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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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but in our houses there must be a meeting of Relations there must be Parents and Children Masters and Servants those who are born at home and the stranger Exod. 20 10. Comm●ni s●nctifi●●ndi S●bbathi lege ●onstringuntur omnes ex aequo herus serv●● peter liberi mas f●●mina s●per●●res et infer●ores Musc within our gates and all these must joyntly keep Gods Sabbath in holy duties and no less God commands in the fourth Commandment the Son and Daughter must remember to keep the Sabbath holy as well as the Parents the Man-servant and the Maid-servant as well as the Governours of the Family nay the stranger within the Gates On the Lords day we must by a conscionable and constant performance of holy duties turn even our private house into a little Church and thus we shall intail Gods presence to our houses as he vouchsafed his blessing on the house of Obed Ed●m we must not onely act secret duties on the Sabbath 2 Sam. 6. 12. but likewise Family duties What those duties are shall be more copiously handled hereafter But Thirdly we must act publick duties on Gods holy Sabbath we must not onely open the doors of our closets and of our chambers to come down into our houses but Ex hac com●●●i●●e tum Regnum 〈…〉 Zanch. we must open the doors of our houses too to meet with Gods people to celebrate the Lords day The Sabbath is the day wherein the Saints visit God and one another they then begin that society which shall be perfected and eternized in Glory David rejoyced when he went with the multitude to the House of God The great Apostle taught every where in Psal 42. 4. every Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He taught when the people 1 Cor. 4 17. were called together The Corinthians came together in one place to eat the Lords Supper Nay Christ himself will declare 1 Cor. 11. 20. the name and praises of God to his Brethren in the midst Luke 8 19. of the Church We must therefore serve God on the Sabbath in the Assemblies of Gods people not in our houses onely but in the Church i. e. in the Congregation of the faithfull Moses speaks of a holy Convocation Exod. 12. 16. Exod. 12. 16. and the Psalmist makes mention of the Assembly of the Saints Psal 89. 7. nay the promise is intailed on the Congregation of Gods people Isa 4. 5. The omission of this our assembling of our Isa 4. 5. selves is by the Apostle sharply rebuked Heb. 10. 25. One commenting on this Text hath divers things remarkable Heb. 10. 25. and worthy of our observation As First By this assembling the Apostle intends no other but the meeting of Believers to hear the Word of God and Per collectionem hanc Apost caetus ecclesiae et conventus fidelium ad sacram synaxin ad verb●m dei p●e●esque publicas intelligit Secundò Hos caetus vult Apost ut Ch●istiani fidem profi●●●ntur gratiarum actiones perso●ent et se invi●em excitent ad veritatem et bona opera Ter●● illi catus et mutui congressus mirè sovent fidem quae in secess● et separatione diuturniori l●ngue scit Quartò Qui ecclesiae ●ae●●s negligunt et deserum facilè urgente perse●utione ecclesiam ipsam et fidem Christi deserunt et abnegant Alap to pour out their prayers before God Secondly The Apostle injoynes the Assemblies that Christians might meet publickly to profess their faith in Christ and to sing the praises of God to stir up one another to love and good works Thirdly The same Author observes that these Companies and Assemblies do exceedingly foment and cherish faith which by a perpetual recluse and separation quickly would languish and be infeebled Nay Fourthly He observes That those who forsake the Assemblies of Gods people will easily in the urgency and heat of persecution desert the Church of Christ thus far that learned man And what a rare promise doth the Apostle mention 2 Cor. 6. 16. the words are these For ye are the 2 Cor. 6. 16. Temple of the living God as God hath said I will dwell in them and walk in them and I will be their God and they shall Lev. 26. 12. be my people Christ when he was upon the Earth he goes into the Synagogue on the Sabbath day Mar. 1. 21. and Mark 1. 21. taught the people Paul and his Company go into the Synagogue on the Sabbath and Paul preacheth there Nay Acts 20. 7. afterwards Paul preacheth to the Christian Assembly in a house on the Lords day Acts 20. 7. In a word where doth Christ walk but in the midst of his candlesticks which are the Churches Rev. 1. 20. Cornelius Alapide observes that Rev. 1. 20. Alapide holy Ignatius who was the Disciple and follower of the Apostle Paul adviseth in his Epistles those of Smyrna and Ephesus to frequent the meetings of the Saints and gives this reason because they will wonderfully confirm us in the faith so then the whole duty of a Believer on the Lords day lies not in the Closet or the Family but likewise in the Societies of Gods people met for divine worship Coals put together make the warmer fire When the Christians were Assembled Acts 10. 44. to hear Peter then the Holy Ghost fell upon them The Saints in Glory are the Assembly and Church of the first-born Heb. 12. 23. and therefore we must act publick duties on Heb. 12. 23. Gods holy day in the publick Assemblies But now what these publick duties are and how we must demean our selves in the performance of them shall be more largely discussed hereafter We had need rise early on the Sabbath for as we have many Duties to perform so we have many Graces to act The Sabbath is both the field to exercise Grace in and the treasury 2 Tim. 2. 1. to supply grace with Ordinances are both the breathing Gr●●i● non soli●●est s●v●r ●●i 〈◊〉 q●od ex eo s●q●●t●r Alap and the breasts of grace In prayer we act and we augment our graces and so in other Ordinances The Sabbath is the Believers resting day but Graces working day it is love which sweetens the work of a Sabbath Faith makes eff●ctual the Ordinances of a Sabbath Repentance reconciles H●b 11. 6. Jer 31. 19 20. Rom. 12. 11. Isa 57. 15. H●b 4. 2. Jam. 5. 16. the God of the Sabbath Zeal makes acceptable the duties of a Sabbath Humility ingages Gods presence on a Sabbath We cannot hear the Word profitably on this holy day without we mingle it with Faith nor address our selves to God in prayer without we inflame the duty with fire with the fire of zeal In our prayers we must get our affections fired by the Holy Ghost that they may flame up towards God in Devout and Religious ascents Broken-hearted and penitent Isa 23. 16. believers
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
〈◊〉 si Iota periret tuno esset 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nullo sensu Par. of the New Creation the curious piece of mans redemption is seen and known considering then we have our Fathers will in our Mother tongue we have and hear the Gospel which brings suitable remedies for every malady suitable sucour for every misery which brings the costliest Cordials and the choysest Comforts let the enjoyment of this Word spring our Hallelujahs in the close of a Sabbath 6. For the frequency of a Sabbath This might have been an annual and not a weekly feast were we kept for several moneths without a Sabbath how would our spirits spring at such a dayes appearance Why should the commonness of the Suns shining and the Sabbaths coming put a blast upon the mercy A market day once in the week doth not tire or weary us a Feast and Banquet once in the week doth not Mat. 12. 42. nauseate or surfet us when we mention the Sabbath a greater then these inconsiderables is here A learned Author observes That near the Pole where the nights endure divers moneths the Inhabitants in the end of such a night when the Sun begins to be seen they deck themselves in their best apparel and get up to the Mountains with joy and singing and cry out the Sun appears the Sun appears And shall not our Sabbath when the Sun of Righteousness appears lay as Hoc vocabulum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 traditur propriè de equis subsaltantibus et transfertur ad motum qui sit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Van. great a foundation of joy and exultation in our souls Indeed our Sabbath doth not onely necessitate our praise for the sweet provision of it but for the speedy revelation of it The Circle turns about quickly and then the Sabbath comes again and meets us with his heavenly salutes The monthly light of the Moon how doth it chear the world Much more the weekly splendour of the Sabbath when the gracious person scaps in the womb of it as fore-telling the coming of a Jesus Luke 1. 44. This weekly rest how sweet is it to Gods holy ones and what a softning argument to praise and thanksgiving Nor must we omit Catechizing of Children and Servants in the close of a Sabbath The learned observe That the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to catechise signifies to resound as by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an eccho When we draw answers from our catechists our children or servants their answers are but the ecchoes of divine truth rebounding from the tongue of the answerer which needs must be pleasing and musical to the examiner This work of catechizing is like the watering of flowers Gutta cavat lapidem non vi sed saepe cadendo which makes them smell and grow This is truly distilling doctrine like the rain Deut. 32. 2. drop by drop which probably will make its way into the heart at last This practice of catechizing is the first liquoring of the soul Fundamentum animae fidelis est Jesus Christus which will not easily wear of This is the laying of the foundation Christ in youth and foundations are not easily shaken winds may annoy the roof of the house but not touch the foundation Governors of families build their houses not with brick but instruction and the hewing of 1 Cor. 3. 11. hearts by inculcating the word of life upon them is the hewing of stone which will last and continue Indeed chatechizing Luke 2. 52. is the feeding of the understanding the exercise of the memory the seasoning of the heart the teaching of the tongue to pronounce Shibboleth and fidelity in this duty will leave marks in the lives of Children and Servants Radix vitae aeternae est fides origo pronuba omnium bonorum etiam caelestium Cyril Let us then in the evening of Gods day make a scrutiny into the knowledge of our families that they may learn to know God and him whom he hath sent and to obtain eternall life John 17. 3. Masters are not only to teach their servants their trade but their Christ And Parents are not only to see their Children trained up in secular but in spiritual learning First Catechizing is a duty most gratefully accepted with God God saith of Abraham Gen. 18. 18. For I know him Sancitur officium aeconomicum parentum erga liberos et domesticos Jubet deus Abrahamum non sepelire revelationes sed ad domesticos et posteros propagare Par. that he will command his Children and his Houshold after him that they shall keep the way of the Lord. And for this God makes him a great and mighty Nation God will assuredly bless and reward our religious care over our families which is much evidenced in a carefull catechizing of them And as we study to diffuse knowledge to them so will God shower down his blessings on us Abrahams crown was not his flocks but his care not his wealth but his diligence to train his family in the fear knowledg of the Lord. Secondly Catechizing is a duty strictly charged upon us God commands the people of Israel Deut. 6. 6 7. That his words may dwell in their hearts and that they diligently teach them their children Parents in families must be as lighted tapers to give light to all who are in the house first they must rivet Gods word on their own hearts and then drop it into the hearts of their families Joshuah's Josh 24. 15. resolve was That he and his house would serve the Lord. Governors of families should be as Gardiners which water the young plants at the root Thirdly Catechizing is a duty most successefully pursued upon young ones This is throwing seed into a fruitfull ground which will not want an harvest Timothy was trained up betimes in holy Doctrine and afterwards he was a most excellent Evangelist When a house is strongly built at first after-years will proclaim the care and fidelity 2 Tim. 3. 15. of the workman As Sir Walter Mildmay said of his Colledge which he built Emanuell Colledge in Cambridge He had planted an Acorn which might be an Oak in time and this worthy Colledge hath been the seminary of many learned and excellent men Every serious catechizing of our family is the planting of an Acorn and after-times may see the fruits of that holy plantation We have all varieties of Arguments to press this necessary and excellent duty We have Scripture In the Old Testament the Jews were to teach their Children the Original use of the Passeover Exod. 12. 26 27. other points of the divine Law The Lord speaks Exod. 12. 26 thus Deut. 11. 18 19. Therefore shall ye lay up these my words Ezod 13. 8. in your hearts and in your soul and bind them for a sign upon your hand that they may be as frontlets between your eyes and ye shall teach them your Children c. In
divinae naturae tribuendum judicarunt singings must not serve our pleasure our wantonness our gain but our Saviour our Christ our God In this heavenly musick we must study not so much to keep time that we do not spoil the Consort as to keep the heart close to God that we do not spoil the Duty The heathens celebrate their false gods Neptune Mars Jupiter c. with Songs and Hymns and think that by this service and worship they proclaim their greatness and Divinity And shall Christiani essent soliti ante lucem convenire carmenque Chr●sto quas● deo dicere not we much more celebrate the praises of God and Christ who hath loved us and given himself for us Gal. 2. 20. in Psalms and Hymns and spiritual songs shall not God have the sweetness of our voice the melody of our hearts the songs of our lips nay the musick of our holy lives that all that is within us and without us too may praise his holy and glorious name And thus at last there is laid before us a Scheme of Sabbath observation and we are instructed how to keep the Lords day according to the Lords will which doing we Psal 4. 8. ● shall lie down at night with safety and satisfaction A well spent Sabbath will warm our bed at night will strew our bed with roses will sent it with perfumes nay strew it with pearls and we may joyfully expect a full crop of blessings the subsequent week nay our future life may be prospered with the gifts of the right hand and the left and drenched with the effusions of the upper and the nether springs CHAP. XXXVI Some supplemental Directions for the better observation of the Lords day BY way of Addition and Appendix some other particulars may be annexed and suggested for the furtherance S●bbatum est aureum vitae tempus of this blessed service Indeed much of Religion is summed up in the care of Gods Sabbath and we should be as chary and tender of this trust viz. The Lords day as Jacob was of Benjamin in which Child his life was bound up The prophane person wasts this golden talent the formalist Luke 19. 20. wraps it up in a Napkin but the sedulous Saint puts it out to great advantage and will give up his account with joy Bishop White tells us The keeping holy of the Lords Bishop White in his Preface to his Treatise on the Sabbath day and why then should he plead so much for recreations on that holy day it is a work of piety a Nursery of Religion and Vertue a means of sowing the seeds of grace and of planting faith and saving knowledge and godliness in the peoples minds And our blessed Lord and Saviour being duly and religiously served and worshiped upon his own holy day imparteth heavenly and temporal benedictions Thus this learned man seems to lay the whole weight of Religion and to entail the whole reward of godliness upon a due observance of Gods blessed Sabbath And let this ever be the praise of his learning Undoubtedly Religion and the Sabbath are twins which live and die together And the piety of the Sabbath is the prosperity of the Nation But let us hasten to some further directions for the more sweet and full discharge of Sabbath piety Dir. 1 We must keep Sabbaths not only personally but domestically not only by our selves but by our families It is not enough for thee to pray but thy family must joyn in prayer Abraham Gen. 18. 18. caused his family to serve God which gave him no small interest in the love and heart of God Joshuas holy resolution was That he and his house would serve the Lord. Josh 24. 15. On a Sabbath every house should be a lesser Temple where all should meet to worship Every one must keep this holy Josh 24. 15. day in order Superiours must be carefull that inferiours observe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Exod. 20. 10. it Can a Master of a family be said to keep a Sabbath when he is praying and his servant is sinning his Child is gadding his Wife is visiting In Heaven where there is an everlasting Sabbath kept there the whole Host is praising God and the Inhabitants of Heaven are called a Family by the Apostle Eph. 3. 15. Our services must be the musique of a Consort not of a single Instrument In the 4th Commandement Servants are commanded the sanctification of the Sabbath as well as Masters and Children as well as Parents This blessed Command takes Necessitas obedientiae non ex cusat servum sed necessi a● co●ctionis in the whole Family within its circuit And learned men observe the necessity of obedience doth not excuse the servant from observing this day onely the necessity of compulsion Servants must not work this day by command but onely by overpowering force and violence as the Israelites did in their Aegyptian bondage In matters of Religion there is no difference between bond or free male or female Gal. 3. 28. Every one hath a soul to look after an account to give a Christ to pursue Communi sanctificandi sabbatum lege constringuntur omnes ex aequo herus dominus pater liberi superiores inferiores Muscul a Heaven to take by force Mat. 11. 12. There dwelleth a piece of immortality in the bosome of the meanest servant And that Child which hath no portion to receive hath a Christ to ensure which is the work of this holy day Museulus observes The common Law for the keeping of the Sabbath equally reacheth all and is a common bond to oblige all and in this it is like the Law-giver It is no respecter of persons Acts 10. 34. nor must the power of Superiours prejudice Religion A Governour of a Family cannot lawfully call off his Children or Servants from religious observations and so from the duties of a Sabbath and Religion is as much the interest of the meanest Servant as of the greatest Masters of the most inferiour Peasant as of the most noble Prince Nay the lower our condition is here the more strictly we should keep the Sabbath that we may better our estate to come in that place and condition where all civil distinctions will be taken away The greatest Magistrate is called to be a nursing Father of the Church of God Isa 49. 23. and therefore herein must he look that the Church be fed and not delivered over to dry Nurses They are Gods Ordinance and their power is of God for of themselves they can do nothing Joh. 19. 11. And therefore they must honour God uphold his Ordinances 1 Sam. 2. 30. They must give to God the things which are Gods Rom 13. 1 2 6. Mat. 22. 21. and must employ their Power and Authority to the service and glory of Christ Wherefore seeing Christ is the Lord of the Sabbath Mark 2. 27. Mat. 12. 8. Prov. 8. 15. They must
of a Sabbath and as lesser stars shine in the holy and exemplary observation of the Sabbath That swaying principle of interest should prompt Governours to this duty 1. Interest if they regard their present peace Slight Sabbaths will make sloathfull Servants and stubborn Children When we do not fasten the family to the holy duties of a Sabbath we leave them to the byass of their own corruptions Cor lubri●um et in omnia mala et iniqua pro pensum which will easily carry them to every thing inconvenient How many Servants in the great City of the Nation for want of care and zeal in their Masters to keep them to holy duties on Gods holy day Court their Harlots take off their Cups waste their Masters substance and hazzard their own in mortal souls and as Belteshazzar drink Dan. 5. 2. in the Vessels of the Temple with their Courtezans and their Concubines Many by these courses anticipate their own ruine and in reference to their dayes in the world for Luke 16. 6. an hundred write down fifty cast themselves untimely away mortgage their future hopes and blast their present parts and all from their riots on Gods holy day On the contrary the Family which serves God most on the Sabbath will serve the Governour best in the week The awe of a Sabbath is not easily worn off as colours laid in Oyle are not washed off with every drop A well spent Sabbath is an Ark in the house which sheds a prosperity on all the 2 Sam. 6. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Addidit affairs of it it makes every one a Joseph who carries increase and addition in his very name and concerning whom it was prophesied He should be a fruitful bough even a Gen. 49. 22. fruitful bough by a wall whose branches run over the wall Ex Josepho et filiis ejus duae tribus fuere propagatae amplissimae et potentissimae This holy care of sanctifying Sabbaths in with our families would cause the dews of heavenly benediction not only to fall upon the head and the beard of the Governours but the skirts also the inferiour branches of the family 2. It is the interest of Governours to see their families Exigit deus rationem à Ministris animarum nostrarum si vel unicâ eorum culpâ perierit Par. keep the Sabbath holy as they will give up their account with joy As the Minister must be responsible for the souls of his people committed to his charge Heb. 13. 17. so the Master for his Family At Gods Bar thou shalt not say am I my Families keeper In the time of the worlds infancy the Governour of the Family was the only Magistrate he Minister onus et curam animarum gerit pro iis aeternae mortis periculo se exponit si●gulorum probitas et salus ab eo exigetur in die judicii Alap was both Master and Pastour his house-hold was his teritory and dominion and he swayed his Scepter in exercising his power over it Abraham was a Prince and a Prophet in his own house and he acted like a Prince in commanding his family to keep the way of the Lord Gen. 18. 19. But still we are accountable for those who are subordinate to us and if we must be accountable for words as transient breath Mat. 12. 36. much more for Children the darlings of our bosoms and for Servants the objects of care that living trust committed to us How often do Parents put their Children into the Masters hand as Jacob did Benjamin into the hands of his Brethren Gen. 43. 14. with weeping eyes with aking hearts with ardent prayers and cry out if They are bereaved they are bereaved and shall the negligence of Gen. 43. 14. Masters strike these trembling Parents under the fifth rib because they did not see their servants strictly observe Gods holy day but left them to the vanity of their minds which gradually habituated them in evil and paved their way to destruction Surely the grief of these disappointed Parents shall no more vie with the doome of the regardless Masters 1 Kings 12. 11. then the smart of a rod can compare with the burning of a Scorpion But Masters of families should do well before-hand to cast up their account and this would be a spur to their care and sedulity on Gods holy day That lovely principle of justice and equity might command this service If we find not our family employed in holy work on Gods holy day what do we more for them then we do for our beasts We give them rest from labour Shall the care of a soul which endures to eternity more valuable Mat. 16. 26. then a world no more sway with us then the care of a beast which perisheth The Cattel shall not travel and the Psal 49. 20. Servants shall not work upon Gods day and so they shall be both equally indulged with the same priviledge Is this suitable to the spirit of the Gospel Paul endures the pangs of travel Gal. 4. 19. Christ endures the pangs of death Luke 23. 46. and thou shalt not endure a little trouble and a little care not one act of zeal or one drop of sweat in holy 1 Sam. 28. 14. diligence for precious and never dying souls Throw off the mantle of Samuel if thou and thy house will not serve the God of Samuel on his own day And moreover it is a great provocation that our Servants must serve us in the week and we take no care that they serve God on the Sabbath Our interest must be on the Anvel though the interest of Christ and Religion be laid aside a poor worm must be more sedulously served and observed then the infinite Jehovah May not that exclamation be here seasonable Hear O Heavens and give ear O Earth Isa 1. 2. The Shop must not be neglected though the soul be is our present gain to run paralel with our servants future Crown Must servants be more mindfull of our work then their own everlasting weal Indeed what would it profit us if we should gain the whole world and our poor servants lose Mat. 16. 26. their immortal souls will our profit compensate their loss Surely this is bruitishly to use our servants and well befits the profession of a Demas who hath forsaken the Gospel and embraced the present world 2 Tim. 4. 10. But let us not beguile our selves saith heavenly Greenham for the blood of servants souls will be required at Masters hands who being lordly and tyrannicall make their servants either equal to their beasts or worse then their beasts caring for nothing but the world never thinking of Hell whereunto they are hastening Dir. 2 We must endeavour to keep Gods day uniformly and harmoniously Our families must be on the Lords day as the building of Solomons Temple where no Axe or Hammar was 1 Kings 6. 7. heard
no discord or division It is very deplorable to consider Quot homines tot sententiae what confusions are in many families so many persons so many opinions the Master is of one Church the Wife of another the Child of a third and may be the Servant of a fourth the Master possibly will sing Psalms the Child or the Servant happily cannot joyn in that heavenly duty Are not these families too like the speckled bird the Prophet speaks of Jer. 12. 9. Or like the spotted Leopard Jer. 13. 23. too like Josephs party-coloured coat which afterwards was dipt in blood Gen. 37. 31. The Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 assures us that God is a God of Order and not of Confusion 1 Cor. 14. 33. Christ's coat was not torne though lots was cast for it It was the praise of the Primitive Church They did serve God with one accord Acts 2. 46. Magna suit Ignatio cura 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Ecclesiâ Ordo venustatem parit confusio infidelitatem Zach. 14. 9. the same pulse beat in all the same spirit acted them all the same love united and espoused them all the same service employed them all Divided Families like divided Kingdoms cannot stand The four and twenty Elders in heaven sung the same song Rev. 4. 11. The Angels all utter the same triumphal words Rev. 5. 8 9 11 12. It is a blessed and glorious promise That we shall call upon the name of the Lord and serve him with one consent Zeph. 3. 9. How pathetically doth the Apostle press unity Eph. 4. 3 4 5 6. A consort of Musicians play not several tunes but one and the same lesson Concord in service is the Musick of a family when we all sing the same Psalm all pray the same prayer fix our thoughts on the same truths hear the same Sermon and variety is over-ruled by unity Surely divisions are the wounds and jars of a family and such contrarieties are the flashing emblems of novelty and sad Prognosticks of fatall scepticism Let us then study that our selves and families may serve the Lord on his own day with one voice with one shoulder with one lip and with one heart Vnited stars make a constellation When stars do fight it presages great slaughter and is no less then miraculous Jud. 5. 20. Dir. 3 We must act the services of the Sabbath freely and chearfully Our services must be the fruit of love not the effect of force Holy delight must draw us to the Sanctuary not a pressing and rigorous conscience God loves a chearfull giver and a chearfull worshipper It was Davids joy to go with the multitude Psal 42. 4. Our service on a Sabbath must not be as wine squeezed from the grape but as water flowing from the fountain Our service must be the service of children not the homage of slaves In this we must imitate Ezek. 10. 5 the Angels who have their wings to fly upon every Neminem voluit cogi sed sponte prompto animo offerri quicquid unus quisque conferri vellet voluit deus hilares datores etiam et spontaneos cultores eos solos acceptabat Obsequium enim involuntariè delatum obedientiae nomen non moretur Riv. commanded service It was a brand put upon the people of Israel they were weary of his Sabbaths Amos 8. 9. The Sanctuary must be our Paradise not our Purgatory In the time of the Law those who would offer to the Lord they must do it with a willing heart Exo. 35. 5. Rivet well observs Involuntary obedience deserves not the name much less the reward of obedience Our duties on the Sabbath must be lively and vigorous The true Mother cries the living child is mine 1 Kings 3. 22. So God saith the living Sabbath is mine It is a character of Gods people that they are a willing people Psal 110. 3. The Hebrew reads it a people of willingness to shew how exceedingly willing we should be in the day of the Lords power which is principally his own holy day It is usually the sigh of a poor Saint Lord I would run faster but my corrupt heart hampers me Sabbaths should be our element not our burden David made it his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 only request that he might spend his whole life in the Temple Psal 27. 4. Every thing in an Ordinance might flush our joy and fledge our desires 1. The superscription it bears it hath the stamp of Christ upon it Preaching is the preaching of Christ the Sacrament is the Supper of Christ Now the name Jesus should be like Caesar his Quirites it should put new life into the Saint 2. The advantage it brings It brings spiritual Life Faith Rom. 10. 17. Conversion Ordinances bring spiritual lading to the soul Acts 16. 14. Lydia was converted by the preaching of Paul 3. The end it designs which is the everlasting good of the soul We hear that we may be holy we receive that we may be hearty we pray that we may be happy Eternal Justificatio praecedit gloriam vitam aeternam Fulgent life is the stage of all Ordinances the center where the lines of every Ordinance meets And the Gospel is generally called the Gospel of life and salvation 2 Cor. 2. 16. Eph. 1. 13. Let us a little glance at the pleasing gradation Faith comes by hearing Justification by Faith and Justification ushers in holiness here and future glory and happiness Thus every Ordinance of a Sabbath may accent our de-delight and put an emphasis upon our joy We must then Rom. 8 30. keep our Sabbaths in holy joys in heavenly satisfactions and the Bride-chamber here below must be in our own bosoms Psal 119. 97. On this day our feasting must be converse with God our meat and drink must be to do our fathers will Psal 119. 20. and to do his will must be our meat and drink Jobn 4. 24. On this day we must be filled with the spirit which is better Cant. 5. 1. then new wine The day of God is prophetically called a day of joy Psal 118. 24. This day literally is a day of delight it is the day on which Christ sprang from the Mark 16 9. grave and gave a new life to the world This day prefiguratively is a day of rich consolation for it prefigures an eternall Sabbatism with the Lord Heb. 4. 9. It adumbrates that glorious state when we shall enter into our Masters joy Mat. 25. 21. Our services then on the Lords day must be enlivened with activity and sweetned with alacrity Dir. 4 Our services on Gods day must be solemn and serious Though they must not be without joy yet they must be without lightness we may be complacential but we may not be formall Delight well becomes a Sabbath but laughter doth not We must consider we have Sabbaths to carry on soul work which is an interest of the greatest importance
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
those times Deut. 4. 10. children were taught the chief points of the doctrine of the Prophets touching God or the Law or the Promise of the Gospel or the use of the Sacraments and Sacrifices which were the types of Messiah to come and of his benefits these and other Principles children were taught at home by their Parents In the New Testament Christ commands little children to be brought unto him Mat. 10. 14. This evinceth the necessity of a Christ for our Children And how shall these young ones believe on Christ of whom they have not heard and how shall they hear without a Chatechizer without one to open and discover Christ to Rom. 10. 14. them in the plain and familiar way of Chatechisme Quando parvuli post baptismum adolescunt Christo adducondi sunt per sedulam sollicitam et piam institutionem cum annis crescat cura nostra de pueris Par. which plain method of instruction adapts and fits youth for hearing t●e Word from the Minister and is the first round of the Ladder of Knowledge The careful institution of children in Gospel-knowledge was no stranger to the first times of the Church and therefore the Apostle Peter calls the Word Milk 1 Pet. 2. 2. as being fit and proportionate sustenance for young ones in Religion And the Promises are called the Breasts of Consolation Isa 66. 11. for young Children to lye at and draw comfort from them We have Antiquity A learned man saith That Paul the Apostle was a Chatechist grounding his assertion from 1 Cor. 14. 19. where that word we translate teach is in the Conciones Apostolorum fere tantum erant Chatecheses Alap in 1 Epist ad Cor. Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Catechise The Sermons of the Apostle often opened the very principles of Religion which are calculated for the information of youth And the same blessed Apostle layes down a short Compendium of Christian principles in a chatechistical Summary Heb. 6. 1 2. And we are told that Cyril of Hierusalem composed a Catechism De rudibus chatechizandis Aug. for the benefit of Christian youth That Gregory Nyssene made a chatechistical Oration And Augustin wrote a Treatise concerning chatechizing the ignorant as being the most proper way of diffusing and disseminating Gospel-light A De pueris ad Christum trahendis Gers in part 2. learned man tells us that Genson Chancellour of Paris in later times did usually instruct Children and did it to the great benefit of the Church of God The Church did gather O ●issime Jesu quis ultra post te verecundabitur humilis ad parvulos c Ger. the fruit of such watered Nurseries The same Author tells us that Gerson wrote a Treatise concerning drawing children to Jesus Christ And in this Tract falls into this holy Rapture O most holy Jesus who after thee shall be ashamed to condescend to children when thou hast invited little ones to thy self O gracious Christ wilt thou intwine children in thy sacred Arms and fold them in thy divine Embraces And shall any who is spiritual and seeks not his own things but the things of Christ whom charity humility Euseb Eccles Hist lib. 6. c. 3. Ab ecclesiâ domi redeuntes Amici inter se cum filiis Parentes cum servis domini meditarentur contenderent quomodo quae imperata sunt exequenda sint Chrysos and piety guides refuse the introduction of younger ones to prepare them for the Embraces of the dear Jesus Eusebius writes of Origen that he restored the pious custome of Chatechizing in Alexandria when in times of persecution it was very much decayed Chrysostom was wont pathetically to perswade his Auditours that when they came from Church on the Lords day That they should discourse among themselvs and Parents with their children Masters with their servants how they might act and do what they were commanded And Origen in his 9th Homily on Leviticus makes it his serious Option That we would be exercised not only in the Church but in our houses in meditating and canvasing Gods Word For saith he Christ will be with them who seek after him Thus we see the Golden times of the Church much favoured and followed this successful practice We have reason 1. Catechizing is necessary that Novices and young ones be not entangled and seduced into erroneous Quo semel est imbuta recens servabit odorem Testa diu opinions Chatechizing is the hammer to beat down heresies Cloth which is died in grain before will not easily take another colour Youth having drunk in the saving and fundamental Truths of Religion will hardly be led aside to another doctrine The first sent remains in the Vessel The Janizaries are the fiercest Turks and they are taken from Christian Parents in their childh●od and so trained up in the Mahometan Religion The same fruits the Tree bears when it is young it bears ever after Chatechizing layes the foundation which Seducers cannot easily shake and pluck up Ignorance is the mother of weakness and layes us open to destructive changes 2. Those who learn throughly the Chatechisme will better understand Sermons and they will be able easily to reduce Facile est inventis addere whatever they hear from the Word to the several heads of their Chatechism Mariners have their several side-winds but they can bring every wind to verge towards one of their four chief winds Principles of Religion take in the whole of Religion reductively and Principles are dropt into youth by Chatechism One gravely observes That Sermons without Conciones sine chatechizatione praeparatoriae sine fructu et emolumento usitatissimè ce●ditae sunt Ursin out preparatory Chatechism and instruction are heard to little profit or advantage Ignorant persons more usually hear a sound than a Sermon like Pauls Companions in their journey to Damascus who heard a voyce but no language Acts 9. 6. Ignorant persons travel in the dark and the light of a Sermon doth rather confound then convince them they are still more in the dark and the learning of Principles must bring them in their way 3. Chatechism is most accommodate to young and in judicious persons A copious and vagrant form of instruction is not suitable to youth and Christians of the lower form The Scholar learns not the Greek language at the first it is the Accidens not Homer is fit for his first setting forth in the travels of literature Every thing is good according to proportion We eat not loaves but morsels The Nurse chews the meat and then puts it into the childs mouth Inculcated principles must first be prepared for children and servants and doctrines must run parallel with their capacities The Sun riseth by degrees nor doth it get up to its full height till its just time We have interest If we will have obedient children and faithful servants let us pave their minds with Scripture-principles and this will chase away that ignorance which is
take especial care to serve the Lord in fear and trembling and remember to keep the Christian Sabbath Ezek. 46. 4. because the Kingdom is the Lords and his Christs who is King of Kings and Lord of Lords Revel 11. 15. The duty of Magistrates is 1. To repress the profaning of the Sabbath and to use all Qui non prohibet peccare cum potest jubet Sen. means for the accomplishment of that worthy and glorious design Namely 1. To forbid Nehem. 13. 15. 2. To reprove Nehem. 13. 17 18. 3. To threaten Nehem. 13. 21. 4. To hinder Nehem. 13. 19 22. And 5. To punish the profaning of Gods holy day Nehem. 13. 20. Secondly To command and to compell the Lords day to be sanctified 2 Chron. 34. 33. And Thirdly To sanctifie it himself his Children his Court his Attendants both privatly Psalm 5. 7. Acts 10. 1 2. and also publickly Ezek. 46. 2 4. 2 Kings 11. 5 7 9. The duties of private and publick sanctifying the Lords day tye and bind the Prince and other Magistrates no less then the meanest of the Subjects and the most pedantique persons And where the Prince neglects the strict and holy observation of Gods blessed day this sin will make his Crown shake and his Scepter tremble and rip up his most stately Pallaces to let in divine wrath and displeasure It was the prophanation of the Sabbath which hasten'd and ascertained Hezekiahs doom as may be clearly observed Jer. 17. 27. If ye will not hearken to me to hallow my Sabbath I will kindle a fire in the gates of Jerusalem and it shall devoure the Pallaces thereof and it shall not be quenched And lesser Governours every Housholder over his family who may be called an inferiour Magistrate in regard of his Authority in the little province of his family it is his duty to sanctifie the Sabbath himself he must keep it with all care Eph. 6. 4 and diligence and move in the circuit of Sabbath duties as Psal 101. 6 7. a star in its Orb And he must command and compell his family Est 4. 16. thereunto that they may effectually practice it as well Sub pronomine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tu intelliguntur 1 Personae dominantes Patres et Matres familiae 2. Personae fulcientes filii et fi liae 3. Personae ministrantes servi et Ancillae Rivet as himself and this he must do in his proportion as Magistrate in his own Houshold Surely if Kings in the midst of all their glittering attendance their courtly delicacies numerous addresses arduous affairs must not forget to keep holy the Sabbath day both themselves and all their bespangled family much more must the private Governours of families who lye not so open to tempting avocations nor are dazled with such courtly appearances take care that themselves and families serve the Lord on his own holy and blessed day The Edicts of State and constitutions of the Church like the two springs of Jor Dan have both met in a full stream to carry on this service against all resistance Ludovicus Proinde necesse est ut primo sacerdotes Reg●s et Principes omnesque fideles huic diei debitam observantiam atque reverentiam devotissimè exhibeant Lud. P. Concil Paris sub Greg. quarto Pius the son of Charles the Great put forth this Decree That it is a necessary duty that in the first place Priests and then Kings and Princes and all faithfull persons do most devoutly exhibit due observation to this holy day This serious Prince enacts the observation of the Sabbath for all that every one being fettered by a Law might not loosely passe over this heavenly day And as the Edicts of Princes enforce the general observation of the Sabbath high as well as low an both equally so the Constitutions of the Church The Council of Paris decreed that all should keep the Lords day Governours Kings Princes Priests and all faithful persons should procure it to be kept and that no man pres● me to make merchandise to do his pleasure or any countrey work but that they with all endea●ours of soul do attend to heavenly praises c. Ambrose in his time complained of some Masters Taeduit mihi videre servulos ad ecclesiam fortassis festinantes ad venandum per dominos avocari quia sic voluptatibus suis peccata accumulant aliena Ambr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lib. 7. cap. 19. who would call away their servants to hunting when they were going to Church on the Lords day and so by their own sinning drew others into the snare not remembring they should be guilty of their servants sin and of the hazard of their immortal souls And a learned man of our own Nation observes that in those Constitutions commonly called Apostolical it was expresly commanded That servants should be at leisure on the Lords day for attendance upon the worship of God and for learning of Religion Those early dayes of the Gospel commanded all every one to mind the great work of Religion and to inure themselves to divine Knowledge Our own Church is not the least in providing that all persons observe the holy Sabbath So in King Edwards time the express words of the Homily are Sithence which time the time of our Saviours Resurrection Gods people in all ages have alwayes without gainsaying used to Homil. de temp loc precum come together upon the Sunday to celebrate and honour the Lords blessed Name and carefully to keep that day in holy Rest both Man and Woman Child and Servant and Stranger c. And so in King James his time it was enacted as one of the Canons of our Church among other things That Parents and Masters of Families should instruct their children and servants in the fear and nurture of the Lord especially Can. Eccles Angl canae 13. An. Dom. 1603. on the Lords day Thus the care of all places where Christianity hath been professed and in all ages which savoured any thing of Religion hath enjoyned the generall observation of the Lords day and the meanest Servant hath come within the compass of Royal Edicts and sacred constitutions as well as the most considerable Eminent Superiour The bowels of Parents might enforce this duty Can a tender Father or an affectionate Mother see their Children trifling away the time of a Sabbath slighting away the Ordinances of a Sabbath and neglecting the private duties of Redarguenda est Parentum segnities qui in rebus seculi s●●● sunt sallic in sed de pietatis incrementa minus sunt solliciti Riv. a Sabbath and not be filled with fear and amazement How shall the fruit of their loynes stand before him who gave the Commandement for the Sabbath in the midst of a flaming Mountain Exod. 19. 18. and be accountable to him who is the Lord of the Sabbath Mark 2. 28. and who will judge the secrets of all men according to
the Gospel Rom. 2. 16. Can Parents see their children grieve the spirit who descended most gloriously on the Apostles upon the Lords day Acts 2. 3. and break that Commandment which is one of Gods Ten Words Deut. 10. 4. Nay pollute that Deut. 10. 2. day which is founded on Christs salvifical Resurrection and not be surprized with dread and consternation I may expostulate with such as once the Church did with the Lord where is the soundings of their bowels Parents love their Isa 63. 15. Children so far as they love their better part it is considerable death will strip them of all the fruits of their care Job 1. 21. excepting that which they have taken for their souls Not only divine command Exod. 20. 10. but natural affection Ex unâ parte Christum urgebat ad mertis supplicium sustinendum aeternum Patris decretum immensus humani generis a mor. Chemnit leads us to the discharge of this duty viz. To see our Family keep holy the Sabbath day What softness and tenderness did Christ shew to his family how sweetly did he instruct them Mark 4. 11 12 13 14 c. How pathetically did he pray for them Joh. 17. 9 11 15 17 20 21 24. How carefully did he lay up for them a divine and glorious inheritance Luke 22. 29 30. And at last how willingly did he shed his blood for them and he was straightned till he drank up his bitter cup for them Luke 12. 50. Let us write after this Copy and shew our love to our family as our dear Jesus did to his and then we shew our love to them when we see they shew their love to God in a carefull keeping of his holy day The excellency of the Sabbath should draw the whole family to an observation of it The Lords day is the Fort-royal of Religion let us all stand in our places to observe it and so we shall preserve it there are many who lay seige to it to race and demolish it Some set their wits on work to oppose the Doctrinal part of it Some set their wills on work to oppose the Practical part of it Now let us countermine these miscreant endeavours 1. By being much in prayer that the Lord of the Sabbath would perpetually preserve his own ordinance 2. By being much in practice that we and our houses serve the Lord on his own blessed day Standing and serious sanctity if it cannot convince men to mind their duty it will engage God to secure his own institution The Jewes never lost the Sabbath untill they rejected Christ who is the Lord of it they had the Oracles of God Rom. 3. 2. till they repudiated the Son of God In the Old Testament they went to worship God with their Flocks and their Herds 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Oracula teste Hesichi● primitus Judaeis à deo revelata sunt illis Scripta per prophetas tradita ita ut illa non nisi per Judaeos ad Gentiles devenerint Alap with them Hos 5. 6. In the New Testament let us take our Children and our Servants with us in the worship of God Let them be with us in the publick let them be with us in private duties of Gods holy day so we shall ensconce our priviledges And every pious family shall be as a Macedonian pbalanx to secure the Sabbath from violation and subversion Sin and neglect makes the forfeiture of spiritual blessings a careless contempt of the Word brings a famine of it Amos 8. 11. And the slight observance of Gods day exposeth it to reproach So that often the Wolves of the Forrest violent men pursue it with persecution and the Hab. 1. 8. little Foxes closer Hereticks infest it with their contagion Cant. 2. 15. Let us therefore with Moses resolve We will go with our Young and with our Old with our Sons and with our Daughters for we must hold a feast unto the Lord Exod. 10. 9. Exod. 10. 9. Chemnitius observes That to the sactification of the Lords day besides publick duties there is work to be done in families Chemnit exam Concil Trident. Cap. de dieb Fest as instructing of servants rehearsal of Sermons reading Scriptures counselling and quickning such who are under our care that all may keep Gods holy day Ah! let not us and our families lose our Sabbaths because we did no better Luke 19. 44. keep them not forgeting that usually Children are wrapt up in a common destruction Luke 19. 44. And so much the more earnestly should we endeavour to fold them up in a common salvation Jude v. 3. Jude v. 3. It well becomes the wisdom of the Governours of Families to see the Sabbath carefully observed Superiours must not leave the keeping of the Sabbath as a thing indifferent to the discretion of the family they must intreat them they must provoke them they must compel them The Kings Command was to compel the guest● to come in Luke 14. 23. The Deus gentes compellit introire ut sic suam erga eos ostenderet charitatem quia enim libentèr vellet ut ipsius essent convivae et cum eo in aeternum delitiarentur non tantùm benefici●s eos invitat quando venire ren●unt in manum sumit mall●um legis quo conterit corda duriora et eos humiliat ut discerent leges et justitiam suam sola enim vexatio dat intellectum auditui Chemn sick child if he will not take his physick with a smile he must do it with a ●od the child must not die and miscarry The ease of the flesh the strength of corruption the insinuating temptations of Satan will all decry Sabbath observation and therefore here indulgence is the greatest injury and mildness is the sorest cruelty to the precious soul Thy family had better endure sharp reproofs then scorching flames As Mr. Shepheard used to tell his weeping Audito●rs It was better crying here then in Hell As David said of Gods House Psal 69. 9. Psal 119. 139. so Governours of families should say of Gods day the zeal of it hath eaten them up Thy Children and Servants must keep the Sabbath holy there is an absolute necessity of it and woe to the Governours of families if through their neglect the day of God is slightly over-past Nehemiah caused the Sabbath to be observed not so much by mild perswasions as peremptory command nay sharp and acute threatnings Nehem. 13. 17 19 20. And so this good man espoused the Magistrate to the Saint Let every Master of a family go and do so likewise And as Superiours must strictly enjoyn so Inferiours must heartily embrace Sabbath observation Children must enquire of their Parents Exod. 13. 14. And Servants must joyfully obey their Masters in all holy and spiritual Isa 28. 19. commands Col. 3. 22. They must spend frugally the time of a Sabbath solemnize seriously the ordinances of a Sabbath perform readily the services
with unwearied patience and unwonted alacrity they would wait upon his Ministry upon the Lords day and thought not the circuit of a Sabbath too great a compass but fill'd up the time of it in holy Devotion Indeed the Sabbath Crowns them who honour it Now Most Worthily Honoured I shall make no Applications what I could say is better seen in your practice then in my Epistle Suffer me only to be your Remembrancer those who are most spiritual lie under the motions of the Spirit if you see your selves in the Glass of this Treatise pardon me if I hold the Glass and let not my service be my offence Thus Eph. 1. 11. commending your selves your worthy Family and this Tract such as it is to the grace of him who worketh all Eph. 3. 20. things for us and in us Iremain Your faithful Servant in the Gospel of Christ John Wells TO THE READER Courteous Reader IT may be the Subject here handled may not please thy Palate because it is not some Rarity Common Dishes more quiet than please and gratifie Necessity more than Desire We are not fo fond of the Choritas ergo animas eadem feribit inculcat Amor spiritualis omne taedium absorbet omnem segnitiem Alap Herbs as of the Flowers of the Garden of those Plants which are to be put in the Pot as of those which are to lie in the bosom Reader at the first cast of thy eye upon this Book when thou seest the Sabbath to be the Theam of it thou wilt happily be apt to conclude Nihil dictum quod non dictum prius Nothing can be more said than what hath been said before And to what purpose should I survey an old Work in a new Edition An ancient person is little mended in his beauty by putting on a new Suit of Apparel The Sabbath hath been often discussed by the Pens of Learned men Nay the Rest of God hath had little Rest from Men there hath been so many Tracts and Treatises about it Now to take away this pretended Surfeit and so to bring the Reader to an Appetite It is answered first That most Tracts upon the Sabbath have been Polemicàl they have Mr. War been the jars and digladiations of Divines Mr. C. and some contending whether the last or the first day of the week be our Sabbath some striving Mr. P. whether the whole day be to be given to God Mr. L. Estr or only part and the rest may be spent in corporal Mr. Bys Refreshments or delightful Recreations Other Controversies are started and handled Dr. Tw whether the Lords day be bottomed upon Ecclesiastical Mr. Ab. or Divine Authority Whether the Sabbath was first founded in Paradise or upon Mount Sinai in the first delivery of the Decalogue VVhether we must begin the Sabbath in the Evening on the Saturday or early on the Morning on the Lords day c. These and the like Polemicks have for the most part filled those Pages which have been written upon the Sabbath Now broken strings make no musick in the Ears of the people Theological Debates are fitter for the Schools than the Vulgar Pro con more disquiet than satisfie the ordinary Reader Many have written upon the Sabbath occasionally as that Subject hath been brought in among others in their Volumes designed to some more comprehensive purpose Many Mr. G. have spent some leaves upon the Sabbath by Mr. Thom. the bye the Sabbath hath been the Branch Mr. S. not the Tree the Flower not the Garden It hath onely taken up some inconsiderable part of the work which they have exposed to the Worlds view Now occasional Diversions can put no Nausea upon full Treatises no more than the putting of a Flag into a Cockboat can stop the building of a Ship There are some who have written upon the Sabbath doctrinally without any application to Conscience the principal design of these Mr. Gr. Writings hath been to inform the Judgment Dr. B. and settle the Mind Conduct hath been more Mr. Walk aimed at than Conversation and Opinion Mr. B. more consulted than manners The end of Mr. G. these Books hath been rather to preserve us from Errour than prophaneness from mistake than miscarriage Now Reader the designe of the ensuing Introduxit me Rex in cella●● vinari●m inquit ponsa hoc est jussit introire ad Altare Dei illi● sumere calicem salutarem Domini Del. Rio. Treatise is different from all these it aimes more at the Heart than the Head at our practice than at our judgment it is more for reformation than information The designe of this Tract is to be a Munduction to lead us to a right keeping of a Sabbath how to converse with God and banquet with Jesus upon his own day how to spend the Lords day exactly according to the Lords will This Tract shoots at Conscience if possible to wound it for Sabbath-sin and to win it to Sabbath-holiness It is an Alarm rather than an Asterisk to call us to the sanctity of a Sabbath than to point at the Criticisms of it or its bare knowledge Other Treatises have vindicated the Sabbath from false glosses this presseth the Sabbath upon Christian practices and is put out to bear testimony against the scandalous abuses of that sacred and heavenly Day But supposing there should be some coincidency with former Tracts in this present Treatise as oftentimes there is a similitude in Pictures when they are drawn for several persons yet Courteous Reader let it not be impertinent that I should be thy Remembrancer the Apostle Paul writes the same things to the Philippians Phil. 3 1. which were before suggested to them and Apostolus eadem repetit ut ex cautis fi●nt cautiores et tutiores à periculis et sic haec praxis nec inutilis est nec molesta Zanch. he saith It was not grievous to him but safe for them Philip of Macedon had an Officer on purpose to mind him every Noon at Dinner of his death and mortality the same Message did impress not nauseate him things of concernment are never too much riveted upon us Now Sabbath-holiness is not onely our obedience but our interest not onely conforms to God but concerns our precious and immortal souls And it is to be observed the Nail is Eccles 12. 11. fastned by the Master of the Assemblies a servant may bring it but the Master must fasten it the same things if spiritual may please but not nauseate a gracious soul The general prophaneness which at this day casts a black veil upon the face of Gods Facit indignatio versum blessed Sabbath calls for some to pluck it off and rend it deep wounds must have the more Balm to heal them and the more Vinegar to wash them Sometimes the Times as well as Theams find work and employment for the Pen what Pages doth devout
other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist faculties the will pursues with eagerness either that which is good or that which appears to be so the memory preserves fresh and lively the pictures of those things which Galerus antiquissimus peritissimus medi●us partes hominis corporales delineans in admirationem raptus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ex clamat are committed to its charge Surely this consideration would make our meditations on the Lords day most sweet and delectable and what a golden thread of divine wisdom runs through the whole Universe The Order of the world shews the wisdom of God Prov. 3. 19 20. The Earth is set lowermost as the foundation of the rest the Sea is pent within its Channels the Air is above them both and the Heavens are the highest loft of the Crea●ion And so admirable order may be seen in making the world God proceeding from things imperfect to things more perfect First there is the rude mass then the Heaven and the Earth glorious Psal 104. 24. creatures but without life then Herbs and Plants which 1 Cor. 1. 21. have a vegetative life but without sense or motion then the brute Creatures which have sense and motion but want reason and last of all Man whom God endows with a reasonable soul and makes him after his own image And Gen. 1. 1 2 11 20 26. in this order we may perceive first the dwelling place is appointed then the food then the creature which is to feed 1 Kings 10. 7. upon it the beast upon the herbs and man upon the beasts The Queen of Sheba was astonished at Solomons wisdom when she perceived the well ordering of his family Certainly Abraham cum suis civis erat non Canaan sed Coeli in Canaan domum haber● noluit se● in mobili semper habitavit tabernaculo qui oculos jugiter conjiciebat in coelestem civitatem Ansel did we observe the order of nature we should more wonder at the infinite wisdom of God Heb. 11. 10. Amos 9. 6. The several parts of the world are sometimes compared to a building and in this great house every part conspires to the beauty service and decency of the whole The roof of this building is Heaven the Sphears are Chambers and stories in the Heavens the foundation of this building is the Earth Job 38. 5 6. The Stars and glorious Luminaries are windows in this house and the Sea is the water-course which serves this magnificent Structure And it is observable that every thing in the world is fitted for use and service The workmans skill is as much commended in the use of an instrument as in the making of it Now the upper Isa 40. 28. Heavens are made for the habitation of the Saints the middle Isa 43. 15. Heavens to give light heat and influence the Air or lower Isa 42. 5. heavens to give breath to sustain both man and beast the Isa 45. 12. fruits are for food the plants and herbs for medicine Galen Mal. 2. 10. saith there are six hundred muscles in the body of man and Eph. 3. 9. every one fitted for ten uses and so for bones nerves arteries and veins whoever shall observe them their situation use correspondence cannot choose but fall into admiration of the wise Creatour The wisdom of Men and Angels cannot mend the least thing in a Flie the figure colour quantity or quality of a worm or of a flower all which are made with so much exactness And it was no less then blasphemy in Alphonso the Spanish King to aver That had he been the Maker of the World he would have cast it into a better form No All the works of Creation are stupendious and admirable and are as so many asterisks to point out the glory and fame of that incomprehensible being who was the author and founder of them CHAP. XIX God is most wonderfull in the works of his providence WE must meditate on the works of Providence God is seen and manifested not onely in the making but Duplex est in deo potentia una quâ novit omnia altera per quom 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Amm. in the governing of the world not onely in the power of his hand but in the wisdom of his head he hath not onely made the ship but he sits at the stern and is the pilot to guide it Divine providence will be more fitted and suited to holy meditation if we trace providence In its conservation of all things in their beings By Gods immutable and powerfull providence all things are sustained Quomodo aut Sapiens esset deus mundi conditor sine sciret aut omnipotens si non posset aut bonus si nollet mundum quem condidit cur are gubernare and supported Acts 17. 28. It is a good saying of a learned man How could God be unspeakably wise if he knew not be infinitely powerful if he could not be admirably good if he would not govern and take care of the world he hath created A Master of a Family will take care for and support the Children of his loins the servants of his house and the place of his habitation where he himself hath taken up his abode That God rules and sustains all things by his good Providence is easily to be demonstrated if we look upon the world in general He hangs the Earth upon no king Job 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 26. 7. And what then should sustain that great vast and massy body but the supporting hand of the Almighty He not only sustains a Body of Earth but gives life and breath unto all things Acts 17. 25. The World doth not only rest steddy as leaning upon the Pil●ar of Gods Power but all creatures in the world have their life and motion from him He puts a principle of life into them to travel and flit Damascen 1 Eph. 11. up and down the world their steps are guided and given Acts 17. 24 25 c Prov. 15. 13. John 5. 17. Annon Dei manu omnia sustentantur reguntur certe durare non possunt presertim tam diu cum omnia sint ex nihilo Z●nch by the Lord Their locomotive power is from him And God doth not only give breath but bread to his creatures Psal 33. 19. He spreads the Table for Man his Vice-roy in the world And the young Ravens cry to him all the fealty they can shew they cry and they have their supplies from him Psal 147. 9. Luke 12. 24. And God doth not only make provision f●r man but afford protection to him His food shall sustain him and mans Sword shall not d●stroy him God will not only exhibit supply but keep off danger This likewise is verified in inanimate things He numbers the Stars that one of those glistring tapers shall not be missing nay he calls them by their Names Psal 147. 4. to shew his exact providence for the conservation
body and Requiesc●mus in Sabbato ne continuis laboribus fatigemur et eorum remissione fess● membra leventur vires reficiantur a revival to the soul the bodies ease and the souls enjoyment the outward man on the Sabbath recovers st●ength and the inward man receiveth Christ Our exhausted spirits on Gods holy day are sweetly recruited and our importunate souls are rarely answered they then prey upon a Christ offered in the Gospel Pla●o observes That the Go●s willing to recrui● mankind over-toiled with labour in pity have appointed festival days for their ease and relaxation Thus that Heathen Philosopher gives in his verdict to this particular Dii genus hominum laboribus pressum miserati propter remissionem laborum ipsis statu●runt solennia F●st● Plat. lib. 2. de legib Indeed Gods blessed Sabbath shores up a piece of clay and it builds up a pie●e of eternity the precious and the immortal soul The Sabbath is the bodies friend and the souls fosterer the bodies rest-time and the souls term-time Those words of God Deut. 5. 14 15. That thy man servant and thy maid servant may rest as well as thou and remember that thou wast a servant in the Land of Egypt are very emphatical and intimate to us that one necessary end of the Sabbath Deut. 5. 14 15. is rest and that not onely for governors of Families who happily need it not so much but also for servants and they which have tasted of toil and bondage will easily allow rest to others There is an aeconomical end of the Sabbath viz. That the whole family be taken off from their customary toil as Exod. 20. 10. Nec Pater familias nec ejus familia nec animalia domestica nimiis laboribus perdenda sunt sed uno die intra septiman●m quiete fruantur à laboribus Zan was suggested somewhat before and labour and enjoy a sweet vacation for their communion with God On this holy day the governor is to cease from his secular over-sight and usual labour the children are to suspend their daily employments and the servants are to lay aside their accustomed sweat and the Posterity of Adam is now neither to dig nor delve and to get his living by the sweat of his brows This day the Ox must ot toil at the plow nor the Ass groan under his burden nor must the stranger be disturbed in his pleasing repose Thomas Aquinas observes In observantiâ Sabba●● s●nctifi●atio est finis prae●●●●●m est c●ss●re ab ●●ere s●rvili quin. secunda se●undae quaest 122. The level of the fourth Commandment aims at holy rest and a full cessation from servile and secular labours And Musculus takes notice That in case of Religion there is no difference between the Master and the Servant between the Parents and Children but all distinctions of Sexes and Degrees and Relations is quite taken away and the same Law for the Sanctification of that holy day indifferently involves and includes Communi s●nctificandi Sabbati lege constring●ntur omnes ex aequo Herus Servus Pater Laberi Mas et Faemina superiores inferiores Musc Deut 5 14. Vt familia quief●eret haec habes ad Charitatem all The observation of the Sabbath reaches him who grinds at the Mill as well as him who sitteth on the Throne Then the whole family must be built up in their most holy faith as the Temple was in its Magnificent structure without noise of ax or hammer 1 Kings 6. 7. without interruption or noise of worldly and secular labour A learned man thinks it is agreeable to the Law of charity that Children and Servants should be call d off from their servile employments upon the Lords day their souls requiring as much care and attendance as the souls of those who move in a higher sphere and take the upper seat in the houshold and family There is an Ecclesiastical end of the Sabbath we are then to be conversant about those things which belong to the Finis secundus Sabbati est Ecclesiasticus eò quod cirea dei cultum et meditationem divinorum operum versatur Omnia enim ea quae ad veram pietatem et verum dei cultum pertinent in hoc sacro otio peragi debent Hospin Ostendit Deus discrimen inter labores externos et inter illos pietatis et cultus Divini in quarto praecepto Ger. Church of Christ we are to attend upon the worship of God to meet with the people of God and to refresh our souls with the Ordinances of God This day is a time for the Church not the Change it is not the fair of the body but the Market-day of the soul The things to be agitated this day are of another nature than the affairs of the week Now we must not mind our coffer but our Christ not the meat which perisheth John 6. 27. but that which endureth to everlasting life God gives us the seventh part of the week to trade for Heaven to dig for grace to sue out our pardon to strike high and look after an interest in a Mediator to lay up for eternity and to mind our part in Canaan above in the Countrey to come Now must we dress the Garden of our souls Gen. 2. 15. Now we must drive furiously 2 Kings 9. 20. for a Crown of glory Now we must pursue the unsearchable riches of Christ Eph. 3. 8. The affairs of the Sabbath are not civil but Ecclesiastical There is a Christian end of the Sabbath viz. That it may be a note and badge of our profession In the Primitive times the Pagans used to question the Christians upon this interrogatory Hast thou kept the Lords day and the answer Beati martyres in judicium vocati et à procons●le interrag●ti num Collectam fecissent aut Dominicum egissent Voce saepius repetitâ respondont se Christianos esse Collectam Dominicam et Dominicum congruâ religionis devotione celebrasse quia intermitti non potest Baron commonly was I am a Christian I dare not intermit it for the Law admonisheth me of it namely the Law of God of Christ of Christianity which answer cost many Christians their lives the last drop of their dearest bloud Never were two truths more deeply dyed in the bloud of Martyrs than the Lords Day and the Lords Supper have been the one under Popish the other under Pagan persecution The keeping of the Lords day in those Golden dayes of the Church was the Christians Motto the Saints Shibboleth the Martyrs boast and persecutors frowns could not cause them to suspend it nor the greatest fury enforce them to renounce it And the holy observation of the Lords day did not only then discriminate the Christian from the Heathen the Church from the world but it still differences the Saint from the sinner the believer from the formalist the carnal Gospeller from the real professor The Lords day is the Crown of the
Christ will scatter vain and wandring thoughts Cant. 3. 1 2. in holy duties the soul will then say I come to seek my Beloved Let us get strong apprehensions of the holiness and purity of God And let us consider how unsuitable vain and slight thoughts are to his holy and unblemished thoughts how Attributa dei sunt invisibilia et spiritualia et ideò deus est colendus latriâ precib● votis et gratiarum actione Alap unsuitable our mud is to his Chrystal What is the reason that the Saints and Angels in Heaven have not a vain thought they strike not a wry stroak the sight of the holy God doth fix them Nothing would more spiritualize our thoughts in holy duties then the consideration of Gods Attributes the transcendent brightness of those most glorious beams The Masters eye keeps the Servant demure and observant and nothing more consolidates mans heart then the serious apprehensions of a glorious and infinite God Let us be earnest with God for the spirit He can sanctifie our thoughts in holy Ordinances and keep them close to the 1 Thes 5. 23. work in hand The spirit of God can turn the heart which naturally is a bed of lust to become a bed of spices and 1 Cor. 2. 10. so fill it with divine cogitations this blessed spirit can present the soul with Heavenly objects in Heavenly duties The spirit is not onely a discerner of thoughts but the refiner of them to purge away their dross and impertinency and therefore called a Refiners fire Mal. 3. 2. Our Saviour faith John 16. 13. The Spirit of truth shall lead us into all truth and our hearts being guided the thoughts will not be subject to wander into by paths when we are interessed in holy and sacred opportunities CHAP. XXXI As we must be strict in our behaviour so we must be spiritual in our duties when we approach the Publick Ordinances HAving thus largely discovered how we must be strict in our behaviours in publick ordinances We come next to shew that we must be spiritual in our duties The heart is the chief ghuest at every ordinance The Aegyptians of all the fruits chose the Peach to consecrate to the Goddess and they gave this reason for it because the fruit thereof resembleth the heart The Saints Character is from his inward carriage to God The Kings Daughter is all glorious within Psal 45. 13. If we will worship God indeed we must worship him in heart Hypocrisie is but practical blasphemy The heart is the King in the little world Man Our Saviour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith John 4. 24. God is a spirit and he will be worshipped in spirit and in truth In truth i. e. Scripturally opposite to the inventions of mens heads In spirit i. e. sincerely John 4. 24. opposite to the dissimulation of mens hearts The deeper the belly of the Lute is the pleasanter the sound is the deeper our worship comes from the heart the more delightfull it is in Gods eye But now that our holy duties may be spiritually performed that we may hear spiritually and pray spiritually and receive spiritually The inward man must be employed in holy ordinances not so much the ear as the understanding not so much the knee as the memory not so much the tongue as the heart though as our Saviour saith Mat. 23. 23. This must be done but the other must not be left undone In legal sacrifices God would have the fat and the inwards Lev. 7. 3. Is it Bis adeps nominatur et halocaustum non tantùm suit res sancta sanctarum sed et locus in quo comesta fuit â sacerdotibus sanctur fuit not to inform us that our services must not be specious but spiritual God must have the fat and they must be cordial not extrinsical God must have the inwards It is not the Pharisees disfigured face but Mary Magdalens melting tears God eyes and respects God is not delighted with the Pageant of a duty The Service doth not please God which hath Absolons face but which hath Davids heart Jehu's fained zeal Herods seeming joy no way comport with Gods will The melting frame of a weeping Peter and the spiritual 2 Kings 10. 16. agony of a praying Hannah are in Christ a sweet smelling Mark 6. 20. sacrifice to the Lord. The chief wheels in prayer in Luke 22. 62. hearing in meditating and other holy duties are the faculties 1 Sam. 1. 13. of the soul a supple will a working mind a faithfull memory embracing affections these are the musick of the Sphears in holy ordinances The care of our souls must be the signal design in all holy Ordinances It is not so grateful to perform service as to advantage the soul in service 1 Pet. 2. 2. When we come to 1 Pet. 2. 2. ordinances we must not study a secular interest or to quiet the clamours of natural conscience or to keep up a port in Religion but we must study the interest and the emolument of our souls 1. To raise them Every Duty every Sermon every Prayer should be a wing to the soul that it might fly higher towards God Duties are not onely to satisfie but to sublimate the soul to make it more heavenly and more ambitious after a crown in glory as those primitive Saints who looked upon the things of this life with disdain soaring after a better Country which was to come Heb. 11. 13 16. 2. We must study our souls in ordinances so as so quiet them to give them more peace and tranquillity Gospel seasons are not onely for the elevation but the calming of the 1 Pet. 5. 8. soul Satan disturbs sin defiles and lusts war against the Mark 7. 20. soul and the soul never finds rest till it comes to God in 1 Pet. 2. 11. ordinances and there quietly it lies at Christs feet as Mary Magdalen to receive the honey combs dropping from his lips After Hannah had prayed then she was no more sad or discomposed 1 Sam. 1. 18. When we acquaint our selves with God in holy ordinances we shall be at peace Job 22. 21. and thereby good shall come unto us 3. To spiritualize them We sow in duty we reap in grace that we may be more humble more holy more savoury and more serious in the things of God and Eternity We enjoy the glorious Gospel that we may pass from glory to glory 2 Cor. 3. 18. Means of grace are for the getting of 2 Cor. 4. 4. Eph. 3. 16. greater measures of grace we feed upon the feast of Ordinances Co●roborari in interiori homine est corroborari in mente in intellectu in voluntate caeterisque animae potentiis that we may be strengthned in the inward man The Apostle saith faith comes by hearing Rom. 10. 17. And the same Gospel is both the Mother and the Nurse of that heavenly grace Study therefore thy soul
Onkelos hanc exclamationem Jacobi ad Christum resert para●hrasi plane piâ Non expecto salutare Gideon filii Joash neque salutare Sampson filii Manoe quae salus est planè temporalis sed expect● salutem redemptionem Christi filii David quae est solus aeterna Onkel God on a dying bed and waited for his glorious salvation On a bed of sickness thou mayest bend thy heart when thou canst not bend thy knee and stretch out the hand of thy faith when happily thy distemper will not suffer thee to stretch out the hand of thy flesh Sicknesses usually spiritualize duty not obstruct it Then the patient prayes more feelingly weeps more heartily converses with God more greedily A sense of approaching death affects the soul with more earnest pursuits after a better life A Christian under a disease may more pathetically improve he need not wave a Sabbath 4. If providence shall cast us into a severe and hard service the man servant is kept back from holy Ordinances by the prophaneness of the Master the maid servant is kept to her drudgery on Gods holy day by the pride and vanity of her Mistriss Nay happily our case is a Turkish Galley is all the Temple we have to worship in yet then though we have lost our freedom we have not lost our Sabbaths Israels worship was not lost but revived in the wilderness and there Moses talked with God as a man with his friend The uncouth and solitary wilderness was the Sanctuary Deut. 26. 10. where the Jews enjoyed the closest communion with God Exod. 33. 11. Paul gave spiritual exhortations in the ship and in a storme Deus non terribilitèr sed amicè cum Moyse egerit Riv. too when he was ready to be dashed into the pit by every wave Acts 27. 20. The rage of remorsless masters should make believing servants not to pray less but as the vassalized Israelites to groan more not to be weary of Sabbaths but Exod. 6. 5. to be more wary in their observation the bondage of the Acts 7. 34. body is no wayes eased by the hazzard of the soul The Heavenly Master must be served especially on his own day notwithstanding all the frowns and countermands of the earthly that imperious worm If threats could have prevailed with the three Children they had worshipped a golden Image and not adventured a fiery furnace Dan. 3. 18. Hard service should make us more heavenly not more heedless in Sabbath observation If our case is hard upon earth we should then the more endeavour to make it more glorious in heaven and Sabbath-holiness bids fair for it Now therefore this being premised Thus we must keep Sabbaths in our greatest solitariness when the world is turned into a Patmos to us Let us encourage our selves that this is not our case alone to serve God without company Moses communed with God alone upon the Mount there was no press of people or society Deut. 5. 31. Dan. 6. 10. of Saints to heighten his enjoyment Daniel conversed with God in his Chamber alone and his sacrifice was sweet though single Peter was praying alone at the top of the Acts 10. 9. house when he gets the company of an Angel that messenger from heaven salutes his pleasing recess The woman John 4. 13. of Samaria enjoys solitary yet salvifical communion with Jesus Christ and her soul lay under the distillations of his heavenly doctrine nay waters of life did flow more freely then the waters of the well which did afford her the plenty of that Element And to come nearer to our purpose the blessed Apostle John was in his Patmos when he was sublimated Revel 1. 10. with unusuall raptures and that upon the Lords day A single Lute can make sweet musick The Sun which gilds the world is but a single Planet And thy soul serving God alone on his day may be taken into galleries to walk Cant. 7. 5. with Jesus Christ and feed upon the honey and the honey Psal 19. 10. comb of an Ordinance The Word was more to Job then his necessary food when he lay on the dunghill alone Job 23. 12. And Christ acted to him above his promise Mat. 18. 20. He was present though two or three were not gathered together If thou art necessitated to keep the Sabbath alone be much in prayer In this single devotion Christ is both our President Luke 6. 12. And our Legislatour Mat. 6. 6. The Cum privatim et solitarie oramus ostentationem et affectationem humanae gloriolae omnino respuimus Chemnit Prayer of one Elijah could work miracles Jam. 5. 17 18. The Prayer of one Daniel could hasten deliverance Dan. 9. 23. The Prayer of one Moses could preserve a whole Nation from impending ruine Exod. 32. 23. Solitary prayers have their peculiar prerogatives in them we avoid all ostentation as Chemnitius well observes and more imitate the votary then the Pharisee In them we can search our hearts more accurately deal with God more faithfully and give a fuller account of our sins and provocations Closet devotion is not stopt because confined no more then the meditations of David were lost in the darkness of the night Psal 63. 6. in Mat. 6. 6. Psal 63. 6. Rev. 1. 10. 1 Sam. 1. 10. which he framed them Christ came to John in Patmos when the Island was his bolted Chamber not with bars but with waves Hannah prayed and wept alone and then she obtained a Samuel 1 Sam. 1. 10. The heart can work in Acts 10. 4. 1 Thes 5. 17. Col. 3. 17. prayer when there is no company to excite it and oftentimes God is most effectually present when man is wholly absent therefore if we must spend a Sabbath alone let part of it be taken up in fervent prayer and supplication In this case of solitariness let us be filled with holy meditations This holy duty of a Sabbath is advanced not obstructed by loneliness and retirement nay it cannot well be performed Gen. 24. 63. in company the noise of any associates hush away these pleasing contemplations which light upon the mind or Psal 92. 5 6 9. are started by the excitation of the good spirit In thy solitary Sabbaths let thy head work in meditation as well as thy heart in prayer and supplication These duties coupled like Castor and Pollux are a good prognostick and promise fair weather to the soul Meditate on thy sins Sin is first viewed by meditation and then moaned by confession and so consequently cashiered by repentance and this order is very proper and genuine first to cast the eye on sin and then to rend the heart for it and from it The head will affect the heart take then the opportunity of a solitary Sabbath to cast up thy accounts and Psal 4. 7. Jer. 31. 18 19 20. to look backward on thy sinfull life that thy soul may kindly melt and the Lord
do it so should Gods fear move us to keep a whole Sabbath Thou sayest thou art not able to keep a Sabbath but canst thou lose an eternal Sabbath It is a cursed exchange to forfeit everlasting rest for a little sloth Sabbaths must be kept if thy soul be saved Let the sense of a future judgment when every Sabbath shall be brought into the account let the dread of an infinite God who is a consuming fire Heb. 12. 29. Let the golden and precious trust of a He. 10 31. Sabbath all spur thee on to Sabbath duties to make thy way more pleasant and delightful Let that be done which must be done or else thou art everlastingly undone Things of absolute necessity are to be effected not disputed If thy Pedibus timor addidit alas servant must go of his errand or turn out of doors this makes him run Here we act for our souls and Sabbaths whole Sabbaths must be kept or our souls will perish in the action thy murmurs cannot silence divine wrath Imperfections through corruption of nature are one thing for they are in the best but to nourish them and willingly to yield to them is another I cannot do what I ought by nature Jer. 5. 31. shall I not therefore endeavour to do what I should by grace To say thou canst not keep a whole Sabbath doth not onely speak thy corruption but that thou lovest to have it so Ease corrupts nature and makes it putrifie nay it sets it backward in the things of God If the Clock be never Prov. 15. 19. wound up the wheeles will rust say to thy unactive heart John 1. 6. a wake thou who sleepest my eternity is bound up in the due observation of Gods day The slothful servant was condemned Dilectio et charitas dictat immò imperat ut serviamus domino inomnibus virtutum offici●s Alap Mat. 25. 26. not he that spent but he that hid his talent Thou hast a trade to drive on a Sabbath away with sluggish nature flesh like the sensitive plant if touched will withdraw from spiritual performances but force it by holy violence It is Apostolical counsel and most seasonable for the Lords day that we should not be slothful in business but fervent in spirit Rom. 12. 11. The Sabbath should be our sphear not our servitude we should then be as the Sun which needs no whips to scourge it forwards Mr. Bernard of Batcombe asketh the question Why we should be more indulgent to weak nature more yielding to the flesh in and about the 4th Commandement for the keeping Mr. Bern in his Tract on the Sabbath of a day wholly to God then in or about our whole service in obedience to the other nine Indeed we should breath after communion with God on his own day as once Christ did after the Cross to dye for his people when he was streightned in his own spirit Luke 12. 50. till it was fulfilled and accomplished To say we cannot keep a whole Sabbath to the Lord is an imputation cast upon divine Wisdome God never commands impossibilities and yet he severely commands the full observation of a whole Sabbath and yet to say God is an Exod. 20. 8. hard Master deserves the brand of an unprofitable servant Luke 19. 22 23 24. The Yoke of Christ is easie not galled with an incapcity of bearing of it If we can honour our Father and Mother Exod. 20. 12. which is the next Commandement why not keep Matth. 11. 30. Gods Sabbath There is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a natural affection sweetens the 5th and there is communion with God a more noble attraction indulcorates and facilitates the 4th Commandement Lazy flesh must not commence a suit with infinite Wisdome God knows our frame and we must know our Psalm 103. 14. duty nay in this particular our priviledge for to keep a Deut. 5. 29. day with God is a temporary Paradise nay a transient heaven Rom. 11. 33. our elevation above the world Let us not then inveigh against the rigour of the Command but deal with our own hearts to run chearfully and sweetly through the heavenly circuits of Gods blessed and holy Sabbath Quicquid factum fuit fiat Whatsoever hath been done may be done Now David layeth it down as a Character of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a godly man to meditate in the law of God day and night Psa 1. 2. The Syriack reads it as if his whole will pleasure was wrapt up in the Law of God the life was to be spent in holy contemplation not a day not a few hours nay the Psalmist gives an instance in himself the Law was his meditation all the day and if he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 might have his option he would dwell The Hebrew bears it he would Sabbath it in the house of God all the dayes of his life to behold the beauty of the Lord and to enquire in his Temple This blessed man thought his life too short a moment to converse with God and to behold his beauty The beauties of God delight not dazle the eye of the soul and such prospects drown all tediousnesse The Apostle Paul preaching on a Lords day continued his discourse till midnight Acts 20. 7. not imping but spreading the wings of the Evening Psalm 139 9. for greater latitudes in holy Communion and no doubt but many a Saint could put a curb into the mouth of Sabbath time to stop its speed that his weekly Jubilee should not fly away so fast Therefore let not any make this objection of sloth to say flesh and blood cannot keep a whole Sabbath surely such objectours are part of the world who know not the meat the Saints have to eat in the Banquets of the Lords day When Peter and the two other John 4. 32. Mat. 17. 1 4. Disciples saw Christ in his transfiguration they would build tabernacles to fasten their abode Sabbath Communion is only a more duskish transfiguration And why should we tire so soon when the way is so pleasant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Chrysost de sacerdot In the Primitive times the reading of the word and the preaching of the Gospel took up some part of every day And Chrysostome took good notice of the profit of that diligent course Mens minds were more babituated to the things of God and became richer treasuries of holy truth It was not then accounted tedious or irksome to spend some time every day with God for soul advantage The Primitive Church thought time spent in spiritual converse their term not their toyle and the School of Christ was open not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. on a Sabbath as Janus his Temple among the Romans only in a time of peace but on every day The worthy Chrysostome highly commends his Auditours That they turned a day which might have been spent in the service of
prayer or any other duty their thoughts look back as Lots wife did upon Sodom and so that duty is as it were turned into a pillar of salt a monument Duo contrarii amores in eodem corde locum non habent nec habere possunt Zanch. of shame And so in hearing the Word they bring the cares of the world with them and they are thorns which choak the blessed Seed of the Word Mat. 13. 22. and it becomes altogether unfruitful And again worldly thoughts do very unseasonably mix with heavenly duties we do ill to be in the vale when we should be on the mount Exod. 24. 18. with God to be supping up the dregs of the world when we should feed on the marrow Psal 63. 5. and drink of the Isa 25. 6. wine well refined in blessed Ordinances this is to powre contempt upon the provisions of the Sanctuary To say our communion is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ on a Sabbath when yet our hearts are fluttering over the John 1. 1. 3. world this is to delude not to satisfie the Soul But be it we can taste no sweetness in Sabbath duties yet we are bound to continue our diligence we must observe our duty though presently we receive not the mercy It is Job 1. 9. the badge of Mercenaries to plead no Recompence no Obedience Indeed the recompence of reward may be in our eye though it be not our end In the work we do we may have a love to the reward though the meer love of the reward doth not attract us to do the work God is our great Lord and Master and though it is not servile obedience yet it is the obedience of Servants we ow him continually and much more upon his own day Cassian observes That he Cassian l 4. c. 24. knew a young man who meerly in obedience to his Superiors command for a whole year together went two miles every day only to pour water on a withered stick We ought every Lords Angeli quomodo discurrunt medii inter deum nos Bern. day to come under Gospel waterings though our hearts remain withered and dry though we feel no softnings or comforting it is enough we have a command the duty is ours the day is Christs who is over all God above all blessed for ever It is a favour God will employ us though he Rom. 9. 5. should never reward us The Angels rejoyce that God will engage them in his business though they receive no new recompence they are chearful to increase the duty though they do not enlarge their glory The Angels saith the Apostle are Bernardus solitus est dicere Angelos secum cooperari unoquoque die dominico all ministring spirits sent forth to minister c. Heb. 1. 14. This is their property they think themselves happy in that God thinks them worthy to do his work in the world And so must we esteem our selves honoured in conversing with God in Ordinances though we do not hear the spouts run Hab. 3. 17 18. with the waters of life and though the fingers of Christ do not drop Myrrh Cant. 5. 5. nor do we taste the honey-comb in them Cant. 5. 1. For Ordinances in themselves are Jude 14. 8. as Sampsons Lion with the swarm and the honey in them they are in their own nature pots of perfume more reviving then the smoaks of incense and though our resentments be not so quick yet we must follow the scent It is a good observation Hos 6. 3. of Chrysostom As fountains saith he send out water though no pitcher be brought to fetch from them so Pastors must preach and Auditors must hear though no fruit be received For as to keep Sabbaths is indispensable for men so to bless them is arbitrary with God But if God shine not forth from between the Cherubims of holy Ordinances Psal 80. 1. yet it is incumbent upon us to wait at the door of the Sanctuary alwayes remembring that subjection is ours but benediction is his and he will have mercy on whom he will have Rom. 9. 18. mercy Suppose Sabbaths are not successful to us what peace or profit can we expect if we lay them aside Upon the same account all other times of holy duty and the exercise of Religion may be waved and left off and then what can there be but a fearful expectation of judgment Hierom upon Heb. 10. 27. that place of the Apostle Rom. 9. 16. It is not of him that willeth nor of him that runneth but of God that sheweth Hieron in Psal 107. mercy Sure then saith he It is not of him who sleepeth nor of him that idleth nor of him who neglects duty for on such the Lord will have no mercy And Chrysostom well observes upon that speech of our Saviour Mat. 16. 24. If any will Chrysost in Matth. homil 56. come after me let him deny himself c. Christ saith not as this Father observes If any man stand still or sit down for the Kingdom of God is not given to standers or to idlers but to walkers and to workers So it may be concluded the comforts of God are not given to any person who upon any pretence whatsoever shall omit or neglect his duty especially Iter monstrat Apost quo fiat ut semper gaudeamus Per orationem nimirum quae non cessat gratiarum actionem Theoph. Non erit glo riosa victoria nisi ubi fuerint laboriosa certamina Ambros upon the Lords day For any to pretend they have performed duties and waited on Ordinances and yet fail of success what good success can they expect upon the ceasing of those duties The Apostle bids us pray without ceasing 1 Thes 5. 17. So then we must pray though the blessing do not presently come we must obey the command though we do not receive the reward If men may use the means and yet miss the end surely such must miss the end who will not use the means let none think to better their souls condition by laying aside Sabbath transactions When Christians have performed Sabbath duties and do not find such comfortable and desired success in their Gospel communion Let them smite upon the thigh and reflect upon themselves The word is fire and why am I cold The Psal 6. 6. word is quickning and why am I dead Ordinances are the means of grace and why have I no grace or comfort by the Psal 43 5. means Some are at Sermons and Sacraments with their Psal 42. 4. hearts leaping and go away with their faces shining and Christi●ne fige tui cursus profectusque me tam ubi Christus posuit suam Bern. those who see them see they have been with Jesus but why go I mourning all the day Thus we should put our selves upon the search and scrutiny Skilful Physicians search into the cause of distempers and so should
diebus Rab. Kimchi in Psal 92. secular affairs and compose himself for divine intercourse he can more conveniently dress his soul to meet with his beloved But suppose man could prepare himself every day for this holy converse with his Maker yet Gods Name would lose by it if God should not have the honour of a solemn day Idols have their set dayes for their worshippers to celebrate their honour in And Kings have their birth dayes Pharaoh had his birth day Gen. 40. 20. And Herod had his birth day Mark 6. 21. which was solemnized with great joy and festivals And so Princes have their Coronation days which are annually kept with the highest observation And is it not meet and just that Gods Name should be magnified by us Commonly by setting apart some time every day which we may well spare out of our employments and callings for God and this doth honour him but a day a set solemn day much more when all Christians in the whole world shall harmoniously and unanimously meet to worship Acts 19. 28. and to honour the great Jehovah and shall cry out Great is the God of the Christians Set dayes of worship do reflect much honour upon God as the stated Noon speaks the elevation of the Sun To keep every day a Sabbath subverts the design of a Sabbath which was to rest after our worldly labours and to set apart that rest for the service of the Lord. So the very words Sabbatum est sanctum otium cultui sacro deputandum of the fourth Commandement Deut. 5. 14. And we have this rest in imitation of Gods rest Now God did not rest every day but onely the seventh Nor did Christ rise every Dominicus dies Christi resurrectione declaratus est Christianis et ex illo coepit habere festivitatem suam day but onely the first That which put life into the old Sabbath was Gods resting one day and that which authorizeth the Sabbath of the new Testament is Christs rising one day it is still one day not many dayes If God had rested every day where would have been the work of creation And if Christ had been alwayes rising from the bed of his grave where would have been the work of Redemption Aug. Epist 119. cap. 13. Thus praecedaneous work ushers in a Sabbaths Rest and so it must be still To rest every day plucks up the very foundation of a Sabbath upon which it is built and as Frederick Barbarossa did Millaine sowe it with salt To keep every day a Sabbath dasheth upon many absurdities and supposeth impossibles We must understand the definition of a Sabbath It is a day of divine appointment which must Hanc ob causam deus septimo die ab omni opere quievit ut nos ab omni opere externo vac●ntes ipsi uni soli hoc die vacaremus Idcirco hunc diem benedixit sanctificavit i. e. in usum suum separavit et elegit Oecol●● p. in 4turn praecept Tom. 3. Oper. be consecrated wholly to the service and worship of God Now should we do nothing every day but attend the service of God in spiritual duties and holy Ordinances what would become of the Common-wealth the Magistrate the Master the Subject the Servant How can the one rule and the other obey Who shall provide for our Families whilst we worse then Infidels cast off the care thereof 1. This opinion overthrows all commerce traffick it plucks down all Empories and Cities of trade or shall we continually fly from the Sanctuary to the Shop from unlading our Souls in prayer to unlade our goods from the Key or the Ship Shall we hurry in Gods Ordinances and suddenly start from them to look after our Merchandise 2. This opinion countermands all those injunctions of God which were given before the Law In the sweat of thy brows thou shalt eat thy bread Gen. 3. 19. And so likewise in the Law Six dayes shalt thou labour Exod. 20. 9. And after the Law in the times of the Gospel We command them to work with quietness and to eat their own bread 2 Thes 3. 12. And if any would not work neither should he eat So that this fancy drives men into the extremity of irreligion and Atheism 3. This opinion takes away all distinction of our general and particular calling Christians have not only their general calling viz. To profess the name of Christ that heavenly Calling Deus vocavit nos vocatione sanctâ dum nos ab infidelitate et peccatis ad suum fidem et sanctitatem vitamque sanctam et divinam Et hac vocatione spes Christianorum acuitur cum Evangelio pro Evangelio pati as the Apostle calls it Heb. 3. 1. That hopeful Calling Eph. 4. 4. That high Calling Phil. 3. 14. That worthy Calling 2 Thes 1. 11. That holy Calling 2 Tim. 1. 9. Now besides this Calling all Christians lay claim to particular Christians have their particular Callings their Trades their Vocations and several employments Shall we then serve God hear pray or receive Sacraments continually and without intermission Where would be the time for our Callings Then we might as the Woman of Zareptah said of her little Oil in the cruse and the little meal in the barrel 1 Kings 17. 12. Even shut up our shops and die our hands then should not minister to our necessities as the Apostle assures us his did Acts 20. 34. This being true Every day must be a Christian Sabbath then the Apostles must not mend their nets Mark 1. 19. Nor Paul make his Tents Acts 18. 3. This fond opinion subverts every trade ties up every painful hand breaks all working instruments it silence the Lawyers tongue and benums the Scholars brain and withers the Plow-mans hand and the Smith at the forge shall sweat no more then the Prince on the Throne and so the world shall have a writ of ease to go down in a pleasant dream to the silent grave 4. This fancy puts God upon constant miracles to rain down Manna for our daily supply and again fetch water Exod. 16 35. out of the rock for we must not apply our selves to worldly Numb 20. 8. labours for that is inconsistent with a Sabbath and every day say these men must be a Christian Sabbath which we know must be most strict and serious and what is all this but daring presumption Truly this opinion fairly leads us back from Canaan to the wilderness again 5. This opinion makes man perfect in this life for weak flesh cannot keep a constant Sabbath If Paul lengthen out his discourse more then ordinary Eutichus falls into a deep sleep and drops from the third Loft and destroys himself Acts 20. 9. Nay our Saviour complains that the Disciples could not watch one hour with him but they were surprized Quot sunt remorae Christianae vigilantiae aut risus diffusio aut intemperantiae gravamen aut quaelibet superfluitas
of this blessed day commands our severest observation The Sabbath contains all the three arguments in it which some calls the worlds Trinity Pleasure Profit Honour And if these arguments have so much force in temporals why should not they be as cogent in spirituals spiritual good things 1. They yield most Sure there is more in a grace of the spirit then in the stuffing of a bag or the lining of a cost●r 2. They last longest 3. They are purchased with greater difficulty they are bought with a price with the blood of a Redeemer Dies dominicus omnium dierum mater est Hieron 4. They enrich our better part and shall not they more influence our care and our devotion Our Sabbath is solemn in its own dignity let it be so in our observation God hath crowned this day with honour why should we degrade it by our sin and vanity Our heavenly carriage doth best comport with the glory of this day Hierom calls our Christian Sabbath the Mother of dayes not only intimating its own antiquity but pointing at the veneration we should give to it And so the fifth Commandment comes in to the support and assistance of the fourth We must honour this Mother of dayes that our dayes may be happy and long in the land Exod. 20. 12. Nor unfitly is the Sabbath called a Mother when it hath so fruitful an issue and hath brought forth so many Children to Christ who is its Lord and Master Ignatius Mark 2. 28. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Ignat. calls our Sabbath the Queen of dayes and all other parcels of time are only hand-maids to wait on her now every evil fact is aggravated which is committed in the presence-chamber The Holy Ghost calls our Sabbath the Lords day Rev. 1. 10. And God doth not call this day by his own Name but to intimate thus much to us that we should likewise honour it by a holy and careful celebration Sin then and vanity is a blot in the Escucheon of the Sabbath and the prophane person as much as in him lies layes the honour of it in the dust The Jews had a very high esteem of their Sabbath and they compared it to a Queen their other festivals they compared to Concubines and ordinary dayes they compared to hand-maids and they made a six fold difference between their Sabbath and other festivals Other festivals had no parasceue or preparation going before them but the Sabbath had still a preparation and it was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or pervigilium Sabbati the Vigils of the Sabbath Obj. but it may here be said that John 19. 14. we meet with the preparation to the Passover and therefore a preparation was not peculiar to the Sabbath Answ To which it is answered It is called the preparation to the Passover because at that time the Sabbath and the Passover fell both together Mat. 17. 62. and then the Jews transferred the Passover to the Mark 15. 42. Sabbath and therefore it was called the great Sabbath Joh. Luke 23. 54. 19. 31. That Sabbath day was an high day saith the Text John 19. 42. because both feasts fell on the same day But the preparation mentioned John 19. 14. was then in respect of the Sabbath and not in respect of the Passover which was drowned in the Sabbath For other feasts besides the Sabbath needed no preparation The Sabbath of the Jews had a prerogative above all other festivals in that other festivals were translated to the Sabbath Alios festivitatis dies transferre solebunt ad Sabbatum propter olera mortuos Judaic Proverb but the Sabbath stood unmoveable and could never be transferred to any other festival therefore they oftentimes made the feast day a common day and upon it they prepared their meat and buried their dead and they transferred the religious exercises which did belong to that day to the Sabbath The Sacrifices of all their festivals gave way to the Sabbath Their daily Evening sacrifice was killed at eight of the clock and half an hour past according to the Jews counting of the hours half an hour before three with us and offered at the ninth hour and an half past which with us is half an hour after three and this they did that they might rest the evening of the Sabbath The Sabbath had a double sacrifice upon it Numb 28. 9 10. Whereas all other festivals had only their particular services and sacrifices which as it was to distinguish the Sabbath from all other feasts so to mind us of that industry and sedulity we should shew on the holy and blessed Sab-Sabbath The Sabbath was kept in the wilderness and in the captivity and he who violated and brake the Sabbath in the Wilderness was stoned to Death Numb 15. 35. But other festivals were not kept in the captivity and the Passover but once in the wilderness Numb 9. 5. The whole week took denomination from the Sabbath Luke 18. 12. Acts 13. 42. And besides all this every Sabbath day they came to hear the Scriptures read and expounded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in medio septimanae Mat. 1. 21. Luke 4. 31. But on the week dayes they met occasionally The Sabbath was the appointed time for those holy exercises Now shall the Jews be so curious Acts 14 15. in drawing of their Sabbaths Eschutcheon of Honour and marking its dignified prerogatives and shall we give less veneration to the Lords Day I mean not in verbal praises or rhetorical panegyricks but in holy practices Our carefull Preparation for the solemnities of it our serious behaviour in the duties of it our frugal improvement of the time of it our unwearied diligence in the service of it this and this only speaks our Sabbath honourable Piety and Devotion best proclaim the dignity of this holy day when we act as those who believe that Christ is not only the institutour of our Sabbath but will be the Judge of the world Let us Rom 2. 16. then consider the Lords Day under what notion we will either as the souls jubilee and festival day or as the souls market 2 Cor. 5. 10. day or as the Churches best and most glorious day yet still nothing but holiness becomes it and its beauty is best seen in our sanctification Our holiness is the foyle to set off the glory of it Arg. 5 Let us look upon our Sabbath as a day of distinction the observation of which distinguisheth Christians from the rest of the world and this meditation will prompt us to holiness What Sabbatum est signum quòd deus Israelem sanctificavit i. e. segregando eos à gentibus profanis in peculiarem sibi populum Lavater in Ezek. the Lord said to the Jews Exod. 31. 13. Verily my Sabbaths shall ye keep for it is a sign between me and you that ye may know that I am the Lord who doth sanctifie you is as applicable to
us as it was to them and it is as if the Lord had said the keeping of my Sabbath shal be a distinctive badge and cognizance of Covenant holiness a sign that I do sanctifie you and separate you to my self for a holy and peculiar people Let us cast our eye upon our Sabbath as our discriminating and differencing badge And shall we shame our livery Shall we make our Sabbath a day of riot or excess Sabbatum est signum et symbolum inter deum et Israelitas ut se dei esse profiterentur et ut à reliquis gentibus discernerentur ●uit enim sacramentale quoddam quòd illos sibi deus sanctificaverat Riv. of sloath or idleness and so mingle with the prophane world Do we prophane our Sabbaths how can we distinguish our selves from a sensual Jew or a miscreant Turk they likewise have their Sabbaths And will a diurnall distinction serve the turn that the Turk keeps his Sabbath on the Friday the Jew on the Saturday and we Christians the First day of the week It is a poor shift and a faint distinction to keep a different day will not the world scoff at this distinction It is not the Day only but the manner of observance The Apostle saith that Christs people are a peculiar people zealous of good works 2 Tit. 14. And so our Saviour makes the distinction of his people from the rest of the world John 17. 14. It is observable that the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chadash signifies two things 1. To separate from common use 2. To sanctifie to teach us our sanctification is our only separation from the rest of the dregs of the world Therefore still let our holiness upon Gods blessed day be a sign between God and us that he hath sanctified us This is his will and let it be our work as alwayes so peculiarly on the Sabbath our sanctification 1 Thes 4. 3. Exod. 31. 13. Sabbatum sanctis usibus et religiosis formalitèr deputatur c. Rivet Let Christ know us to be his sheep by this our will is not only melted into his will but our obedience is fully calculated for his day Rivet hath a pregnant note The Sabbath saith he is given formally for holy uses for hearing the Word for Prayer for receiving the Sacrament by which our sanctification is ripened and accomplished Arg. 6 No command but that of the Sabbath hath a memento prefixed Hic specialis observatio requiritur ita ut nunquam obliviscamur quia agitur de operibus humanis intermittendis et de opere dei suscipiendo quae sunt naturae hominis depravatae omninò contraria c. Riv. to it As if our obedience to this command was our chief business which we must not forget God doth not usually annex his mementoes to any thing but to matters of the greatest moment As 1. Sometimes to press his Laws Num. 15. 39 40. And 2. sometimes to press his Love as a motive to obedience Deut. 5. 15. 3. Sometimes to mind us of himself Deut. 8. 13. 4. Sometimes to mind us of his Enemies Deut. 25. 17. And 5. Sometimes to mind his Sabbath Exod. 20. 8. God puts an Higgaion Selah upon this Commandment that as among the Jews the singing of it caused them to raise their voice So among us in keeping Sabbaths it should raise our hearts to a holy observation Now God prefixes a memento to the Commandment for the Sabbath upon divers designs which will very well suit with our purpose As first to intimate the opposition of mans corrupt heart to this holy Command Rom. 7. 12. Depraved man cannot endure Homines parati sunt ad fervorem operum suorum oc●upantur suis commodis suis voluptatibus facilime irretiontur sed cultui divino c. Riv. the snaffle of a whole dayes service he loves not to be bridled to spiritual duties and therefore God here awakens us by a shrill memento the learned Rivet observes That men are upon the wing in flight and heat after their owne works and they are most easily entangled in the snare of their own pleasures and delights but to do Gods work upon his own day this goes against the grain of corrupt Nature This Memento shews the venerable antiquity of the Sabbath God hath been pressing the Sabbath upon us from the beginning of the world as hath been shewn already The Gen. 2. 3. good Lord is jealous least an ancient should be an antiquated institution God gives us this Memento to mind us of the strict account we must make hereafter for all our Sabbaths When a Master gives his servant many errands but saith he be sure you remember this above all the rest if that errand be forgotten he breaks out into a greater passion God remembers us to keep inviolably his holy Sabbath to assure us he will else remember to punish severely the breaches and violations of this Emphatical Commandment His expostulation hereafter will be Did not I give you my Sabbath with a Memento To inform us the sum of Religion lies in a due observation of the Sabbath It was a good saying of worthy Mr. Rogers Take away Gods Sabbath and Religion will soon Tolle Sabbatum et citò marcessit omnis Religio Rog. dwindle and faint into nothing Jacob gave a severe charge to his Sons about Benjamin because he lay nearest his heart And is it not an evidence that the fourth Commandment lies nearest to Gods heart that he gives so severe a charge about it That much of Religion is wrapt up in it nay the very quintessence of piety is dropt into it We are more apt to forget the fourth Commandment then Observandum est quod deus non simpliciter dicit Diem Sabbati sanctificabis sed memento ut diem Sabbati sanctifices Genus hoc praecipiendi non est leve vulgare sed grave serium et significat praecipirem seriam nec ullo modo negligendam sed summâ curâ et diligentiâ servandom sic solent Parentes liberis suis et ser●●● Heri obtervantiam eo●●● inculcat● quae omnium maximè negligi notant Admonemur etiam verbo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Recordare et memor esto ad observantiam praeceptorum dei Requiritur enim memoria ut noctes et dies de illis servandis cogitemus nec unquam obliviscamur quid praecepti à quo illud accepimus Muscul any of the rest And it is observable when any duty is charged by God with a Memento it argues a proneness to forget it so Eccles 12. 1. Remember thy Creatour in the dayes of thy Youth which charge intimates to us no age is so prompt to forget God as Youth which usually is snarled and entangled in divers lusts called by the Apostle Youthfull lusts 2 Tim. 2. 22. And there are many reasons why we are so apt to forget this Commandment 1. Because the rest of the Commandments are written in our