our Sabbath doth but leap from seven to seven it flies away and then recurs in a constant revolution One Sabbath passeth over and we must press through the croud of weekly and worldly Rabbin affairs which will make us sweat and faint before we attain Isa 55. 2. to another But our Sabbath above is A rest from sin In it we shall enjoy absolute purity and spotless perfection we shall there be a Glorious Church Excitat sibi Christus ecclesiam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 multo decore et gloriâ illustrem non habentem maculam peccati aut rugam vetustatis Alap not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing Eph. 5. 27. Sin cannot dwell in Heaven with God it is impossible if Achans wedge one sin disturbed the whole Camp of Israel John 7. 11. How would one sin disturb the Court of Heaven It would put a damp upon all the triumphs of it there cannot be perfect joy where there is the least relique of sin A rest from troubles and afflictions In our heavenly Sabbath there shall be no groans but musicks no sighs but songs no tears but triumphs not a drop of the waters of Marah in a whole ocean of joy and satisfaction if any grief remain'd our joy would not be full The Saints in glory shall be freed from natural afflictions They shall hunger no more nor thirst any more Rev. 7. to 16. Rev. 7. 16. to which accords that of the Prophet Isa 49. 10. The Isa 49. 10. Saints cannot hunger in their eternal Sabbath for the good Shepherd of our souls doth not onely f●ed us to eternal life Psal 16. 11. but likewise in eternal life and there he shall feed us with fulness of joy with the smiles of his face with the fruits of his love and with the over-coming influences of his grace and favour And moreover the Saints cannot thirst in glory The Lamb shall bring them to living fountains Rev. 22. 1. of waters Rev. 22. 1. They shall have waters for their necessity Rev. 7. 17. Rivers of water for their plenty nay pure rivers of water for their greater extasie and these rivers of water shall proceed out of the Throne of God and the Lamb for their superlative complacency Nor shall the Saints Eternal rest be disturbed with pressing afflictions All tears shall be wiped from their eyes a Isa 25. 8. sentence mentioned three times in Scripture Isa 25. 8. John 7. 17. Rev. 7. 17. Rev. 21. 4. As if every person in the Trinity Rev. 21. 4. would severally assure the Saints of future undisturbed felicity A learned man observes this phrase of wiping tears from our eyes is a metaphor taken from tender mothers Lacrymae malorum sensu exprimuntur who give their breasts to their infants when they cry for want and then wipe off their tears from their pretty cheeks which were bedewed with that emblem of sorrow Tears Altera foelicitatis pars est quòd nullis miseriis aerumnis molestiis hujus praesentis vitae obnoxii erimus Malorum immunem esse maximum est bonum cujus Author deus est Par. are those drops which fall when the fire of affliction is put under the sense of some evil the feeling of some corroding sorrow squeizeth them out as the extremity of pain makes the patient sweat But such oppressive calamities shall not seize upon the Saints in their Sabbath and Rest above here indeed they are in a valley of tears but one tear shall not interrupt the joyes of the glorified Saints The Psalmist saith Psal 30. 6. Weeping endures for a night but joy cometh in the morning and when the Saints are arrived at their rest above all night is past to return no more the morning is begun to pass away no more The Saints Eternal Rest shall not be disturbed with privative afflictions There shall be no more death Rev. 21. 4. Rev. 21. 4. Isa 25. 8. 1 Cor. 15. 57. John 3. 16. Then death shall be swallowed up in victory 1 Cor. 15. 57. and it shall rally no more to do any execution upon the Saints in glory Our Sabbath in heaven is eternal and therefore our life is eternal Indeed here below death is alwayes Sabbatum hoc coeleste est sempiternum sicut omnia alia bona quae ad perfectionem pervenerunt Musc to be expected Job 14. 14. But above death is never to be dreaded there that King of terrours as Job calls it Job 18. 14. hath lost both his Scepter and hs Sithe both his force and his prevalency There is neither fear nor expectation of death in glory were it not so it would turn those rivers of pleasure memorized by the Psalmist Psal 36. 8. into Psal 55. 4. salt and unpleasant waters and upon the very possessions of heaven would be written bitterness in the latter end But faith in Christ gives us eternal life John 3. 16. A full assurance and security against the approaches and seizures of death or conclusion Perfection which is the character of the Saints future condition excludes and denies all
as they came to them like the Beasts in Noahs Ark they went in unclean and they came out unclean how necessary then is it that we should pray for a firm memory to record sacred truth as well as a free heart to entertain it Fourthly Let us on the morning of a Sabbath pray for a tender conscience to fall down before the power and force of the word Conscience is the strongest Fort for the word to take it is the most unruly patient for the word to cure Oftentimes the word takes the ear nothing is more musical Ezek. 33. 32. The word takes the tongue nothing more commended then the Preacher and the Sermon Ezek. 33. 31. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sua vitèr Nay the work taketh the affections Mark 6. 20. Herod that miscreant Prince heard John the Baptist gladly Nay often the word takes the judgment nothing is accounted more rational The fickle Jews were convinced never man spake as Jesus Christ John 7. 46. But all this while conscience lies asleep and is not awakened from its dream Conscience all this while is as fast asleep in the bosom as Jonah in the ship Jon. 1. 6. and nothing minds the storm Conscience may be seared 1 Tim. 4. 2. and so feel nothing of the sharpness of the word conscience may be defiled 1 Tit. 15. and so mind nothing of the m●ssage of the word conscience may be evil Heb. 10. 22. and so fling away from the warnings of the word and therefore how should we beg of God that conscience may be impartial in waiting upon holy Ordinances A yielding conscience is the best auditor at a Sermon This was Josiahs praise he wept and Sacrae Scripturae sic exaratae sunt ut scire volentes sciant et litis studiosi ansam litigandi facillimè arripiant Camer was tender at the hearing of the Law 2 Chron. 34. 27. The soul lies in a fair way to life and Salvation when conscience blushes at the reproof of sin when conscience startles at the hearing of judgment when conscience is convinced of the necessity of Christ and of the beauty of holiness and that only a holy life leads to a holy God Indeed the principal work of the Gospel is to deal with conscience and it is the great work of God himself in the Gospel to rowse Non periclitor docere ipsas Scripturas ita dispositas esse ut moteriam subministrant etiam haereticis Tertul. conscience from its sleepiness to quiet its rage to take away its prejudices and to bring it into a calm temper that with meekness it may receive the engraffed word which is able to save the soul Jam. 1. 21. Men of polluted consciences can arm themselves against the assaults of the word now that we should lay down the weapons and submit to the force and power of truth this is to be begged by sollicitous and importunate prayer Fifthly We must intreat the Lord that the fruit of all Cingulo veritatis ornantur qui veritatem in moribus assequuntur Qui omnes res amandas et amplectendas per veritatem per virtutem virtutis verum dictamen metiuntur Quid enim humilitas Quid charitas quid patientio quid ●aeterae virtutes nisi lumina veritatis Ansel his holy Ordinances may appear in our lives The life of Ordinances lies in living Ordinances our sanctity only commends the Sanctuary to hear the word speaks some profession but to live the word only speaks Religion It is very observable that all those Israelites who heard God speaking from Mount Sinai the ten Commandments not living up to the tenor of those ten words as Moses calls them Deut. 10. 2. they all fell in the Wilderness none but Joshua and Caleb came safe to Canaan The sight of Physick doth not cure the patient but the application The word doth not advantage us as it is musicall but as it is medicinal as it is taken inwardly and heats the corrupt heart and the cure will easily be seen in a fruitfull conversation We then become the Gospel when holiness is our dress Those Sermons are most fairly printed which are most conscientiously practised A Sermon of charity is best seen in our alms a Sermon of self-denyal is best seen in our carrying the Cross A Sermon of Repentance is best seen in our tears and reformation To be only hearers of the word is to put a cheat upon our souls Jam. 1. 22. and make the Minister not the Physician but the Mountebank Practice is the shining lamp of the Sanctuary Exod. 27. 20. It was observed among the Jews that they were exact in turning Rom. 3. 2. over the leaves of the Bible and none more incurious to understand John 5. 39. the mind of the Holy Ghost in those sacred pages or to conform themselves to the commands of those divine Oracles they were like some heedless persons who gaze upon a tree but never turn up the leaves to see what fruit is underneath that they might feed upon it for support and satisfaction Such Jewish spirits too too many we have among us who like oscitant and negligent workmen who have their tools about them and set upon no piece for the exercise of their Art But it is rare and worthy when we hear things to be done and do things to be heard That knowledge is best which is practical when the understanding Psal 119. 105. impresses the will as the seal doth the wax and Mat. 7 17. so leaves characters of worth and holiness Our Saviour calls them blessed who hear the word and keep it Luke 11. 28. The hearers life is the Preachers best commendation The true use of Ordinances is not only to increase our knowledge but to regulate our practice The Law is a rule as well as a lamp A sinfull life will unravell all our profession and expose that puppet dressed up to scorn and derision Seneca observed of the Philosophers That when Boni esse desierum simulac docti ●vaserint Senec. they grew more learned they grew less morall This is more venial in a Heathen Philosopher then in a professing Christian We must desire the sincere milk of the word that we may grow thereby 1 Pet. 2. 2. Indeed the word must not onely be the light of our minds but the treasure of our Psal 119. 111. hearts which treasure must be spent upon works of piety and holiness The Lord Jesus makes it an infallible Character of our love to him if we keep his Commandments John 14. 15. First Christ doth not say if ye hear but if ye do my Jam. 2. 22. Rom. 2. 13. Commandments hearing is onely a step towards Religion a good wish for heaven the Scribes and Pharisees heard Qui servat legem dei verè testificatur se non simulate sed verè et sincerè amare deum Zanch. Christ who afterwards brought him to the Cross It is a sharp speech of the holy
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
collections for the poor every Lords day 1 Cor. 16. 1 2. A consecrated day being fittest for a consecrated dole the week day being the seeds time the Sabbath the harvest for Christian charity This sacred stock as one calls it which is laid up in the week day will be put to the highest and the holiest usury on the Lords day if the hearts of the poor be filled with food and gladness and the backs of the poor wear the livery of our bounty Just Mart. Justin Martyr speaking of the order of Christians upon the Lords day in his time affirms That Almes are given Chrysost in 1 Cor. 11. Hom 43. according to the discretion of every man for the relief of the poor the fatherless and the banished Chrysostome observes that the duty of charity is most seasonable on a Sabbath because it is a day wherein God appears in his best and largest bounty to us then he gives us his sweetest ordinances then he enricheth us with Gospel priviledges then he drops Qui aliquià recondit et thesaurizat pauperibus hic sibi ipsi thesaurum comparat et coelo reponit Alap down upon us his divine graces In our Churches at this day the poors bread is set up for distribution on the Lords day which imports the sweet correspondency between that day which is a day of love the duty which is an act of charity A learned man takes notice that this custome of relieving the poor on the Lords day was grown obsolete at Constantinople till the worthy Chrysostome restored that commanded duty And this custome well becomes the Sabbath for what are we but Almes-men at the throne of Gods grace on the time of Gods day Indeed the Sun of Righteousness as on this day arose and scattered his beams of light and love and the world rejoyced in that appearance let us scatter our hounty and laudable charity on this day that the poor Conferre in pauperes debemus in diem dominicum Buc. may rejoyce in our seasonable contributions Let us remember the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 16. 2. we render it laying by but it is treasuring up He that layes up and treasures for the poor layes up an everlasting treasure for himself And let us consider charitable words are not enough the love of the tongue only is flattery not charity it is adulation and not affection Words are cheap and the pities of language Nehem. 8. 10. Johannes Archiepiscopus are at no cost or charge The belly is not filled with roseat phrases nor the back cloathed with the embroydery Alex●n●●●nus 〈…〉 eò plus al●●nde recipi●b●t hinc ipse Deo dicere solebat videbo Domine quis citiùs deficiet an tu mihi dando an ego ali●● distribuendo Alap of indulgent language only to bid the poor be filled or be cloathed is not compassion but dirision And therefore on the Sabbath our love must be the charity of the purse and not only of the lip we must act good works and not only give good words Faith acts not without love Gal. 5. 6. and love acts not without works Heb. 13. 16. When we are blessing God on a Sabbath let the poor be blessing us it will be sweet harmony when our heart and the poors loyns both praise God together On the Sabbath we must appear before God Psal 42. 2. And the Old Law commands us not to appear before God empty Deut. 16. 16. Charity on any day is Silver Bullion but on the Sabbath is Golden Ore Let us therefore on that holy day feed the hungry refresh the thirsty receive strangers cloath the naked visit the sick and comfort those in prison this will redound to our account in that day when acts of Charity are the recorded Mat. 25. 36. characters of a sincere and sympathizing Saint Mat. 25. 35. And happily capacitate us for the donative of a Crown There is Charitas Corporalis Mercy and Charity to the bodies of others It is recorded of our Saviour that usually upon the Sabbath he visited the Sick healed the Criples Mar. 1. 30 31. Insigniora miracula edidit Christus in diem Sabbati Athan. restored the Blind and in this he leaves himself a president to others and a pattern for holy imitation We meet with divers Miracles which Christ wrought on the Sabbath on this day the eye of his pity guided the hand of his power his strength and his sweetness both conjoyned in acting and on this day Christ would be both Pastour and Physician And in his miracles on the Sabbath divers things are observable 1. He cures all varieties he healeth partial and external distempers Mat. 12. 13. he healeth the most durable and Nihil extrà legem fecit Christus curans in die Sabati Iren. lasting distempers John 5. 8. he healeth the most chronicall and habitual distempers Luke 13. 10 11. he healeth the most threatning and drowning distempers Luke 14. 4. Nay Christ on the Sabbath dislodgeth Satan himself Mark 1. 34. Diabolus vocatur potestas aeris quia in Aere miscet ventos tonitru fulgura et in A cre i. e. in mundo inter homines potestatem suam exercet eos tentando et vexando et quoquo modo nocendo Aquin. Satan at his word shall fall as lightning though he be Prince of the Air and God of this world Christ casteth out many Devils on the Sabbath Legions of Spirits are but atomes which scatter at his rebuke and disperse themselves after new enquiries Thus all varieties of diseases are cured by Christ on a Sabbath and will ye know why upon this day because this day is a season of shewing mercy 2. That which is observable in Christs cures upon the Sabbath is he justifies all his Cures as the sanctification and not the prophanation of the Sabbath Luke 13. 15 16. Works of mercy are the perfume not the pollution of a Sabbath not its eclipse but its observation And this Christ shews by the custome of the rigorous Jewes themselves and Magnae est stultitiae prohibere hominem à sanatione in diem Sabbati Theoph. by the light of nature Luke 14. 5. Christ is the Lord not the Task-master of the Sabbath And mans weale is to be carried on that day by cures as well as ordinances and the sick bed as well as the sick soul is to be visited Mercy is the sweetness and the epiphonema of a Sabbath Iraeneus avers that the true sanctification of the Sabbath Vera Sabbati sanctificatio est in operibus misericordiae Iraen lies in works of mercy We then keep the Sabbath when we are pitiful to our own souls and to our brothers body and we may serve God on that day as well in a dungeon in visiting a prisoner of Christ as in the sanctuary in waiting on an Ordinance of Christ Iraeneus observes Christ did more works of Charity upon the Sabbath then upon other Multò
to bind conscience Others have raised the Jewish Sabbath out of the grave of Christ to walk as a Ghost up and down the world when the Lords day hath for more then sixteen hundred years been its peaceable successor And thus Satan hath every way endeavoured to invalidate the power and ecclipse the glory of the blessed Lords day the holy observation of which he is the greatest enemy of And to this day this Apollyon and Abaddon a destroyer in any language attempts Rev. 12. 9. nothing more industriously then to draw men into a sluggish and sinful frame either to idle away Sabbaths or to spend them profusely in riot and prophaness How many proud persons waste the Sabbath at a Glass or dressing box How many intemperate persons drown their Sabbath Eph. 5. 18. 1 Pet. 4. 3. in luxuries and excess and are fill'd with wine instead of the holy spirit How many are catched at the bait of a Procul abjiciamus impura carnis opera et insanum voluptuandi studium Wal. mad eagerness after pleasure and delight as Walaeus calls it But let us watch against all these wiles and depths of Satan And indeed we should double our guards for there is not an Ordinance but Satan attempts to evacuate and make it a barren womb and a dry brest to the soul If Joshua stand before the Lord Satan will be at his right hand Zach. Rev. 2. 24. 3. 1. He cursedly ●nvies all our converses with God and would raise a cloud and thick darkness to hinder the transmissions of divine love Now he cannot beat life out of the Ordinance prayer will be a prevailing duty maugre Satans malice and therefore he would beat love out of us he would take us off by his snares and enticements either he would disturb us by his temptations or charm us by his perswasions or disengage us from holy and close communion with God by his flatteries and insinuations This Serpent for his subtilty and Lion for his cruelty will like Tertullus Gen. 3. 1. 1 Pe. 5. 8. Luke 22. 31. to Paul Acts 24. 5. attempt us most forcibly when we are pleading the cause of our souls in holy Ordinances on Gods holy day If the Sons of God present themselves before the Lord Satan comes among them Job 1. 6. If we attend in hearing the word the wicked one comes and is Mark 4. 15. ready to catch away the seed which is sown in the heart Mat. 13. 19. Satan enters Judas at the Passeouer John 13. 1 Thes 2. 18. 27. and some Divines assert at the Sacramental Supper How often doth Satan raise noise and disturbance to divert our thoughts and damp our desires when we are engaged in holy prayer that so our distractions may sower and disaffect our most melting devotions And therefore let us cast our selves upon this threefold experiment Let us Petition the Lord to fetter and chain up this roaring Lion so to muzzle him that he may be a Lion without a paw and a Serpent without a sting God cannot only tread Satan non deponit Odium sed vertit ingenium et cruentas inimicitias ad quietas convertit insidias Leo. Satan under his own but under our feet Rom. 16. 20. He can pinion Satan with a check and a rebuke Zach. 3. 2. He can chase him away with the prohibition of a word Mat. 4. 10. He that can bind Satan for a thousand years Rev. 22. can shackle him for a few Sabbaths Satan is a cruel but a conquered enemy Heb. 2. 14. He is a wolf in a chain Now prayer cannot only obtain the good spirit but Apostolus ait Deus conteret satanam sub pedibus nostris ut indicet infirmitotem nostram et salutem can restrain and bind up the evil one and bridle both his injections and disturbances and if thou prayest that thy enemy strike not Christ will pray that thy faith fail not Luke 22. 32. to shield off the fiery darts of the Devil Eph. 6. 16. And to stand against the wiles of the evil one Eph. 6. 11. Brayer can exercise the evil spirit fasting and prayer can Acts 26. 18. 2 Cor. 2. 11. cast Satan out of our bodies Mark 9. 29. much more out of our duties Resist the Devil It is the Apostles counsel 1 Pet. 5. 9. and the benefit will be He will fly from thee Now this Satan vetus hostis est cum quo praeliam gerimus sex mille annorum complentur ex quo hominem Diabolus oppugnat omni genere tentandi et artes atque insidias deficiendi usu ipso vetustatis addidicit Par ex Cypr. lib. de Exhort Martyr ad Fortunat resistence must be made by resting upon Christ by faith so taking in Christ as our second in the encounter and being fixed in holy resolution as the Apostle hints in the fore-cited Text. It is true as Paraeus observes out of Cyprian Satan is an old and experienced enemy but the shield of faith can secure us and the sword of the spirit can subdue him Christ put him to flight with a Scriptum est It is written Satan only batters yielding combats The bird is easily caught which flies into the snare His fiercest stroks are avoided by repulse We best resist him when we will not admit him into parley Let us remember he is the God of this world and so cannot interpose for hurt in spirituals unless we give him the advantage If he be a Prince it is of the Air 2 Eph. 2. And so by his own power cannot endamage us in things heavenly and divine He never conquers but when we let fall the weapons We never lose but give away the Victory and his insultation is the reward of our pusillanimity Let us not tempt the tempter by a frothy and slight spirit Indeed corrupt hearts are his territories and claim Satan maketh his greatest rapes on wandring and light spirits he Gen. 34. 1 2. is Beelzebub a God of flies who buzzes about vain dispositions Psal 108. 1. with his troublesome assaults and therefore on Gods Luke 11. 15. blessed day let us say with the Psalmist our heart is fixed Psal 57. 7. our heart is fixed Psal 57. 7. If our hearts are centerd in God we are above the attachments of the evil one Foolish men usually meet Satans temptations but being immured in Ordinances and onely minding Christ in our devotions this common enemy chained at Christs Cross as Origen speaks will leave us as he did our Master and dear Redeemer Mat. 4. 11. We must watch our Corruptions they are never so violent in their sallies as on Gods own day Pride will go in the most garish dress on the Sabbath and many happily will study more to bring a new fashion then a new heart into the Congregation Vlcerous consciences on this day will quarrel with divine truth or at least with the messengers of it Corrupt wounds will not endure the
indeed how much do these Sons of Belial cloud Gods blessed day with their deeds of infernal darkness But there is another generation risen up in our present Incessimus diei dominicae eversores sub praetextu libertatis Christianae ut bodie sunt Anabaptistae Prof. Leid age who sub larvâ pietatis under a pretence of religion attempt to over-throw and wholly to subvert the Lords day and yet they are so passionate in their love to the Sabbath that they would have every day a Sabbath As he said would all the Lords people were Prophets Numb 11. 29. so these wish all the dayes of the week were Lords dayes They think they give Christ too scant measure to give him but one day in the week they conceive our whole life should be a continual Sabbath And thus the Devil according to his wonted custome turns himself into an Angel of light that he 2 Cor. 11. 14. may the more undiscernedly deceive and beguile incautelous souls But the work of this Chapter will be to ferret this opinion out of all its lurking holes and to shew that the feigned sanctity of these pretenders is only a vain pretence Multitudo medi●orum interfecit Regem for by a seeming multiplication of Sabbaths they annihilate the true Sabbath and thrust it out of the world And as it was once said of the Graecian Emperour when he was sick that a multitude of Physicians killed the King So a multitude of pretended Sabbaths will destroy the true one which Ignatius calls the Queen of dayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There is some difference among Divines upon whom to father this demure fancy this feavourish zeal which runs over into all kind of absurdity The learned Professors of Leyden affix this opinion upon the Anabaptists and in downright terms call them the over-throwers of the Lords day notwithstanding with guilty Adam they run among the trees to hide themselves from the charge of the truth and think to take sanctuary in the notion of Christian liberty Dr. Twisse that mirrour of learning layes the brat at the door of Swenkfeldus as if he first gave new life to this old errour and received it by a large stride from Manes the father of the Manichees who threw this wild fire up and down in the Primitive Church against whom holy Augustine planted his batteries with glorious success Yet the Reverend Twisse will not exempt the Anabaptists from their share in the propagation of this pestilential errour Walaeus one of the Leyden Professors tells us that the Anabaptists turn the fourth The Manichees of old made all days equally holy under the Gospel Mr. Shep. Commandment into a meer Ceremony and so that Sun being set we are left in the dark and so know no distinction of dayes and he assures us that the Socinians are brethren in this iniquity The learned Rivet another of the Leyden Professors in his tract upon the Decalogue gives in his free suffrage to the judgement of his Collegue Walaeus The Familists likewise have set to their shoulder to carry on this work of Satan to level all dayes and so depose the Lords day Merè ceremoniale esse quartum preceptum ac proinde per adventum Christi planè abolitum bodiè ferè sentiunt Anabaptistae Wal. from its just royalty and honour These brain-sick persons who delight to call themselves the family of love have willingly drowned the Sabbath in the deluge of all other dayes But let it be the shame of all these Sects to make all dayes equall and equally to be regarded for so instead of Christian liberty there is brought into the Church an Heathenish licentiousness Nay the Heathen● had alwayes their set and solemn dayes nay weekly nay some of them the seventh day in imitation of or allusion to the Sabbath which first was fixed on that day and at this day the barbarous Turks have their weekly festival every Friday the first day of Quid est haec opinio nisi barbarie● petulantia Chemnit in Exam. Concil Trident. Mahomets Kingdome when he fled from Mecca to Jethrib and thenceforth constituted that day the first day of their week and of their year Chemnitius calls this levelling errour rude impudency and barbarous folly Nay it is the very dregs of ignorance not to observe that day with all due solemnity which hath so long been kept by the universal Church of God Against these Familists and Libertines many of our modern Divines have drawn up the battel wherein Truth hath gained a triumphant Victory But these spiritual levellers who make all dayes alike and would they not make all Estates alike and give no preheminence to the Lords day have some paper forts to fly unto to prevent a rout which are partly built upon pretended reason and partly upon mistaken Scripture I shall give them the full scope of their own defence and easily shew the vanity of their pleas and allegations They alledge for themselves that the fourth Commandment is meerly ceremonial and ceremonies are only for a Ceremonia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bishop Andr. time they include decay in their very name and expired ceremonies are no obligations upon us to obedience or observance 1. To this it may be replyed That no reason can be assigned why the rest of the decalogue should not follow and Quartum praeceptum est pars Decalogi in quo nihil merè ceremoniale praecipitur quum lex Decalogi est lex morilis et aeterna duabus tabulis à deo inscripta et decem verba non novem tantùm amplecti asseritur Wal. the other Nine Commandments breath out their last with the Fourth and so the hedge of Gods Ten Words being broken down we may leap over into any sin for the Apostle avers That where there is no Law there is no transgression Rom. 4. 15. Sin is the transgression of the Law as another Apostle affirms 1 John 3. 4. And the Law being expired and disanull'd the transgression ceaseth So we may covet our neighbours wife without immodesty the law against it being out of date and cassated and what a gap would this open to all licentiousness How would this turn the world into a Stews and a Brothel house For as Walaeus rightly argues The fourth Commandment is part of the Decalogue one of Gods ten words in which nothing meerly ceremonial is commanded seeing the Law of the Decalogue is moral and eternal written in two Tables by God Exod. 34 28. himself Deut. 10. 4. and is called Gods ten words Deut. 4. 13. not his nine words to intimate the indivisible Exod. 19. 16. union between the fourth and the rest of the Commandments Exod. 31. 16. Considering likewise it is a Commandment partaking Levit. 19 3. of the same priviledges with the rest 1. It was delivered with the same admirable Majesty 2. It was written with the same finger of God Levit. 23. 3. Exod. 31. 13. Jam.
ecclesiae Corinthi●cae mandetur quod à totâ Christi ecclesiâ non requiritur and therefore binds their Consciences to it And if Paul ordained it certainly he had it from Jesus Christ who first commanded him so to appoint it for he solemnly professeth That what he received of the Lord 1 Cor. 11. 23. that onely he commanded them to do If this day had not been more holy and more sit for this work of love than any other day the Apostle would not have limited them to this day nor would he have honoured this day above the Jewish Sabbath for the Apostle was always very tender of Christian liberty and would never bind where the Lord hath left his people free for in so doing he should rather make Snares than Laws and go expresly against his own doctrine and that in this very point of the 1 Cor 7. 28. 35. Gal. 5 1. observation of days Gal. 4. 10. He may give his advice indeed in things proposed 1 Cor. 7. 25. but he always distinguisheth between his own counsel and Gods command and makes the Command necessary but the other onely expedient The Apostle doth not in this place immediately appoint and institute a Sabbath but supposeth it to be so already and we know duties of Mercy and Charity as well as of necessity Primr part 3. cap. 6. and piety are Sabbath duties for which end this day was most fit for these collections because they usually Quando quidem ●postolus collectas die dominico faciendas statuit dubium non est quin praecipiat ut diem ipsum celebrent quando finem requirit quid non media ad finem du●entia praescribat met togethet publickly on this day and so then collections might be in a greater readiness and partly also that they might give more liberal●y it being supposed that upon this day their hearts were more weaned from the World and more warmed by the Word and more elevated by other Ordinances to a vigorous faith and a lively hope of better things to come and so having received spiritual things from the Lord more plentifully on this day every man would be the more free to impart his temporal good things for refreshing the poor Saints And why should the Apostle limit the Church of Corinth to this day either for extraordinary or private collections and such special acts of mercy unless the Lord had hon●ured this day for acts of mercy and much more of piety above any Et si primaria Pauli intentio scil collectam praecipere tamen quia vult illam fieri d●e d●min●co dubi●●m no● est q●●n ●raecip●●t etiam ut Dominicum diem celebrent qui enim vult finem v●lt media ordinary or common day What then should this day be but the Christian Sabbath imposed by the Apostles and magnified and honoured in all the Churches in those days It is rightly observed by Bishop White Although this Text of St. Paul saith he maketh no express mention of Church-assemblies on this day yet because it was the custome of Christians and so likewise it is a thing convenient to give Alms on the days of Christian Assemblies it cannot well be gain-said but that if in Corinth and Galatia the first day of every week was appointed to be the day for Alms and charitable contributions the same also was the Christians weekly holy-day for their religious Assemblies Thus this learned man rightly and genuinely Vedel Exercit in Ignat. ad Magnes cap. 7. draws the inference I● the first day of the week was the day for Alms it was likewise the day for Worship Chrysostom upon the evidence of this Text concludes positively That in the Churches of Corinth and Galatia the Lords day was made a weekly holy day by the Apostles for they governed these Churches at that time Philo Judaeus and Philo Judaeus Josephus relate That it was the custom of the Jews who were scattered in other Countries to make Collections every Josephus Sabbath-day which were sent by the hands of eminent persons to Hierusalem every year and for the use of the Temple and the Levits and this custom the Apostle seems to follow in the Text now under discussion in enjoyning Collections every first day of the week our Christian Sabbath to be sent for the relief of the poor Saints at Hierusalem who were oppressed by a multitude of strangers and subjected to persecutions and wants for their zeal and holy fervour to the blessed Gospel Once more if it be deman●ed why the Apostle enjoyns Collections on the Lords day Chrysostom gives us a good answer he saith That was a Sacrament-day and d●u●tless that was a powerful Argument to prompt them to liberality it was strange ingratitude to spare a little from the poor when it is considered God spared not the blood of his own Son which Chrysost is lively represented in the sacramental feast Beza observes Acts 20. 7. That Justin Martyr after he had described the order and manner of the primitive times in sacramental Administrations on the Lords day he adds That their Collections were made according to every ones free will and those Acts 1. 2. 4. Collections were distributed by the chief Minister to Orphans Widows sick persons and those who were in want for their relief and seasonable support So that this sacred custom and holy day were propagated by the Apostle to the succeding ages of the Church And indeed what better H●ctenus ex hisce tribus locis scripturae conjunctim consideratis ex communi sententiâ quam tota fore reformata exlesia ex iis constantèr colligit d●ei dominicae usum ad Apostolos esse referendum Wal. exposition of an Apostolical Precept and practise can we meet withal than the universal practise and observance of the Church of Christ VVe must then shut up this particular with what Walaeus takes notice of For these two Texts Acts 20. 7. 1 Cor. 16. 2. saith he joyned with Revel 1. 10. have caused almost all the reformed Churches to conclude that undoubtedly the observation of the Lords day must necessarily be referred to the Apostles as the Original Founders of it And let this be added That the Apostles transmitted the Lords day to the Church most probably by the immediate command of Christ most certainly by the infallible guidance of the Holy Ghost that unerring conduct of them in the affairs of the Church The Lords day is more illustrious from its eminent Title Revel 1. 10. where it is stiled the Lords day If ye ask why Augustine will tell you because the Lord hath made it This Ignat. Epist ad Magnes Euseb Eccles Histor lib. 3. cap. 21. Diònys Corinth Histor lib 4 cap 22. Cyprian Epist 59. Caeperatintereà post tristia Sabbata foelix dies qui nominis alti culmen a domino dominante trahit c. Sedul name and title was so sweet to the Primitive Church that most
midwived into the world by Apostolical precept or practise The infinite distance between the Authorities must needs conclude a vast difference between the benedictions nor can the Canon of a Council tie conscience so fast or bless the obedient so much as the Canon of Scripture our enemies themselves being Judges nor can in the least any Scripture be produced to authorize the Church to set up a Sabbath for the Christian World God usually blesseth his own institutions Prayer is powerful because He commands it Preaching John 14. 15. effectual because He en●oyns it the Sacraments comfortable Mat. 28. 19 20. because He ordains them and so the Lords Day is often Luk. 22. 19 20. bedewed with showers of the choicest love and benediction because it was Christs institution either more immediately by his personal command or else mediately by his inspired and infallible Apostles And therefore let us fall down before the force of truth and conclude the blessings of our Sabbath speak the beginnings of our Sabbath to be in Gods breast and not in mans will God usually accepting the worship at Jerusalem and not that at Dan and Bethel he loves those festivals of which himself is the Author And let us fetch a pregnant argument from Providence What signal judgements hath God punished the prophaners of Peccatum est dei●idium ● Christici●●um est summum malum spomane● infania somnus et mors anima ex sui naturâ mortem meretur grav● est onus animum deprimens cibus durus nullo stomacho digestibilis morbus pesti lentissimus putidissima corruptio Alap the Lords day with as shall be shewn more fully hereafter Now the prophaning of the Lords day must needs be a breach of the law of God or else how can it be a provocation of the wrath of God God punisheth only for sin which the Apostle saith is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a transgression of the Law 1 John 3. 4. Now if our Christian Sabbath be only a law of Man where is the positive and provoking sin in the violation of it where is the infinite evil which should so inflame divine displeasure as to pour out his fury on the violatours of it and to follow them with tremendous judgements Is it probable that God would strike so deeply and punish so fearfully and wonderfully for the breach of a Canon of the Church or a Decree of a Council It is true was the Lords day bottom'd on Ecclesiastical authority it would be a piece of disobedience to the Church to violate it but still where is the infinite evil as every sin is to stir up so much indignation in the Almighty Surely the breach of a humane constitution could never raise such storms in the world nor pelt so many untimely into their dust and oftentimes on a sudden and in a stupendous and terrible manner as shall be fully shewed hereafter And again we meet with no such tragedies in our sporting upon holy dayes and those festivals which are of the Churches appointment those dayes run waste in mirth and jollity nor do we meet with broken limbs sudden deaths fearfull diseases unexpected blindness c. the common issues of the prophanation of the Lords day to be the success and consequence of that vanity Providence then makes the distinction between dayes of the Churches appointment and that blessed day our Christian Sabbath which is of divine institution To conclude then this particular Let us cloath the Lords Quid hac die f●●icius est quâ domin●● judae●● mortuus est nobis resurrexit In quâ cultus Synagogae oc●ubuit et est ortus ecclesiae in quâ nos homines fecit surgere et vivere secum et sedere in coelestibus Haec est dies quem fecit dominus exultemus et laetetemur in illo Omnes dies fecit dominus sed caeteri dies possunt esse ju daeorum possunt esse Haereticorum possunt esse Gentilium sed dies dominica dies est resurrectionis dies Christianorum est dies nostra est Hier. day in all its royal Apparel and put on all its Jewels and Ornaments and then we shall see this Queen of dayes in all its splendour and glory A day it is of honour and renown above all dayes that ever the Sun shone in the most gloririous day that ever God created the most solemn day that ever the Church celebrated a day which Christ hath crowned with the greatest glory of any day that ever dawned upon the world It is a day of the Lords power a day of his perfection the day of his praise and glory and a day of his b●●●nty and blessings the day of his espousals and of the gladness of his heart When Christ was born the Angels celebrated that day with Songs and triumphs Luke 2. 13. When Christ rose from the dead or else why was he born Let the Saints celebrate that day with weekly solemnities and praises and not passe away their laud in a transient musick as the Angels did On this day our Christian Sabbath day there was a confluence of wonders and wonderfull transactions wrought by him whose name is wonderfull Isa 9. 6. In a word this day is the highly favoured of God a map of Heaven a taste of Glory the golden spot of time the market day of souls the day break of eternal brightness a day to be marked of thousands for their new birth day a day on which many have been redeemed from more then Aegyptian bondage a day of light of joy of love and delight a day which is truly delitiae humani generis the delight of mankind as once Titus was called Ah! how do men flutter up and down on the week dayes as the Dove on Rom. 1. 4. Luke 13. 32. John 20. 22 23. the waters and can find no rest for their souls till they come to this day as to an Arke and this day takes them in On this day the light was created the Holy Spirit descended life hath been restored Satan subdued Sin mortified Souls sanctified Cant. 3. 11. Hos 2. 19 20. Acts 13. 34. Sex praerogativae recensentur ad diem dominicum propiissimè pertinentes Beda in lib. de officiis Eccles Cap. 1. the Grave Hell and Death conquered O! the mountings of mind the ravishings of heart the solace of soul which on this day men enjoy in their dearest Saviour Our Lords day is the first day of the week was the first day of the world On it the Elements were formed the light was created the Angels were produced On it Manna was first rained down On it say the Fathers of the sixt General Council was Christ born On it did the Star first appear to the wise men who came out of the East On it was Christ baptized in Jordan by John the Baptist as the Council of Paris observe Sextum Concilium generale Constantinopoli celebratum On it saith a learned man Christ
wrought his first Miracle by turning water into wine And on this day saith Junius the Israelites passed the Red Sea on dry ground Concil Paris sub Ludovico Pio et Lothario celebratum securely by the help of a Miracle And to wind up all on this day the light of the firmament and the Sun of Righteousness first rose and appeared from darkness and death And thus the Lords day is brought to its Throne and let Jun. in Deut. all who love Christ say God save the Christian Sabbath and preserve it from the fury and rage of malevolent pers●cutors John 2. 49. from the virulent and sophistical pens of adversaries from the fancies of familistical and enthusiastical hereticks and from the blemishes and discrediting practices of prophane persons And let our fervent prayers to the Lord of the Sabbath Mark 2. 28. be that as this blessed day had a divine institution so it may be ever honoured and celebrated with a spiritual and heavenly observation CHAP. XLVII A Plea with Christians to out-vy the Jews in Sabbath-holiness and observations HAving now bottom'd the Lords day upon its Scriptural basis and given it its due and just authority let us further consider how its original may influence our practice and how its institution running parallel with that of the Jews Sabbath may over-awe our consciences and sublimate our minds to a more holy and severe observation It is a good note of a learned man If saith he The people shall be made to believe that the Lords day stands upon humane authority all the power of Princes and all the policy of Bishop of Ely Prelates shall never be able to preserve it from the peoples prophanation as we evidently see in the Church of Charles Dow of the Sabbath p. 56. Rome But Adversaries in this point are enforced to acknowledge as much as may be learned from their confessions That seeing God did require of those stiffnecked Jews burdened with the yoke of Ceremonies one day in seven to be employed in his service how can less suffice Christians who have obtained a greater measure of divine grace and who are freed from that yoke and burden Nor must we permit this Verè dico Fratres satis durum pro priè nimis impium est ut Christiani non habeant majorem reverentiam diei dominico quam Judaei observare videntur in Sabb●to Caesar Arelatensis consideration that the obligation of Christians to serve God and Christ upon his heavenly promises is greater then that of the Jews In the former times of shadows and darkness the Lords people observed a weekly Sabbath then surely we should be ungrateful and negligent of our own salvation if we should fall short of the same observation nay if we should not keep our Sabbath with greater exactness and more accurate devotion Golden talents call for quicker trading and greater priviledges summon us to a more strict obedience And indeed to come closer to our purpose what can lie upon the Jews as an argument for the sanctification of the Sabbath which doth not reach us Had they six dayes granted for their own affairs to labour and work in and is it not so with us are not we indulged with the same bounty have not we an equal latitude with them for the gain and acquest of these outward things And ours is the Lords day as well as theirs nay their weekly festival was called Sabbath from its manner of observation Exod. 20. 8. Rev. 1. 10. servation ours the Lords day from its Divine Author Gods example is as strong to move us as them our Father is our pattern and his preceding practice doth tie us as forcibly to imitation as it can do them Mat. 5. 48. The blessing of God depends upon our right observation of our Sabbath as well as it did upon their faithful discharge of Sabbath-duties and holiness obtains the birth right in Longius à ●●ebus sacris remo●enda sunt quae castis labem integris probrum et sin ceris corruptelam afferunt Festivitates dominicus honorate non mundanè sed divinè non instar gentilium sed instar Christianorum Ephr ●yr both And therefore what can be suggested to oblige them which doth not engage us One of the Fathers passionately cryes out Shall the Jews be so strict on their Sabbath which only is in umbra in a shadow and a type of something to come which only did presigure Christs resting in the grave and shall not we ●e se●ious and solemn on our Sabbath which is so in ve●tue in truth and shall endure to the end of the world Our Sabbath saith Chrysostom is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 An unmoveable law and therefore lays claim to a greater solemnization Ephrem Syrus cryes out Let us solemnize our Lords day as Christians and he thinks then he had said enough the Apostle telling us He that names the name of Christ must depart from iniquity But if we shall discuss this point more fully the Chri●tians 2 Tim 2. 19. incentives to Sabbath holiness will easily be found to have a sharper edge and a stronger byass then those of the Jews We have greater measures of knowledge The Jews lived under Star light but the Sun of Righteousness arose on our Mal 4. 2. Exod. 34. 35. Col. 2. 17. Mat. 27. 51. Sabbath day Moses his face had a vail upon it 2 Cor. 3. 13. Their pedagogy was enveloped in many types and shadows ceremonies which cast it into a twilight but when our Saviour dyed not only the veil of the Temple but of the Judaeis vetus Testamentum est velamine obductum ut non videant internam ejus lucem Novo Testamento Christus hoc velamen abst●lit tanqu●m à lege Novâ Alap type was rent Now here our Saviours rule takes place To whom much is given of them much shall he required Luke 12. 48. And the Apostle saith 2 Cor. 3. 14. But the minds of the Jews are blinded for until this day remaineth the same veil untaken away in reading the old Testament which veil is done away in Christ Our knowledge then is far greater then theirs our ministration of the spirit is more glorious 2 Cor. 3. 8 9. Now much knowledge as it doth amplifie guilt so it doth engage duty as it is a greater weight to sin so it is a sharper spur to service the light of knowledge most properly guides us in the way of holiness And shall we who live under the light of the most glorious Gospel be out-done Illuminatio Evangelii est sublustre quiddam et praegustus cl●rae lucis et 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 etiam gloriae divinae quae revelabitur in caelis Theoph. in Sabbath-holiness by them who had but our dawnings who only fed upon the crumbs of the bread of life We see Christ with open face they only through the Prospective of a type or a ceremony by the light of a
burnt offering and indeed what information could they receive from the slaying of a sacrifice Let not them O Christians who groped in the dark keep better Sabbaths then we who live in the Sun-shine Our means being greater our light brighter our Gospel beams stronger let our services on Gods blessed day be more sublime and accurate And it is observable our light sprung upon our Sabbath to bear stronger Ma● 16. 2. Mat. 28. 1. witness against all deeds of darkness on that day O let us then pity the Jews incapacities and testifie to all the Natitions we live under the Gospel of Christ because we are so strict upon his own day As we are endowed with more knowledge so we are embraced with more love then the Jews were The love of God to mankind was never so fully revealed as in these latter times Heb. 3. 2. John 3. 16. And hereupon undoubtedly it is that our Saviour Prophet● docuerunt ut Prophetae i. e. ut homines futura de Christo et ecclesiâ dei praenunciantes et praevidentes obs●ura Jam verò in lege novâ Christus filius dei qui clarè vidit et penetravit omnem Patris sapientiam non docet sicut membra corpori et sic Prophetae Christo cedant professeth That from the time of John the Baptist the Kingdom of Heaven suffers violence and the violent taketh it by force Mat. 11. 12. To such an height of devotion hath the love of God manifested in his Son inflamed his true Servants Indeed love is the genuine incentive to obedience now we have warmer love as well as clearer light then the Jews which doth strongly engage us to stricter Sabbaths then they were accustomed too They had Christ in a type we had him in truth they had him in a shadow we have him in substance they saw him afar off in a promise but we saw him bleeding on a Cross dying for our sins and rising again for our justification Rom. 4. 25. Rom. 8. 34. They saw Christ through the lattice and we with the window open they beheld him behind the cloud but we when the cloud was broken away And what is the inference Let this endearing love inspire us with g●eater zeal upon the Lords day that we may travel further in Heavens way on Apparuit dei potentia in creatio●● d●i sapientia in re●um g●bernatione sed benignitas miserico●diae apparet in Christi humanitate Bern. that blessed season The love of a Father caused him to send down his Christ the love of a Christ caused him to lay down his life the love of the spirit causes him to bring home his work to a believing soul and this love of the Trinity should constrain every Christian to the holy observation of the Lords day When we understand how strictly sometimes the Jewish Church kept the Sabbath let the fire of love set us all in a flame and let the blushes of shame recruit our resolution concluding we have tasted deeper of the sweets of John 3. 16. John 10 17. Christs unspeakable love And if thou lovest Christ keep his Commandments John 14. 15. And among the rest the f●urth The Jews were tolerated in some things offensive which will not be permitted to us as in case of Polygamy so Jacob Gen. 29. 28. 1 Sam. 30. 5. ● Kings 11. 3. David Solomon holy and excellent men had their variety of wives and yet we read not of the thunder of a Ne quis adulteretur aut fornicetur Deus in remedium concupiscentiae instituit honorabile matrimonium illud cuivis amplecti licet Si eo relicto adulteretur quis aut fornicetur inex●usabilis sit ideòque à deo judicandus et damnandus Alap in Hebr. threat or the thunder-boult of a judgment falling upon them for that fact and practice There was something of a connivence God seemed as the Apostle speaks in the times of ignorance to wink at that un●●stifiable procedure Acts 17. 30. But now in Gospel-times this plurality of wives incurs the penalty of the law of the land much more of the law of God and is a sin most scandalous and abominable well becoming the brutishness of a Turk or the barbarism of a Gentile Well then to come nearer to our purpose spots are sooner discerned in the garment of a Christian we have no shelter of connivence to fly unto if we break the law of marriage the Apostle tells us plainly Whoremongers and Adulterers God will judge Heb. 13. 4. And so in the law of the Sabbath we have no toleration to plead or connivence as a skirt to be thrown over the breaches of it If we Christians break the Sabbath we are arrested by divine wrath without any bail or mainprize nor can we expect any suspension of divine displeasure Indeed God will something bear with offences in the duskish time of the law but he will Mat. 10. 15. scourge those very sins with scorpions in the times of the glorious Gospel Our tie therefore is not only stronger but our Mark 6. 11. interest and reason is clearer to engage us to Sabbath-holiness It will be more tolerable for the people of Israel and Luk. 10. 12 14. the inhabitants of Judah in the day of judgment then for Christians who shall presume upon Sabbath-violation The Gospel is a constant alarm to holiness There is no profession of the Gospel without an abju●ation of all sin and uncleanness 2 Tim. 2. 19. The Gospel adds weight to every sin sin under the Gospel is like Adams transgression which was acted in Paradise a place of pleasure and abundance of purity and undefiledness it is like the sin of the buyers and sellers in the Temple their sin was inhaunced by Rom. 13. 12. the place Gospel light and love adds Vinegar to the Gall John 3. 19. of every offence Greater then must be our breaches of Gods holy day our prophanation of it must be of a scarlet dye and Heb. 12. 14. of a crimson tincture the poor Jews had never the argument of a Gospel to urge Sabbath-obedience or to inhance Sabbath-guilt they were in the Night Rom. 13. 12. The Nox●●● te●pus ante Christ●m plenum terebr● infidelitatis peccatorum sed dies est rempus evangelti quo sol justitiae lucis suae radios toto orbe diffundit Praesente jam Christo et luce evangelii in hoc die opera tenebrarum abjicere et honestè ambulare et Christianè vivere debemus Cypr. 2 Cor. 4. 4. Mal. 5. 15. Cant. 1. 7. day-spring from on high never visited them but our day shines bright upon us which clears up our way to sanctity and holiness Let not Christians then under a pure purifying Gospel under a Gospel ●hich will both discover and condemn every evil way under a Gospel which was indited by a holy Spirit which leads to a holy life which suits with a holy heart let not such brutifie
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
20. Luke 24. 41. The day of 2 Sam. 23. 5. Christs rising from the dead was a day of joy and gladness Ille est primus dies in quo deus tenebras ut materiam cum mutasset mundum effecit quòd in codem die Jesus Christus conservator noster è mortuis excitatus est Just Mart. Psal 118. 24. No day like this since the Creation then our surety was released the Covenant and sure mercies of David fully ratified and confirmed our hope wonderfully revived heaven and eternal life plenteously assured These thoughts of Christs Resurrection might quicken our hearts and make them sparkle with life and affection It may be we never took the crown of this day into our hands to feel the weight of it and that makes our services ●● flat and our thoughts to speak in Nazianzens phrase so chained to the ground upon this seraphical day And therefore Clemens Romanus argues sharply and pathetically What shall excuse us with Die dominico qui est dies resurrectionis Templum adite quid enim excusare poterit apud deum qui eo die ad audiendum non convenit c. Clem. Rom. God if we fill not up this blessed day with bearing the word with holy prayer with reading the Scriptures with singing the praises of the Lord and other duties seeing God makes all things by Christ and sent him into the world to die for sinners and raised him again as on this day Innocentius calls Christs Resurrection day the first day of our joy the bright lustre of heavens shine And Ambrose saith The Lords day is a day ●f joyes in the plural number to shew the Variety and the Increase of them Joy is the Shibboleth of this day the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Spring-tide and the full Sea of this weekly Festival And Tertullian professeth That on this day we indulge our selves Plus gaudere debemus propter resurrectionem gloriosam quàm dolere propter passionem ignominiosam Bern. with holy joy The primitive Christians were wont when they saw one another to have this joyful salute The Lord is risen and the others ordinary answer was True the Lord is risen indeed we should not saith Bernard so much mourn at Christs igneminious passion as we should rejoyce at his glorious Resurrection And this day is not only sweetned with joyes but enriched with gain the death of Christ Haec est illa dies quae suâ magnitudine omnia beneficia obscurat Const Apost l. 7. c. 37. was the sowing of the Corn the raising of Christ was as the springing up of the Corn the benefits of Christs death are reaped in his Resurrection The death of Christ was as the casting of Joseph into the pit the selling him into Aegypt and putting him into prison But the raising of Christ was as the preferring of Joseph by which he comes into a capacity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to save his Family and so enrich all his Relations Clemens Romanus tells us This day is such a day of love such a day of gain that the greatness of those benefits we receive by this day ecclipse and obscure the shew and appearance of all other benefits Athanasius calls the Resurrection day The beginning of the New Creation And another learned tells us That Christs Resurrection was a great and an excellent Miracle and therefore it gave life and name to the Lords day Indeed Mans all is folded up in the triumphant success of this day Let us a little hearken to the good News that Christs Resurrection brought to the world and these Cords of love should fasten us to Holy duties and becoming carriages on the Lords day The Resurrection of Christ was the compleating of his work Indeed many fair lines were drawn before in the great work Josephus i● tertium usque annum in 〈◊〉 dete●tus s●●t posteà tamen libe●tus est Egypti constitutus est dominus Et salvator noster ad tertium usque diem detentus est in carcere sepulchri tum resurrexit sanctorum dominus dominus dominantium Ger. of Mans Redemption every tear which dropt from Christs eye every drop of bloody sweat which fell from his sacred body contributed to our salvation but when Christ rose again then he put the last hand to the beautiful frame of this glorious work And therefore he is said then to be perfected Luk. 13. 32. when Christ breath'd out his last he cried out consummatum est It is finished John 19. 30. But that had relation to his sufferings but when he rose again he was perfected in relation to his people he then became a perfect Redeemer Christ on his resurrection-day folded up his bottom and had nothing left to do but to ascend to his Father and to take his place at his right hand and to give him an account that the glorious work of mans Redemption was now fully finished Christs dying-day was the perfection of his love but his rising-day was the perfection of his work when he sprang from the Grave he threw off the cloths of his own mortality and of our sin Thus the Sun works through the Cloud and makes its own way till it is freed from that dark incumbrance and appears to the World in its sweetest brightness And so our Saviour after a short sleep in the tenacious dust awakes and comes as a Bridegroom out of his Chamber to speak a few words to his Psal 19. 5. Disciples and to take witness of his resurrection and so to go up to his Father ever to make intercession for us And shall Christ compleat his work upon his resurrection-day Heb. 7. 25. our Christian Sabbath and shall we be defective in ours Shall he be perfected on that day and shall we be polluted Surely when we trifle and sin away our Sabbath we never think that on that day Christ put his last hand to the blessed work of our Redemption This will condemn careless Christians when they are so short and Christ so full on his Resurrection-day our blessed Sabbath The Resurrection of Christ was the Conquest of his and our Enemies On this day the seed of the woman did bruise the Gen. 3. 15. Promeruit in cruce Christus sed posteà peregit Zanch. Serpents head and Christ did triumph in his own person over Sin Death and Satan Upon the account of which the Apostle cries Victory 1 Cor. 15. 54 55. On this day Christ spoiled principalities and powers and openly triumphed over them Col. 2. 15. Christ merited Victory by his passion Acts 10. 39 40. but he executed Victory by his rising from the Grave he died a Sufferer but he rose a Conquerour not onely Mat. 28. 18. arrayed with honour and immortality but richly invested Phil. 2. 9. with power and principality and then were the Keys of Eph. 4. 8 9. Death and Hell resigned up to him as the Trophies of his Revel 1. 18.
of his Resurrection when his power was most illustrious The Resurrection of Christ was unparallel'd Others indeed were raised from the grave So Lazarus John 12. 1. So Dorcas Acts 9. 40. And women received their dead raised to life again Heb. 11. 35. But all these retired to their Christus post quam resurrexit talem vitam amplius non vivit immò mori ampliùs non p●ssit Alap graves again their renewed life was only a short apparition which was quickly smoothered a little Candle set up after it had been put out which burned for a while and spent it self till it went out again But our Saviour as the Apostle speaks Rom. 6. 9. Being raised from the dead dyeth no more This Sun being risen sets no more nay it is no more inveloped in a Cloud but shines in a higher sphear in a more sublime Orb to eternity Christs Resurrection was not damped with a revocation nor did he fly back again to his empty tomb there to shelter himself till the general Resurrection Nay let us run a little higher the Resurrection of Christ was that glorious work above all others which the Scriptures mention to the Fathers honour Rom. Gal. 1. 1. 1. 4. Acts 2. 24 32. Acts 3. 26. Acts 4. 10. Acts 10. 40. This work it was by which Jesus Christ is made both Lord and Christ and is exalted to sit at the right hand of his Father This act of Resurrection advanced him to the throne who before was stigmatized with the Cross and changed him from a prisoner to be a Prince and Saviour Acts 3. 31. Acts 10. 41. Nay to be the Prince of life Acts 3. 15. And nothing but glory and honour are the Attendants of his Throne To Acts 2. 32. publish this glorious act Christ principally did choose his Disciples Acts 10. 41. Acts 2. 32. Christs Resurrection Acts 2. 25. was the Motto of the Apostles embassie and the emphasis of their Errand the grand argument by which they both 1 Cor. 15. 14. made and comforted believers For indeed the receiving of 1 Pet. 1. 3. our Christ again after the certainty of his death and the solemnity of his burial is the spring of our joy the fountain of 1 Pet. 3. 21. our comfort the stay of our hearts and the assurance of our Hymnus Angelicus ad nativitatem Christi accipiatur 1. Tanquam gratulatio gratiarum Actio z. Tanquam Angelorum votum quod Angeli optant hominibus 3. Tanquam doctrina quae vera est pax scil in Christo solo Theod. Mat. 4. 2. justification This blessed work of Christs rising put the last hand to the work of our Redemption and so fasten'd it that it cannot unravel The Birth of Christ was accompanied with the joy of Angels Luke 2. 13. His life was embroidered with wonders and miracles for every word our Jesus spake was not less than a wonder John 7. 46. His death was imbittered with sorrows and perplexities and sighs were the escutcheons about his Hearse but his Resurrection was the new Birth of the World and the sparkling spirits of a Believers consolation The wise-men of the East rejoyced at his Star Mat. 2. 10. when it did proclaim the Birth of Christ But Believers rejoyce at himself when he himself proclaims his Resurrection The Star retires at the Suns rising And now shall the Resurrection of Christ be unparallel'd for glory and shall it not so far influence us as to make us exemplary for sanctity upon its weekly commemoration the Lords day Shall every thing concur to the honour of Christs resurrection and shall onely our loosness and vanity on the day of it cast a damp and put an ecclipse upon it When we prophane the Sabbath what do we but draw a veil before the glory of Christs resurrection and practically deny that he is sprung from the Grave What loves can those Christians have to or what esteems for their dear Jesus who when his resurrection-day gave new life to the world fresh joy to the Disciples and new wonders to Mankind can yet pollute and defile the Sabbath its constant Memorial Sabbath-breakers are worse than Sadduces they onely deny Acts 23. 8. our Resurrection but these vertually deny Christs for if Christ be risen why do they not adore the rising Sun by Eph. 5. 11. walking in the light on his own blessed day But why do they attempt to ecclipse this glorious day by their sins and deeds of darkness CHAP. LIV. Some miscellanious prescriptions for the better discharge of our duty towards the LORDS DAY THe Concernments of the Soul can be never sufficiently pressed because of the weightiness of the affair and Mat. 16. 26. nothing more conduceth to the advantage of the Soul then the holy observation of Gods blessed day Soul-welfare In die dominico mens nostra in piis exercitiis tota defigenda est Cartw. much depends upon a due and careful observance of it Spiritual Sabbaths very much draw the Soul to its center formal Sabbaths do much retard the Soul in its progress and Sabbaths wasted in prophaneness do very much harden the Soul in sin and vanity and drop apace into the Vials of Gods wrath jogging Vengeance to awaken it which seems to slumber It may easily fall under our observation that one who is slight on the Sabbath will be profuse on the week that sin which is hatched in the Sabbath will be fledg'd in the week And therefore where there is so much danger to lose the way it must needs be safe to take good direction and to set up more lights for our better guidance and this is the further designe of what followes in this Chapter Let love be the spring of all our duties upon the Sabbath-day Prescript 1. Love is a sweet but a forcible principle it works not as a Sword but as a Sun-beam it draws but not drives it Excessus mentis est intentio ad superna Ansel constrains but not compels and it wins by perswasion and not coaction 2 Cor. 5. 14. Fear storms the Town but Love takes it by composition a heart full of love will run through the Datur sancta insania quando mente excedimus deo Bern. duties of a Sabbath as the Sun through the several Signs of the Zodiack with swiftness and delight Nor doth it understand any toyl or weariness Our Sabbath should not be our task but our delight Isa 58. 13. and then we should be on the wing and flye to the Sanctuary as the Doves to the Windows And indeed what is there in a Sabbath which doth not court our love The Lord of it He is our Beloved Mat. 2. 28. Our love our dove our undefiled Cant. 5. 2. Cant. 6. 9. He doth or ought to lie as a bundle of myrrh between our breasts Cant. 1. 13. The Son of man who is the sum of our desires is the Lord of the Sabbath Love of
all principles hath the greatest force and the love of Christ of all loves hath the greatest power The love of Christ could make Martyrs and bring them to a stake in a time of persecution and shall not the Octaginta sex annos servivi domino meo c. Polycarp love of Christ make Zelots and bring them chearfully to a duty on a Sabbath-day Let us be free and vigorous on the Lords day it is the day of our Beloved The occasion of it which was Christs resurrection when he rose for our justification Rom. 4. 25. That which started this day was the Rising Sun which enlightned the World In die dominico à mortuis resurrexit Christus Orig. over-spread with the darkness of Gentilism and the shades of Judaism Let us consider what put life into our Sabbath let the same thing put life into us upon this blessed Sabbath The duties of it they are all strains of love 1. The Sacrament is our love-feast and in it we have a double communion 1. Communion with Christ to remember Charitas Christi qua Christus homines dilexit nos urget ut Christi exemplo amore idem faciamus Alap his love to us in sacrificing himself for us Luke 22. 19. 2. Communion with the Saints for the increase of love At Christs Table the Heirs of Salvation come acquainted before they meet in their Fathers Kingdom and there those spiritual Stars rally together in a Constellation 2. Prayer is only the breathing forth of the Soul into the bosom of God the melting and the working of the heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 towards God Jam. 5. 16. In prayer sighs are but the moans of love and tears are but the streams of love And this duty is onely the flight of the Soul to its beloved the Cant. 3. 1. Spouse in prayer pours out her heart before him whom her Soul loves Hearing the word is nothing but the unbosoming Rom. 5. 8. of the Fathers heart to poor sinners Acts 20. 27. that they may know his will and live When we sit under the Heb. 1. 14. Gospel we onely hear those things which have been upon the heart of God from all eternity Thus all the duties of a Sabbath are the Emblems of love and call for a principle of love The donation of the Sabbath to us is the fruit of love and therefore the Sabbath is called the gift of God Ezek. 20. 12. Vide hic et obstupesce immensitatem amoris Christi Foedi eramus insipientes mendici pu●idi viles miseri et miserabiles sed Foedos Christus amavit ut pulchros efficeret inimicos amavit ut amicos faceret c. and gifts are love-tokens It is great love we should have seasons of grace opportunities of life and term-times for our precious Souls days of converse with the Almighty constituted times for transacting the grand affairs of Eternity Now every thing in a Sabbath speaking love let that genuine and natural principle carry us out in Sabbath-duties with all freeness and delight Many persons are swayed by other principles by a principle of credit interest or the clamours of natural Conscience nay some are staked down to a Sabbath from the common usage and custom of the Country where they live but these men are like Puppets which are stirred and moved with Wires they onely act a part and the Sabbath is their Seene But the heaven-born principle which should carry us through all the severals of a Sabbath Psal 27. 4. is love to and longing for our dear Jesus Duties will never Psal 42. 2. be musick unless tuned by a heart full of love to God It was love brought Christ to a Cradle to be born for us it was love brought Christ to a Cross to die for us John 10. Amoris vis corpus et animam liquefacit et ultrà se ad videndum du●itur et ergo necesse est ut carneum hoc vinculum qu● ferre talenti p●ndus non valemus infirmetur Greg. 17 18. And it is love to this Christ which can sweeten and succeed out duties upon his own holy day Love to Christ will make prayer the evidence of our desire to be at home and make hearing only our inquiry which is the next way to bring us home and make Sacraments our Corn by the way to support us till we do come home and make all other duties the planks upon which we get to come to shore to our desired and longed for home Let all our services on a Sabbath be acted with a serious poise and deliberation Meat which is rasht up never tasts Praescrip 2. pleasantly In holy duties we must carefully distinguish between holy delight and sinful precipitancy the Wise-man Jer. 8. 6. counselleth us to look to our foot when we go into the house Quatuor causae afferunt●r ex Hebraeis quare pecus separatum et comparatum decimo die asservabatur usque decimum quartum 1. Ne Israelitae negotiis impediti illud oblivi●ni traderent 2. Vt meliùs observarent ne defectus aliquis sit in agno 3 Vt ex aspectu agni oxasionem haberent colloquendi de redemptione suâ ex Aegypto 4. Vt sese in tempore ad bonum opus perficiendum accingerent praepararent Fag of God Eccles 5. 1. we must not leap into the Sanctuary but we must pause in our approaches The Lamb for the Passover was taken up the tenth day of the month but not killed till the fourteenth Exod. 12. 3. 6. to shew us how considerately and advisedly we should converse with God in Ordinances Before we adventure upon any Sabbath-duty we should weigh and ponder these four things 1. The infiniteness of that God with whom we have to do Heb. 12. 29. 2. The nature of that duty in which we are to engage which is most solemn and spiritual Levit. 10. 2 3. 3. The preciousness of that soul which is highly concerned in all these services 4. The strictness of that account which must be made for all our Sabbath opportunities Nothing more ripens and amplifies our spiritual advantage then a serious advisedness and we are necessitated to it not only because our hearts are so slippery and will easily beguile us in holy services but because Satan never makes greater On-sets then when we are in Heavens roade Therefore on a Sabbath let us compose our selves for Divine Worship and dress our selves as the Spouse to meet with the Bride-groome of our souls Rash duties leave cold hearts and are nothing less then offering up strange fire Levit. 10. 1 2. When Ahab seemingly pleased God in his humiliation he walked softly 1 Kings 21. 27. And we must come to holy duties as the wise men of Mat. 25. 10. the East came to Christ with an observant distance and veneration Mat. 2. 11. Our inconsiderate adventures upon things sacred and divine only lose the taste of the duty and trifle away
Rom. 11. 16 17. should look greener and sprout more then that which is grassed in Let us be earnest with God for Ministers that their success may be great and that they may see of the travel of their souls Praescrip 5. and be satisfied The Ministers work upon a Sabbath may Interior vita vigor gratiae ad crescendum adolescendum in fide charitate et Christianismo hoc solius dei est Alap be painful from himself but it is prosperous only from the Lord the Minister throws the net it is God brings the draught nay he may cast the net but God directs it to the right side of the ship The Apostle assures us It is God gives the increase 1 Cor. 3. 6. That Gods work prospers in the hands of the Ministers and in the hearts of the people is from Gods smile not from the Ministers sweat The Minister may have skill to open the Text but God only hath power to open the heart Let this God therefore be sought to that he would fill the Ministers sail with a prosperous wind and that every Sermon they preach and every Sabbath they celebrate may be as the bow of Jonathan and the sword of Saul which returned not empty 2 Sam. 1. 22. And we have a rare and rich promise to build and bottom our prayers upon which is mentioned Isa 55. 10 11. As the rain comes down and showers from heaven and return not thither but Isa 55. 10 11. water the earth making it bud and bring forth seed to the sower and bread to the eater so saith God shall my word be that goes out of my mouth it shall not return to me void Let us heartily sue out this blessed promise in holy prayer to the Lord Strong prayers are the readiest method to make successful Sabbaths Ministers might do great things upon the prayers of the people they might convince conscience they Acts 2. 37. might prick to the heart and fasten truth upon the soul and go off in the evening of a Sabbath crying victory ovor captivated Converts and lead many lost sheep home to the great shepherd of their souls we have many still-born Ordmances because previous prayers did not put life into them It is prayer that can give a good Minister to a people Philem. ver 22. And it is prayer can bless a good Minister to a people How frequent and pathetical is the Apostle Paul with Ingens est orationum virtus potentia ut Paulus talis tantusque vir illarum ope subsidio indi geat Theopil those to whom he writes to beg and importune their prayers so Rom. 15. 30. Now I beseech you Brethren for the Lord Jesus Christ his sake and for the love of the spirit that ye strive together with me in your prayers to God for me We may see the great Apostle of the Gentiles though resplendent with such rich gifts enriched with such eminent grace and conducted by the guidance of an infallible spirit yet he stood in need of the people prayers Nay this blessed Apostle not only sollicits the prayers of the Church of the Romans but he addresses himself to other Churches to that at Thessalonica 2 Thes 3. 1. Finally Brethren pray for us that the word of the Lord may have a free course and be glorified even as it is with you Thus Gospel victories are usually the issue of wrestling with God And thus again Paul importunes prayers 1 Thes 5. 25. Brethren pray for us And again Heb. 13. 18. Pray for us This holy Apostle rests not so much upon his own pains as others prayers knowing that the gales of the spirit by which we hoise up sail for heaven are promised to earnest and importunate prayer Luke 11. 13. And indeed as the Minister must row with one Oare by powerful and painful preaching to the people so the people must row with the other by frequent praying for the Minister Dispensator domus dei curam hobet in eâ omnia regit omnia ordinat distribuit They must strive together as the Apostles phrase is Rom. 15. 30. In a word one piece of service which we owe to the Sabbath is that we beg of God that the Ministers who are stars Rev. 1. 20. may fructiferously shine upon who are light Mat. 5. 14. may be a safe conduct to who are Salt Mat. 5. 13. may throughly season and preserve who are Stewards 1 Cor. 4. 1. may feed and refresh the people of God on his own blessed day Let us be much in prayer that Magistrates would take care Praescrip 6. of Gods holy Sabbath Magistrates are called shields Psal 47. 9. Let us pray that they defend the Sabbath from sin and Lev. 19. 17. prophanation Magistrates are called Gods Psal 82. 6. Let us pray that they would remember their own title and commend Gods day to a holy and strict observation And Qui non vetat peccare cùm potest jubet Senec. surely as children for the most part are as the Nurses are so Sabbaths in Nations and Kingdoms are as the Magistrates are we may feel the pulse of the Magistrate in the observation of the Sabbath And therefore let us pray for Magistrates because the eye of the people is fixed more stedily on the Magistrates Sword then on the Scholars pen or the Ministers tongue Magistratical severity more awes and influences then Ministerial intreaties That weapon gives us the deepest wound which is sharpned by civil Authority When a Ministers zeal is insignificant In Sabbati observatione non Ministros verbi tantùm sed et Patres familias i●primis Magistratus versari decet Wal. the Magistrates heat will be effectual a Magstrates frown shall operate more throughly then a Ministers check When Nehemiah threatned the strangers to lay hands upon them they came no more upon the Sabbath day Nehem. 13. 21. The soft bowels of a Minister may be abortive when the sure force of a Magistrate may put life into the reformation of the Sabbath Besides the fourth Commandment is retinaculum caeterorum the bond of obedience both to God and man in the duties Custodire Sabbatum per Synechdochen accipiatur pro observatione totius legis praesertim primae tabulae quae religionem cultum dei spectat Alap of the first and the second table this Commandment is the golden clasp which joynes both the Tables together and therefore it is much to be observed that keeping the Sabbath from polluting it and keeping the hands from doing any evil are both coupled and joyned together Isa 56. 2. The pollution of the Sabbath is the usual introduction of all other sin It may be added if Magistrates let the reins loose to connive at vanity and prophaneness on the Lords day the Nation will be filled with evil subjects the Church will be filled with corrupt members and private families will be filled with stubborn children and licentious Servants and
when a Sabbath the day of God and our souls is Jud. 15. 6. almost lost in a Nation for this let tears be our drink and Jud. 21. 2. ashes our meat day and night And when the Magistrates Psal 42. 3. become Gallioes for the things of God let the people become Jeremies for the day of God Sabbath decayes will soon make a bankrupt Nation Nay lastly we may bewail the punished purity of Englands Sabbaths The people of God cannot be so good as they will on Gods holy day How often are the Saints in the midst of Lew Sabbati opera humana non divina prohibuit Tertul. their weeping eyes bended knees melting hearts mounting minds when congregated in secret to seek Gods face and to meet with Christ their beloved How often I say are they interrupted surprized haled away by Officers and the Sanctuary leads them to a Prison their Piety is uncharitably called treachery and their devotion is unreasonably interpreted Sedition This is Englands misery and unhappiness the Prisons are filled with spiritual worshippers and the Nation is filled with carnal Gospellers Prophaneness is uncontrouled but the most resined service of God is liable to poenalties Tertullianus de Cor. Mil. Plin. Sec. in Epist ad Trajanum Imper. De Amelucanis coetibus Christianorum in die dominigo mentionem faciunt and pursued with force and violence not because it is unsuitable to Gods will but it is inconformable to mans law Now as the Primitive Christians we must have our caetus antelucanos our early because unknown meetings on Gods holy day but surely it must needs be a great evil to rout the stars when gathered in a constellation to hush away the Doves when they stock to the windows and strange it is that mans wrath should be there where Gods presence is in the assembly of the Saints But that the people of God meeting on the day of God in the name of God for fuller communion Mat. 18. 20. with and enjoyment of God in obedience to the command Dan. 12. 3. of God should meet with frowns and disgusts should feel the sharpness of a Law or undergoe the keenness of Mat. 13. 43. the Magistrates sword and all this in a Protestant Nation Isa 60. 8. whose usuall Motto was Mildness This is a lamentation and Psal 89. 7. shall be for a lamentation Isa 4. 5. Ezek. 19. 14. FINIS The TABLE A SEnsual Actions to be forborn on the Sabbath day 20. and so sinfull 22 There shall be no Affliction in our Sabbath above 218 The Lords day is of Divine Authority 569 An answer to the Apostles preaching in the Synagogues on their Sabbath day 570 The Lords day instituted by Divine Authority 585 Not by Ecclesiastical ibid. Arguments to urge Sabbath-holiness 668. 718. 732. B The Bounty of God in giving us his Sabbath 186 Our outward Behaviour must be exact in Publick Ordinances on the Sabbath 277 The Sabbath instituted from the Beginning 526 C God is admirable in the works of Creation 147. 191 Conscience is chiefly to be dealt withall in Gospel Administrations 259 The benefit of Chatechizing 334 Some necessary Cautions to prevent Sabbath pollution 407 Several Cases to satisfie conscience in Sabbath Observation 440 The fourth Commandment cannot be Ceremonial 489. 544 The worke of Creation compared with the work of Redemption wherein the last exceeds the first 642 D Duties shall not want their reward p. 3 The Sabbath must be spent in holy Delight 53 The Emptiness of worldly Delights 58 Duration speaks the value of every good thing 209 The sweetness of Holy Duties 229 Holy Discourse doth well become the Sabbath 320 Several Directions for the better observance of the Lords day 353 The evil of Spiritual Doubts 382 All dayes are not eqaally holy in the times of the Gospel 496 The observation of one Day in seven to God hath its great advantages 499 The wildness of that opinion which makes every Day a Sabbath day 505 A seventh Day not the seventh day is commanded in the fourth Commandment 582 E To rise Early well becomes the morning of a Sabbath 85 Several incentives to this practice 86 87 c. The several Ends of the Sabbath 191 Divers Evils to be avoided in the time of publick Ordinances 297 Several Examples of Divine Justice breaking out upon Sabbath-breakers 683 England bemoan'd for Sabbath-prophanation 781 F Holy Fruitfulness becomes the Sabbath 56 Many Faculties and parts to be acted on a Sabbath 95 The Excellency of Faith 422 The sore judgement of a Famine of the Word 680 The influence God hath upon the Fire 716 G Many Graces to be acted on a Sabbath 95 God is most Glorious in his Nature and Essence 128 The works of Grace deserve our sweetest meditation 178 The works of Glory to be meditated on 185 Active Graces become holy Ordinances 316 How to procure Gods presence in ordinances 385 There are three Glasses to see our hearts in 445 H We must look on the Sabbath as Honourable 54 God most glorious in his Holiness 135 How we are to deal with our Hearts on the morning of a Sabbath 263 Holiness is engraven upon the Sabbath 733 I Holy Joy becomes a Sabbath 267 How our Inward man is to be ordered in publick Ordinances 300 How we must spend the Interval between the Morning and Evening worship of a Sabbath 319 The Lords day is a day of Rest not Idleness 427 The great evils of Idleness 435 Idleness on the Lords day a very great evil 436 The Jewes sometimes very exemplary in Sabbath-observation 514 We Christians are to out-vy the Jews in Sabbath-observation 634 The dreadfull Judgements which pursue Sabbath-breakers 676 L The Labourers plea for recreations upon the Sabbath answered 33 Impertinent Language unbecoming the Sabbath day 49 God is incomprehensible in his Love 143 Nothing in a Saint can make a change in Gods Love 145 The Lords day confirmed by all Laws 619 What Christian Liberty is 645 Some remarkables concerning Londons fire which began on the Lords day 696 M Secret duties befitting the Morning of a Sabbath 89 The benefit of Morning duties on Gods holy day 104 The excellency of Meditation 106 124. It s Nature 107. How it is distinguished from some things very like to it 109. How much and how long we must Meditate 112. The chiefest seasons for Meditation 115. The rich advantages of Meditation 119. Meditation proper to every Ordinance 121 122. It feeds our Graces ibid. And amplifies our Comforts 123. It s necessity 125 The Morality of the fourth Commandment 552 How the Sabbath was made for Man 648 O Outward enjoyments are the reward of Sabbath obedience 59 God is most glorious in his Omnisciency 134 The excellency of Gospel Ordinances 285. 423 424. 443 The first Original of the Sabbath 522 And most probably it was ordained in Paradise 524 P The Poor mans Plea for working on a Sabbath Answered 7 Rich Promises made to a due observation of the Sabbath 57 63 Prophanation of the Sabbath the greatest Prodigality 67 Preparation for the Sabbath very necessary and several incentives to it 71 What those Preparatory duties are which must precede the Sabbath 77 Publick duties become the Sabbath 93 Many Persons to converse with on a Sabbath 96 God is most adorable in his Power 133 God to be exceedingly admired in the works of his Providence 156 Gods Presence must be meditated on on the Sabbath day 188 Prayer well becomes the morning of a Sabbath 239 How our Prayers must be qualified 243 The necessity of the spirits assistance in all our Prayers 246 What we must Pray for on the morning of the Sabbath 249 Practice is the best use of Ordinances 161 The sweetness and excellency of the Promises 269 Singing of Psalms a sweet and an excellent duty 339 The efficacy of Prayer 425 The advantages of Praying alone 454 Miscellanious Prescriptions for the better discharge of conscience in Sabbath-observation 765 R Recreations unlawfull on a Sabbath 23 Reverence becomes the Sabbath 54 God is wonderfull in the most glorious work of Mans Redemption 167 All the attributes of God shone gloriously in the work of Mans Redemption 174 The benefit of Repeating Sermons 327 Why the word Remember is prefaced to the fourth Commandment 660 The Resurrection of Christ a forcible argument to Sabbath-holiness 750 S What a Sabbath days journey is 6 The whole Sabbath is to be spent with God 35 The worth of the Soul 38 The Saints must meet together on a Sabbath day 97 The Jewish Sabbath compared with the Christian 201 The Christians Sabbath here compared with his Sabbath above 210 Some eminent types of our Sabbath above 234 The excellency of the Scriptures 272. 326. 456. Reading of the Scriptures usefull in the morning of a Sabbath 273 Publick Assemblies most pleasing on a Sabbath 274 The mischiefs of Sleeping in Ordinances 280 We must be Spiritual in our duties when we come to Publick Ordinances 312 What it is to be in the Spirit on the Lords day 387 The rare effects of the Spirit 393 466 How to keep Solitary Sabbaths 451 453 T Gods Truth is a glorious attribute 139 Vain Thoughts must be avoided in holy ordinances 305 Two days in a week cannot be observed as Sabbaths 569 V The Beatifical Vision somewhat opened and explicated 214 Unbelief a destructive sin 421 Variety of Sabbath duties delightfull 465 W Secular Works unlawful on the Sabbath 4. By Scripture 5. By Authority Civil 10. Ecclesiastical 11. By Reason 13. Works of necessity may be done on a Sabbath day 17 God is infinite in wisdom far surpassing mans 136 To Work upon the Sabbath day very sinfull 215 Holy Watchfulness becomes a Sabbath 401 How to keep a Whole Sabbath to God spiritually and sweetly 466 FINIS