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A03146 The history of the Sabbath In two bookes. By Pet. Heylyn. Heylyn, Peter, 1600-1662. 1636 (1636) STC 13274; ESTC S104023 323,918 504

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by them who deny it here 4 Anticipations of the same nature not strange in Scripture 5 No Law imposed by God on Adam touching the keeping of the Sabbath 6 The Sabbath not ingraft by nature in the soule of man 7 The greatest Advocates for the Sabbath deny it to be any part of the Law of Nature 8 Of the morality and perfection supposed to be in the number of seven by some learned men 9 That other numbers in the confession of the same learned men particularly the first third and fourth are both as morall and as perfect as the seventh 10 The like is proved of the sixth eighth and tenth and of other numbers 11 The Scripture not more favourable to the number of seven then it is to others 12 Great caution to be used by those who love to recreate themselves in the mysteries of numbers 1 I Purpose by the grace of God to write an History of the Sabbath and to make knowne what practically hath been done therein by the Church of God in all ages past from the Creation till this present Primaque ab origine mundi ad mea perpetuum deducere tempora carmen One day as David tells us teacheth another Nor can wee have a better Schoolmaster in the things of God then the continuall and most constant practice of those famous men that have gone before us An undertaking of great difficulty but of greater profit In which I will crave leave to say as doth Saint Austine in the entrance to his Book● de Civitate Magnum opus arduum sed Deus est adjutor noster Lib. 1. c. 1. Therefore most humbly begging the assistance of Gods holy Spirit to guide me in the way of truth I shall apply myselfe to so great a worke beginning with the first beginnings and so continuing my discourse successively unto these times wherein we live In which no accident of note as farre as I can discerne shall passe unobserved which may conduce to the discovery of the truth and setling of the minds of men in a point so controverted On therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the present businesse In the beginning saith the Text God created the Heaven and the Earth Gen. 2. Which being finished and all the hosts of them made perfect on the seventh day God ended his worke which ●e had made and hee rested on the seuenth day from all his worke which he had made And then it followeth And God bless●d the seventh day and sanctified it because that in it hee had rested from all his worke which God created and made Vnto this passage of the text and this point of time some have referred the institution and originall of the Sabbath taking these words to be a plain narration of a thing then done according to that very time wherein the Scripture doth report it And that the sanctifying of the seventh day therein mentioned was a Commandement given by God to our Father Adam touching the sanctifyng of that day to his publick worship Conceiving also that there is some speciall mystery and morality in the number of seven for which that day and none but that could be designed and set apart for this employment Others and those the ancienter and of more authority conceive these words to have been spoken by a Prolepsis or Anticipation and to relate unto the times wherein Moses wrote And that it was an intimation onely of the reason why God imposed upon the Iewes the sanctifying rather of the seventh day then of any other no precept to that purpose being given to Adam and to his posterity nor any mystery in that number why of it selfe it should be thought most proper for Gods publick service The perfect stating of these points will give great light to the following story And therefore wee will first crave leave to remoove these doubts before we come to matter of fact that afterwards I may proceed with the greater ●ase unto my se●f and satisfaction to the Reader The ground-worke or foundation laid the building will be raysed the surer 2 And first it is conceived by many learned men that Moses in the second of Genesis relates unto the times in the which hee lived and wrote the History of the Creation when God had now made known his holy will unto him and the Commandement of the Sabbath had by his Ministery been delivered to the house of Israel This is indeed the ancienter and more generall tendry unanimously delivered both by Iew and Christian and not so much as questioned til these later dayes And howsoever some ascribe it to Tostatus as to the first inventer of it yet is it ancienter farre then he though were it so it could not be denyed but that it had an able and a learned Author A man considering the times in which he lived and the short time of life it pleased God to give him that hardly ever had his equall I● Gen. 2. It s true Tostatus thus resolues it He makes this quaere first Num Sabbatum cum à Deo sanctificatum fuerit in primordio mundi rerum c. Whether the Sabbath being sanctified by God in the first infancy of the World had beene observed of men by the Law of nature And thereunto returns this answere quod Deus non dederit praceptum illud de observatione Sabbati in principio sed per Mosen datum esse c. That God commanded not the Sabbath to be sanctified in the beginning of the World but that it was commanded afterwards by the Law of Moses when God did publickly make known his will upon Mount Sinai And that wheras the Scripture speaketh of sanctifying the seventh day in the second of Genesis it is not to be understood as if the Lord did then appoint it for his publick worship but is to be referred unto the time wherein Moses wrote which was in the Wildernesse Et sic Moses intendebat dicere quod Deus illum diem sanctificavit sc. nobis c. And so the meaning of the Prophet will be briefly this that God did sanctifie that day that it to us to us that are his people of the house of Iacob that we might consecrate it to his service So farre Tostatus In which I must confesse that I see not any thing but what Iosephus said before him though in other words who speaking of the Worlds Creation doth conclude it thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. So that Moses saith Antiqu. l. 1. 2. that the World and all that is therein was made in six whole dayes and that upon the seventh day God took rest and ceased from his labours 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. By reason whereof wee likewise desist from travaile on that day which we call the Sabbath i. e. repose So that the institution of the Sabbath by Tostatus and the observation of it by Iosephus are both of them referred by their us and wee unto the times of Moses and the
Ministery therein hath no such evidence Though God had brought them then into the Land of Promise yet all this while they were unsetled The Land was given after when they had possession So that the next Sabbath which ensued on the removall of the Tabernacle unto Shil● was the first Sabbath which was celebrated with its Legall Ceremonies and this was Anno Mundi 2589. In which if we consider aswell the toylesomenesse as multiplicity of the Priest like-offices wee shall soone see that though the people rested then yet the Priest worked hardest First for the Loaves of Proposition Antiqu. Iud. l 3. c. 10. or the Shew-bread however Iosephu● tell us that they were baked 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the day before the Sabbath and probably in his time it might be so yet it is otherwise in the scriptures The Kohathites 1. Chron. 9. saith the Text were over the Shew-bread for to prepare it every Sabbath These loaves were twelue in number one for every Tribe each of them two tenth deales or halfe a peck so the Scriptures say every Cake square ten hand-breadthes long five square and seven fingers high so the Rabbins teach us The kneading baking and disposing of these Cakes must require some labour A●han●s hom de semente 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Where there is baking saith the Father then must be heating of the Oven and carrying in of faggots and whatsoever worke is necessary in the Bakers trade Then for the Sacrifices of the day the labour of the Priest when it was left was double what it was on the other dayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Chrysostome hath rightly noted Concio 1. de Lazaro The daily sacrifice was of two lambs the supernumerary of the Sabbath was two more If the New-moone fell on the Sabbath as it often did there was besides these named already an offering of two Bullocks a Ramme seven Lambs and if that New-moone were the Feast of Trumpets also as it sometimes was there was a further offering of seven Lambs one Ramme on Bullock And which is more each of these had their severall Meat-offerings and Drink-offerings Persumes and Frankincense proportionable to attend upon them By that time all was done so many beasts kill'd skinned washed quartered and made ready for the Altar so many fires kindled meate and drinke offerings in a readinesse and the sweet Odours fitted for the worke in hand no question but the Priest had small cause to boast himselfe of his Sabbaths rest or to take joy in any thing but his larger fees and that he had discharged his duty As for the people though they might all partake of the fruits hereof yet none but those that dwelt in Shilo or neere unto it at the least could behold the sight or note what paines the Priests tooke for them whilest they themselues sate still and stirred not Had the Commandement beene morall and every part thereof of the same condition the Priests had never done so many manners of worke as that day they did However as it was our blessed Saviour did account these works of theirs to be a publick prophanation of the Sabbath day Math. 12. 5. Reade yee not in the Law saith hee how that upon the Sabbath dayes the Priests in the Temple doe prophane the Sabb●th yet hee declared withall that the Priests were blamelesse in that they did it by direction from the God of Heaven The Sabbath then was daily broken but the Priest excusable For Fathers that affirme the same See Iustin Martyr dial qu. 27. ad Orthod Epiphan l. 1. haer 19. n. 5. Hierom. in Psal. 92. Athanas. de Sabb. Circumcis Austin Qu. ex N. Test. 61. Isidore Pelusiot Epl. 72. l. 1. and divers others 10 These were the Offices of the Priest on the Sabbath day and questionlesse they were sufficient to take up the time Of any other Sabbath duties by them performed at this present time there is no Constat in the Scripture no nor of any place as yet designed for the performance of such other duties as some conceive to pertain unto the Levites That they were scattered and dispersed over all the Tribes is indeed most true The Curse of Iacob now was become a blessing to them Forty eight Cities had they given them for their inheritance whereof thirteen were proper onely to the Priests besides their severall sorts of ●ithes and what accrewed unto them from the publick Sacrifices to an infinite value Yet was not this dispersion of the Tribe of Levi in reference to any Sabbath duties that so they might the better assist the people in the solemnities and sanctifyng of that day The Scripture tels us no such matter The reasons manifested in the word were these two especially First that they might be neere at hand to instruct the people and teach them all the statutes Levit. 10. 10 11 which the Lord had spoken by the hand of Moses as also to let them know the difference betweene the holy and unholy the uncleane and cleane Many particular things there were in the Law Leviticall touching pollutions purifyings and the like legall Ordinances which were not necessary to be ordered by the Priests above those that attended at the Altar and were resorted too in most difficult cases Therefore both for the peoples ease and that the Priests above might not be troubled every day in matters of inferiour moment the Priests and Levites were thus mingled amongst the Tribes A second reason was that there might be aswell some nursery to train up the Levites untill they were of age fit for the service of the Tabernacle as also some retirement unto the which they might repaire when by the Law they were dismissed from their attendance The number of the Tribe of Levi in the first generall muster of them from a moneth old and upwards was 22000. just out of which number all from 30 yeares of age to 50 being in all 8580 persons were taken to attend the publicke Ministery The residue with their wives and daughters were to be severally disposed of in the Cities allotted to them therein to rest themselues with their goods and cattaile and do those other Offices above remembred Which Offices as they were the works of every day so if the people came unto them upon the Sabbaths or New-moones 2. King 4 23. as they did on both to be instructed by them in particular cases of the Law no doubt but they informed them answerably unto their knowledge But this was but occasionall onely no constant duty Indeed it is conceived by Master Samuel Purchas Pilg● l. 2. c. 3. on the authority of Cornelius Bertram almost as moderne as himselfe That the forty eight Cities of the Levites had their fit places for Assemblies and that thence the Synagogues had their beginnings which were it so it would be no good argument that in those places of Assemblies the Priests and Levites publickly did expound the
that Law all other precepts were included which afterwards were given by Moses S. Basil next De jeunio who tels us first that abstinence or fasting was cōmanded by the Lord in Paradise And then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. the first Commandement given by God to Adam was that he should not eate of the tree of knowledge The very same which is affirmed by Saint Ambrose in another language Lib. de Elia jejunio c. ● Et ut sciamus non esse novum jejunium primam illic legem i. e. in Paradise constituit de jejunio So perfectly agree in this the greatest lights both of African the Easterne and the Westerne Churches If so if that the law of abstinence had been alone sufficient for the justification of our Father Adam as Tertullian thinks or if it were the first law given by God unto him as both Saint Basil and Saint Ambrose are of opinion then was there no such law at all then made as that of sanctifying of the Sabbath or else not made according to that time and order wherein this passage of the Scripture is laid down by Moses And if not then there is no other ground for this Commandement in the Booke of God before the wandring of Gods people in the Wildernesse and the fall of Mannah A thing so cleere that some of those who willingly would have the Sabbath to have bin kept from the first Creation and have not the confidence to ascribe the keeping of it to any ordinance of God but onely to the voluntary imitation of his people And this is Torniellus way Ann 236. amongst many others who though he attribute to Enos both set formes of prayer and certaine times by him selected for the performance of that duty praecipue vero diebus Sabbati In die 7. especially upon the Sabbath yet he resolves it as before that such as sanctified that day if such there were non ex praecepto divino quod nullum tunc extabat sed ex pietate solum id egisse Of which opinion Mercer seemes to be as before I noted So that in this particular point the Fathers and the modern Writers the Papist and the Protestant agree most lovingly together 6 Much lesse did any of the Fathers or other ancient Christian Writers conceive that sanctifying of the Sabbath or one day in seven was naturally ingrafted in the minde of man from his first creation It s true they tell us of a Law which naturally was ingrafted in him So Chrysostome affirmes In Rom. 7. 12. ●om 12. that neither Adam nor any other man did ever live without the guidance of this Law and that it was imprinted in the soule of man assoone as hee was made a living creature 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as that Father hath it But neither he nor any other did ever tell us that the Sabbath was a part of this law of nature nay some of them expresly have affirmed the contrary Theodoret for example In Ezech. c. 20. that these Commandements Thou shalt not kill Thou shalt not commit adultery Thou shalt not steale and others of that kind alios quoque homines natura edo●uit were generally implanted by the law of nature in the minds of men But for the keeping of the Sabbath it came not in by nature but by Moses law At Sabbati observandi non natura magistra sed latio legis So. Theodoret. And answerably thereunto Sedulius doth divide the law into three chiefe parts Whereof the first is de Sacramentis In Rom. 3. of signes and Sacraments as Circum●●sion and the Passeover the second is quae congruit legi naturali the body of the Law of nature and is the summary of those things which are prohibited by the words of God the third and last factorum of ●ites and ceremonies for so I take it is his meaning as new Moones and Sabbaths which cle●rly doth exempt the Sabbath from having any thing to doe with the law of nature De 〈◊〉 ●ide l 4 c. 24. And Damascen assures too that when there was no law enacted nor any Scripture inspired by God that then there was no Sabbath neither 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To which three Ancients we might adde many more of these later times * In Dec●l●g Ryvet and * Medulla theol l. 2 cap. 15. A●●es and divers others who though they plead hard for the antiquity of the Sabbath dare not referre the keeping of it to the law of nature but onely as wee shall see annon unto positive lawes and divine authority But hereof wee shall speake more largely when we are come unto the promulgating of this Law in the time of Moses where it will evidently appeare to be a positive Constitution onely fitted peculiarly to the Iewes and never otherwise esteemed of then a Iewish Ordinance 7 It s true that all men generally have agreed on this that it is consonant to the law of nature to set apart some time to Gods publicke service but that this time should rather be the seventh day then any other that they impute not unto any thing in nature but either to divine legall or Ecclesiasticall institution The Schoolmen Papists Protestants men of almost all perswasions in religion have so resolved it And for the Ancients our venerable Bede assures us that to the Fathers before the law all dayes were equall the seventh day having no prerogative before the others In Lu● 19. and this he cals naturalis Sabbati libertatem the liberty of the naturall Sabbath which ought saith he to be restored at our Saviours comming If so if that the Sabbath or time of rest unto the Lord was naturally left free and arbitrary then certainly it was not restraind more unto one day thē another or to the seventh day more than to the sixth or eighth Even Ambrose Catharin as stout a chāpion as he was for the antiquity of the Sabbath finds himselfe at a losse about it For having tooke for granted as hee might indeed that men by the prescript of nature were to assigne peculiar times for the service of God and adding that the very Gentiles used so to do is fain to shut up all with an Ignoram●s Nesci●●● modo quem diem praecipue observarunt prisci illi Dei cult●res We cannot well resolve saith hee what day especially was observed by those who worshipped God in the times of old Wherein he doth agree exactly with Ab●lensis against whom principally he tooke up the bucklers who could have taught him this if he would have learnt of such a Master that howsoever the Hebrew people or any other before the giving of the Law were bound to set apart some time for religio●s duties non ●amen magis in Sabbat● In Exod. 20. Qu. 11. quam in quolibet ali●rum dierum yet were they no more bound to the Sabbath day than to any other So for the Protestant Writers two of the greatest Advocates
that so by his example the Iewes might learne to rest from their Worldly labours and be the better fitted to meditate on the workes of God and to commemorate his goodnesse manifested in the Worlds Creation 2 Of any other sanctification of this day by the Lord our God then that he rested on it now and after did command the Iewes that they should sanctifie the same we have no Constat in the Scriptures nor in any Author that I have met with untill Zanchies time Indeed hee tels us a large story of his owne making how God the Sonne came down to Adam and sanctified this first Sabbath with him that hee might know the better how to doe the like Ego quidem non dubito c. I little doubt saith he De creat ●aminis l. 1. ad finem I will speake onely what I thinke without wrong or prejudice to others I little doubt but that the Sonne of God taking the shape of man upon him was busied all this day in most holy conferences with Adam that he made known himselfe both to him and Eve taught them the order that he used in the Worlds creation exhorted them to meditate on those glorious works in them to prayse the Name of God acknowledging him for their Creatour after his example to spend that day for ever in these pious exercises I doubt not finally saith hee but that hee taught them on that day the whole body of divinity and that he held them busied all day long in hearing him and celebrating with due prayses their Lord and God and giving thankes unto him for so great and many benefits as God had graciou●ly vouchsafed to bestow upon them Which said he shuts up all with this conclusion Haec est illius septimi diei benedictio sanctificatio in qua filius Dei una cum patre spiritu sancto quievit ab opere quod fecerat This was saith hee the blessing and sanctifying of that seventh day wherein the Sonne of God together with the Father and the Holy Ghost did rest from all the workes that they had made How Zanchie thwarts himselfe in this See n. 5. wee shall see hereafter Such strange conceptions though they miscarry not in the birth yet commonly they serve to no other use then monsters in the works of nature to be seen and shewne with wonder at all times and sometimes with pitie Had such a thing occurred in Pet. Comestors supplement which he made unto the Bible it had been more tolerable The Legendaries and the Rabbins might fairely also have been excused if any such devise had been extant in them The gravity of the man makes the tale more pittifull though never the more to be regarded For certainly had there been such a weighty conference between God and Man and so much tending unto information and instruction it is not probable but that we should have heard thereof in the holy Scriptures And finding nothing of it there it were but unadvisedly done to take it on the word and credit of a private man Non credimus quia non legimus was in some points Saint Hieroms rule and shall now be ours 3 As little likelihood there is that the Angels did observe this day and sanctifie the same to the Lord their God yet some have been so venturous as to affirme it Sure I am Torniellus saith it Annal. d. 7. And though he seem to have some Authors upon whom to cast it yet his approving of it makes it his as well as theirs who first devised it Quidam non immerito existimarunt hoc ipso die in Coelis omnes Angelorum choros speciali quadam exultatione in Dei laudes prorupisse quod tam praeclarum admirabile opus absolvisset Nay he and they who ever they were have a Scripture for it 38. 4 6. even Gods words to Iob Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth when the morning starres sang together and all the sonnes of God shouted for joy Who and from whence those Quidam were that so interpreted Gods words I could never finde and yet have took some pains to seek it Sure I am Saint Austin makes a better use of them and comes home indeed unto the meaning Some men it seemes affirmed that the Angels were not made till after the sixe dayes were finished De Civit Dei l. 11. c. 9. in which all things had been created and he referres them to this Text for their confutation Which being repeated he concludes I am ergo erant Angeli quando facta sunt sydera facta autem sunt sydera die quarto Therefore saith he the Angels were created before the Starres and on the fourth day were the starres created Yet Zanchius and those Quidam be they who they will fell short a little of another conceit of Philos De vita Mosis lib. 3. who tels us that the Sabbath had a privilege above other dayes not onely from the first Creation of the World though that had beene enough to set out the Sabbath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but even before the Heavens and all things visible were created If so it must be sanctified by the holy Trinitie without the tongues of men and Angels and God not having worked must rest and sanctifie a time when no time was But to return to Torniellus however those Quidam did mislead him make him think that the first Sabbath had been sanctified by the holy A●gels yet he ingenuously confesseth that sa●ctifying of the Sabbath here upon the earth was not in use till very many ages after Annal d 7. not till the Law was given by Moses Veruntamen in terris ista Sabbati sanctificatio non nisi post multa secula in usum venisse creditur nimirum temporibus Mosis quando sub praecepto data est filiis Israel So Torniellus 4 So Torniellus and so farre unquestionable For that there was no Sabbah kept amongst us men till the times of Moses the Christian Fathers generally and some Rabbins also have agreed together Which that we may the better shew I shall first let you see what they say in generall and after what they have delivered of particular men most eminent in the whole story of Gods Booke untill the giving of the Law And first that never any of the Patriarkes before Moses time did observe the Sabbath Iustin the Martyr hath assured us Dial. cum T●yph 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 None of the righteous men saith he and such as walked before the Lord were either circumcised or kept the Sabbath untill the severall times of Abraham and Moses And where the Iewes were scandalized in that the Christians did eat hot meats on the Sabbath dayes the Martyr makes reply that the said just and righteous men not taking heed of any such observances 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 obtained a notable testimony of the Lord himselfe Adv haeres l. ● c. 30. So Irenaeus
could that Adam ever kept the Sabbath Doceant Adamum sabbatizasse as hee there hath it Which doubtlesse neither of them would have done considering with whom the one disputed and against whom the other wrote had they not beene very well assured of what they said The like may be affirmed both of Eusebius De Praepar E. v●●g l. 7. c. 8. and Epipha●ius two most learned Fathers Whereof the first maintayning positively that the Sabbath was first given by Moses makes Ad●m one of those which neither troubled himselfe with Circumcision 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nor any of the Lawes of Moses Adv haer●●●s l. 1. ● 5. The other reckoneth him amongst those also who lived according to that faith which when he wrote was generally received in the Christian Church Therefore no Sabbath kept by our Father Adam 6 But whatsoever Adam did Abel I hope was more observant of this duty Thus some have said indeed but on no authority It is true the Scriptures tell us that he offered Sacrifice but yet the Scriptures do not tell us that in his Sacrifices he had more regard unto the seventh day then to any other To offer Sacrifice he might learne of Adam or of naturall reason which doth sufficiently instruct us that we ought all to make some publick testimony of our subjection to the Lord. But neither Adam did observe the Sabbath nor could nature teach it as before is shewne And howsoever some Moderne Writers have conjectured and conjectured onely that Abel in his Sacrifices might have respect unto the Sabbath yet those whom we may better trust have affirm'd the contrary For Iustin Martyr disputing against Trypho brings Abel in for an example that neither Circumcision nor the Sabbath the two great glories of the Iewes were to be counted necessary For if they were saith hee God had not had so much regard to Abels Sacrifice being as hee was uncircumcised and then he add 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that though he was no Sabbath-keeper yet was he acceptable unto God And ●o Tertullian that God accepted of his Sacrifice Adv. Iudae●● though he were neither circumcised nor kept the Sabbath Abelem offerentem sacrificia incircumcisum neque sabbatizantem laudavit Deus accepta ferens qu● in simplicitate cordis offerebat Yea and hee brings him also into his challenge Doceant Abel hostiam Deo sanctam offerentem Sabbati religionem placuisse which is directly contrary to that which is conjectured by some Moderne Writers Adv. haeres l 1 n. 5. So Epiphani●s also makes him one of those who lived according to the tendries of the Christian Faith The like hee also saith of Seth whom God raised up instead of Abel to our Father Adam Therefore no Sabbath kept by either 7 It is conceived of Abel that hee was killed in the one hundred and thirtieth yeare of the Worlds Creation of E●os Seths sonne that he was borne Anno two hundred thirty six And till that time there was no Sabbath But then as some conceive the Sabbath day began to be had in honour because it is set downe in Scripture that then began men to call upon the Name of the Lord. Gen. 4. A●●al Anno 236. n. 4. That is as Torniellus descants upon the place then were spirituall Congregations instituted as wee may probably conjecture certaine set formes of Prayers and Hymnes devised to set forth Gods glory certaine set times and places also set apart for those pious duties praecipue diebus Sabbati especially the Sabbath dayes in which most likely they began to abstaine from all servile works in honour of that God whom they well knew had rested on the seventh day from all his labours Sure Torniellus minde was upon his Mattins when he made this Paraphrase Hee had not else gathered a Sabbath from this Text considering that not long before hee had thus concluded That sanctifying of the Sabbath here on earth was not in use V. ● 3. of this Chapter untill the Law was given by Moses But certainly this Text will beare no such matter were it considered as it ought The Ch●ldee P●raphrase thus reades it Tunc in diebus ejus inceperunt filii hominum● Q●●ebrai● i●●n G●● ut non orarent in nomine Domini which is quite contrary to the English Our Bibles of the last Translation in the margin thus then began men to call themselues by the name of the Lord and generally the Iewes as Saint Hierome tels us doe thus glosse upon it Tunc primum in nomine Domini in similitudine eius fabricata sunt idola that then began men to set up Idols both in the name and after the similitude of God Ainsworth in his Translation thus Then began men prophanely to call upon the Name of the Lord who tels us also in his Annotations on this Text out of Rabbi Maimony that in these dayes Idolatry tooke its first beginning and the people worshipped the starres and all the host of Heaven so generally that at the last there were few left which acknowledged God as Enoch Methuselah Noah Sem and Heber So that wee see not any thing in this Text sufficient to produce a Sabbath But take it as the English reades it which is agreeable to the Greeke and vulgar Latine and may well stand with the originall yet will the cause be little better For men might call upon Gods Name and have their publick meetings set formes of Prayer without relation to the seventh day more then any other De P●aeparat Evang l 7 8. As for this E●os Eusebius proposeth him unto us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the first man commended in the Scripture for his love to God that we by his example might learn to call upon Gods Name with assured hope But yet withall he tels us of him that he observed not any of those Ordinances which Moses taught unto the Iewes whereof the Sabbath was the chiefe as formerly we observed in Adam And Epiphanius rankes him amongst those Fathers who lived according to the rules of the Christian Church Therfore no Sabbath kept by Enos 8 We will next looke on Enoch who as the Text tels us walked with God and therefore doubt wee not but he would carefully have kept the Sabbath had it been required But of him also the Fathers generally say the same as they did before of others For Iustin Martyr not onely makes him one of those which without Circumcision and the Sabbath had been approved of by the Lord but pleads the matter more exactly The substance of his plea is this that if the Sabbath or circumcision were to be counted necessary to eternall life wee must needs fall upon this absurd opinion Dial. cum Tryph●●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that the same God whom the Iewes worshipped was not the God of Enoch and of other men about those times which neither had been Circumcised 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nor
kept the Sabbath nor any other Ordinances of the Law of Moses So Irenaeus speaking before of Circumcision and the Sabbath placeth this Enoch among those Lib. 4 cap 30. qui sine iis quae praedicta sunt justificationem adepti sunt which had beene justified without any the Ordinances before remembred Tertullian more fully yet Adv. Iudaeos Enoch justissimum nec circumcisum nec sabbatizantem de hoc mundo transtulit c. Enoch that righteous man being neither Circumcised nor a Sabbath-keeper was by the Lord translated and saw not death to be an Item or instruction unto us that we without the burden of the Law of Moses shall be found acceptable unto God Hee set him also in his challenge as one whom never any of the Iewes could prove Sabbati cultorem esse to have been a keeper of the Sabbath Eusebius too who makes the Sabbath one of Moses institutions De Demonstr l. 4. c 6. hath said of Enoch that hee was neither circumcised nor medled with the Law of Moses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. and that hee lived more like a Christian than a Iew. The same Eusebius in his seventh de praeparatione and Epiphanius in the place before remembred affirme thesame of him as they do of Adam Abel Seth and Enos and what this Epiphanius saith of him that hee affirmes also of his sonne Methusalem S●al de Em●●d Temp l 7. Therefore nor Enoch nor Methusalem ever kept the Sabbath It s true the Aethiopians in their Calendar have a certain period which they call Sabbatum Enoch Enoch's Sabbath But this consisteth of seven hundred yeares and hath that name either because Enoch was borne in the seventh Century from the Creation viz. in the yeare six hundred twenty two or because he was the seventh from Adam It s true that many of the Iewes and some Christians too have made this Enoch an Embleme of the heavenly and eternall Sabbath which shall never end 〈◊〉 in Ge● 4. because he was the seventh from Adam and did never taste of death as did the six that went before him But this is no Argument I trow that Enoch ever kept the Sabbath whiles hee was alive Note that this Enoch was translated about the yeare nine hundred eighty seven and that Methusalem died but one yeare onely before the Floud which was 1655. And so farre we are safely come without any rub 9 To come unto the Floud it selfe to Noah who both saw it and escaped it it is affirmed by some that he kept the Sabbath and that both in the Arke and when he was released out of it if not before Yea they have arguments also for the proofe hereof but very weake ones such as they dare not trust themselves It is delivered in the eighth of the Booke of Genesis that after the return of the Dove into the Arke Noah stayed yet other seven dayes before he sent her forth againe Vers. 10 12. What then This seemes unto Hospinian to be an argument for the Sabbath In historia diluvii columbae ex arca emissae septenario dierum intervallo ratione sabbati videntur So hee and so verbatim Iosias Simler in his Comment on the twentieth of Exodus But to this argument if at the least it may be honoured with that name Tostatus hath returned an answere as by way of prophecie In Gen. 8. He makes this Quaere first s●d quare ponit hic quod No● expectabat semper septem dies c. Why Noah betwixt every sending of the Dove expected just seven dayes neither more nor lesse and then returns this answere to it such as indeed doth excellently satisfie both his own Quaere and the present argument Resp. quod Noah intendebat scire utrum aquae cessassent c. Noah saith he desired to know whether the waters were decreased Now since the waters being a moyst body are regulated by the Moone Noah was most especially to regard her motions for as she is either in opposition or conjunction with the Sunne in her increase or in her wane there is proportionably an increase or falling of the waters Noah then considering the Moone in her severall quarters which commonly we know are at seven dayes distance sent forth his Birds to bring him tydings for the Text tels us that he sent out the Raven and the Dove foure time● And the fourth time the Moon being then in the last quarter when both by the ordinary course of nature the waters usually are and by the will of God were then much decreased the Dove which was sent out had found good footing on the earth and returned no more So farre the learned Abulensis which makes cleere the case Nor stand wee onely here upon our defence For wee have proofe sufficient that Noah never kept the Sabbath Vbi supra Iustin the Martyr and Irenaeus both make him one of those which without circumcision the Sabbath were very pleasing unto God and also justified without them Tertullian positively saith it that God delivered him from the great water floud Adv. Iuda●●● nec circumcisum nec sabbatizantem and chalengeth the Iewes to prove if any way they could sabbatum observasse that he kept the Sabbath Eusebius also tels us of him that being a just man and one whom God preserved as a remayning sparke to kindle piety in the World yet knew not any thing that pertained to the Iewish Ceremony De demonstr l. 1. c 6. not Circumcision 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nor any other thing ordained by Moses Remember that Eusebius makes the Sabbath one of Moses Ordinances Finally Epiphanius in the place before remembred ranks Noah in this particular with Adam Abel Seth Enos and the other Patriarchs 10 It s true that Ioseph Scaliger once made the day whereon Noah left the Arke and offered sacrifice to the Lord to be the seventh day of the week De Emend●● Temp. l. 5. 28. Decembris feria septima egressus Noah 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 immolavit Deo saith his first Edition Which were enough to cause some men who infinitely admire his Dictates from thence to have derived a Sabbath had hee not changed his minde in the next Edition and placed this memorable action not on the seventh day but the fourth I say it might have caused some men for all men would not so have doted as from a special accident to conclude a practice Considering especially that there is no ground in Scripture to proove that those before the Law had in their Sacrifices any regard at all to set times and dayes either unto the sixt day or the seventh or eighth or any other but did their service to the Lord I mean the publick part thereof and that which did consist in externall action according as occasion was administred unto them The offerings of Cain and Abel for ought we can informe our selves were not very frequent The Scripture tels us that it was
common nothing according to the custome of the former times neither in time or place or any other circumstance For the time although it was the Feast of Tabernacles yet it was the seventh yeere as Moses ordered it that yeare Neh. 8. ● ● which was the first of Nehemiahs comming unto Hierusalem not being the sabbaticall yeare but the third yeare after as Torniellus doth compute it Then for the place it should have beene performed in the Temple onely as both by Moses Ordinance and Iosiahs practice doth at large appeare but now they did it in the street before the Water-gates as the Text informes us So for manner of the reading it was not onely published as it had beene formerly but expounded also Whereof as of a thing never knowne before this reason is laid downe by Torniellus quod lingua Hebraica desierat jam v● lgaris esse Chaldaico seu Syriaco idiomate in ejus locu●● surrogato An. 3610. n. ● because the Hebrew tongue wherein the Scriptures were first written was now growne strange unto the people the Chaldee or the Syriack being generally received in the place thereof And last of all for the continuance of this exercise it held out eight dayes all the whole time the Feast continued whereas it was appointed by the Law of Moses that onely the first and last dayes of the Feast of Tabernacles should bee esteemed and solemnized as holy convocations to the Lord their God Levit. 23 35. 36. Here was a totall alteration of the ancient custome and a faire overture to the Priests who were then Rulers of the people to beginne a new a faire instruction to them all that reading of the Law of God was not confined to place or time but that all times and places were alike to his holy word Every seventh day as fit for so good a duty as every seventh yeare was acounted in the former times the Villages and Townes as capable of the Word of God as was the great and glorious Temple of Hierusalem and what prerogative had the Feast of Tabernacles but that the Word of God might be as necessary to be heard on the other Festivals as it was on that The law had first been given them on a Sabbath day and therfore might be read unto them every Sabbath day This might be pleaded in behalfe of this alteration and that great change which followed after in the weekly Sabbaths whereon the Law of God was not onely read unto the people such of them as inhabited over all Iudea but publickly made knowne unto them in all the Prouinces and Townes abroad where they had either Synagogues or habitations God certainly had so disposed it in his heavenly counsailes that so his holy Word might be more generally knowne throughout the World and a more easie way layed open for the admittance and receipt of the Messiah whom he meant to send that so Hierusalem and the Temple might by degrees be lesned in their reputation Iohn 4. ●0 and men might know that neither of them was the onely place where they ought to worship This I am sure of that by this breaking of the custome although an institute of Moses the Law was read more frequently then in times of old there being one other reading of it publickly and before the people related in the thirteenth of Nehemiah when it was neither Feast of Tabernacles nor Sabbaticall yeare for ought we finde in holy Scripture Therefore most like it is that it was the Sabbath which much about those times beganne to be ennobled with the constant reading of the Word in the Congregation First in Hierusalem and after by degrees in most places else as men could fit themselves with convenient Synagogues houses selected for that purpose to heare the Word of God and observe the same Of which times of none before Chap. 6. n 4. those passages of Phil● Iosephus before remembred touching the weekly reading of the Law and the behaviour of the people in the publick places of assemblies are to be understood and verified as there we noted 11 For that there was no Synagogue nor weekly reading of the Law before these times beside● what hath been said already we will now make manifest No Synagogu● before these times for there is neither mention of them in all the body of the old Testament nor any use of them in those dayes wherein there were no Congregations in particular places And first there is no mention of them in the old Testament For where it is supposed by some that there were Synagogues in the time of David and for the proofe thereof they produce these words Psal 74. ● they have burnt up all the Synagogues of God in the Land the supposition and the proofe are alike in firme For not to quarrell the Translation which is directly different from the Greek and vulgar Latine and somewhat from the former English this Psalme if writ by David was not composed in reference to any present misery which befell the Church There had been no such havock made thereof in all Davids time as is there complained of Therefore if David writ that Psalme hee writ it as inspired with the spirit of prophecy and in the spirit of prophecy did reflect on those wretched times wherein Antiochus laid waste the Church of God and ransacked his inheritance To those most probably must it be refer●ed the miseries which are there bemoned not being so exactly true in any other time of trouble as it was in this In Psal. 74. Magis probabilis est conjectura ad tempus Antiochi referri has querimonias as Calvin notes it And secondly there was no use of th●m before because no reading of the Law in the Congregation of ordinary course and on the Sabbath dayes For had the Law been reade unto the people every Sabbath day wee either should have found some Commandement for it or some practice of it but we meet with neither Rather we find strong arguments to perswade the contrary We read it of Iehosaphat 2. Chron. 17. 7. that in the third yeere of his reigne he sent his Princes Ben-hail and Obadiah and Zechariah and Nathaneel and Micaiah to teach in the Cities of Iudah These were the principall in Commission and unto them he joyned nine Levites and two Priests to beare them company to assist them It followeth Verse 9. And they taught in Iudah and had the book of the Law of the Lord with them and they went about throughout all the Cities of Iudah and taught the people And they taught in Iudah and had the Booke of the Law with them This must needs be an needlesse labour in case the people had beene taught every Sabbath day or that the Book of the Law had as then been extant and extant must it be if it had beene read in every Towne and Village over all Iudaea Therefore there was no Synagogue no reading of the Law every Sabbath
day in Ie●●sophats time 2. Kings 22. But that which followes of Iosiah is more full then this That godly Prince intended to repaire the Temple and in pursuite of that intendment Hilkiah the Priest to whom the ordering of the work had been committed found hidden an old Copy of the Law of God which had been given unto them by the hand of Moses This Booke is brought unto the King and read unto him And when the King had heard the words of the Law Verse 11. hee rent his clothes And not so onely but hee gathered together all the Elders of Iudah and Hi●rusalem Chap. 23. 1 2. and read in their eares all the words o● the Book of the Covenant which was found in the house of the Lord. Had it beene formerly the custome to reade the Law each Sabbath unto all the people it is not to be thought that this good King I●siah could possibly have beene such a stranger to the Law of God or that the finding of the Booke had beene related for so strange an accident when there was scarce a Towne in Iudah but was funished with them Or what need such a suddain calling of all the Elders and on an extraordinary time to heare the Law if they had heard it every Sabbath and that of ordinary course Nay so farre were they at this time from having the Law read amongst them every weekly Sabbath that as it seemes it was not read amongst them in the sabbath of yeares as Moses had before appointed For if it had been read unto them once in seven yeares onely that vertuous Prince had not so soone forgotten the content● thereof Therefore there was no synagogue no weekly reading of the law in Iosiahs dayes And if not then and not before then not at all till Ezras time The finding of the booke of God before remembred is said to happen in the yeare 3412. of the worlds creation not forty yeares before the people were led Captives into Babylon in which short space the Princes being carelesse and the times distracted there could be nothing done that concern'd this businesse Now from this reading of the Law in the time of Ezra unto the Councell holden in Hierusalem there passed 490. yeares or thereabouts Antiquitie sufficient to give just cause to the Apostle there to affirme that Moses in old time in every Citie had them that preached him Act. 15. ●1 being read in the Synagogues every Sabbath day So that we may conclude for certaine that till these times wherein we are there was no reading of the Law unto the people on the Sabbath dayes and in these times when it was taken up amongst them it was by Ecclesiasticall institution onely no divine authoritie 12 But being taken up on what ground soever it did continue afterwards though perhaps sometimes interrupted untill the finall dissolution of that Church and State and therewithall grew up a libertie of interpretation of the holy words which did at last divide the people into sects and factions Petrus Cunaeus doth affirme that howsoever the Law was read amongst them in the former times De republ l. 2. ca. 17. either in publike or in private yet the bare text was onely read without glosse or descant Interpretatio magistrorum commentatio nulla But in the second Temple when there were no Prophets then did the Scribes and Doctors begin to comment and make their severall expositions on the holy Text Ex quo natae disputationes sententiae contrariae from whence saith he sprung up debates and doubtfull disputations Most probable it is that from this liberty of interpretation sprung up diversity of judgements from whence arose the severall sects of Pharisees Essees and Sadduces who by their difference of opinions did distract the multitude and condemne each other Of whom and what they taught about the Sabbath we shall see next Chapter Nor is it to be doubted but as the reading of the Law did make the people more observant of the Sabbath then they were before so that libertas prophetandi which they had amongst them occasioned many of those rigours which were brought in after The people had before neglected the sabbaticall yeares but now they carefully observed them I●seph Ant li. ●1 ca ul● So carefully that when Alexander the Great being in Ierusalem anno 3721 commanded them to aske some boone wherein he might expresse his favour and love unto them the high Priest answered for them all that they desired but leave to exercise the ordinances of their fore-fathers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and that each seventh yeare might be free from tribute because their lands lay then untilled But then againe the libertie and varietie of interpretation bredde no little mischiefe For where in former times according to Gods owne appointment th● Sabbath was conceived to be a day of rest whereon both man and beast might refresh themselues and be the more inabled for their ordinary labours by canvassing some Texts of Scripture and wringing bloud from thence instead of comfort they made the Sabbath such an yoke as was insupportable Nor were these weeds of doctrine very long in growing Within an hundred yeares and lesse after Nehemiah the people were so farre from working on the Sabbath day as in his time we see they did and hardly could be weaned from so great a sinne but thought it utterly unlawfull to take sword in hand yea though it were to save their libertie and defend Religion A follie which their neighbour Ptolomie I●s●ph Ant. li. 12. c. 1. the great King of Aegypt made especiall use of For having notice of this humour as it was no better he entred the Citie on the Sabbath day under pretence to offer sacrifice and presently without resistance surprised the same the people 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not laying hand on any weapon or doing any thing in defence thereof but sitting still 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in an idle slothfulnesse suffered themselues to be subdued by a Tyrant Conquerour This happened Ann. M. 3730. And many more such fruits of so bad a doctrine did there happen afterwards to which now wee hasten CHAP. VIII What doth occurre about the Sabbath from the Maccabees to the destruction of the Temple 1 The Iews refuse to fight in their owne defence upon the Sabbath and what was ordered thereupon 2 The Pharisees about these times had made the Sabbath burdensome by their Traditions 3 Hierusalem twice taken by the Romans on the Sabbath day 4 The Romans many of them Iudaize and take up the Sabbath as other Nations did by the Iews example 5 Augustus Caesar very gratious to the Iews in matters that concerned their Sabbath 6 What our Redeemer ta●ght and did to rectifie the abuses of and in the Sabbath 7 The finall ruine of the Temple and the Iewish ceremonies on a Sabbath day 8 The Sabbath abrogated with the other Ceremonies 9 Wherein consists the Christian Sabbath mentioned in the Scriptures
and amongst the Fathers 10 The idle and ridiculous niceties of the moderne Iews in their Parasceues and their Sabbaths conclude the first part 1 WEe shewed you in the former Chapter how strange an alteration had beene made in an hundred yeares touching the keeping of the Sabbath The people hardly at the first restrained from working when there was no need and after easily induced to abstaine from fighting though tending to the necessary defence both of their libertie and Religion Of so much swi●ter growth is superstition then true pietie Nor was this onely for a fit as easily layed aside as taken up but it continued a long time yea and was every day improved it being judged at last unlawfull to defend themselves in case they were assaulted on the Sabbath day Antiochus Epiphanes the great King of Syria intending utterly to subvert the Church and Common-wealth of Iudah 1. Mac. 1. did not alone defile the Sanctuary by shedding innocent bloud therein but absolutely prohibited the burnt-offerings and the sacrifices commanding also that they should prophane the Sabbaths and the festivall dayes So that the Sanctuary was layed waste the holy dayes turned into mourning and the Sabbath into a reproach as the story tels us some of the people so farre yeelding through feare and faintnesse that they both offered unto Idols and prophaned the Sabbaths as the King commanded But others who preferr'd their pietie before their fortunes went downe into the wildernesse and there hid themselues in caves and other secret places Thither the enemies pursued them and finding where they were in covert assayled them on the Sabbath day the Iews not making any the least resistance Ioseph li. 12. ca 8. no not so much as stopping up the mouthes of the Caves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a● m●n resolved not to offend against the honour of the Sabbath in what extremitie soever These men were certainly more perswaded of the moralitie of the sabbath then David or Elijah in the former times and being so perswaded thought it not fit to flie or fight upon that day no though the supreme law of nature which was the saving of their lives did call them to it Tantum religio p●tuit suadere malorum in the Po●ts language Bu● ●attathias one of the Priests a man that durst as much ●s any in the cause of God and had not beene infected with those dangerous fancies taught those that were about him a more saving doctrine Assuring them that they were bound to fight upon the sabbath if they were assaulted For otherwise if that they scrupulously observed the law in such necessities 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they would be enemies to themselues and finally be destroyed both they and their Religion It was concluded thereupon ● Macc. 2. that whosoever came to make battell with them on the Sabbath day they would fight against him and afterwards it held for currant as Iosephus tells us that if n●cessitie required they made no scruple 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to fight against their enemies on the Sabbath day Yet by Iosephus leave it held not long as he himselfe shall tell us in another place what time the purpose of this resolution was perverted quite by the nice vanities of those men who tooke upon them to declare the meaning of it But howsoever it was with those of Iewrie such of their Countreymen as dwelt abroad amongst other Nations made no such scruple of the Sabbath but that they were prepared if occasion were as well to bid the battell as to expect it as may appeare by this short story which I shal● here present in briefe leaving the Reader to Iosephus for the whole at large Two brethren Asinaeus and Anilaeus borne in Nearda in the territory of Babylon began to fortifie themselves and commit great outrages which knowne the Governour of Babylon prepares his forces to suppresse them Having drawne up his Army he layes in ambush neere a marish and the next day which was the Sabbath wherein the Iews did use to rest from all manner of worke making account that without stroke stricken they would yeeld themselues he marched against them ●aire and softly to come upon them unawares But being discovered by the scouts of Asinaeus it was resolved amongst them to be farre more safe valiantly to behave themselues in that necessitie yea though it were a breaking of the very Law then to submit themselues and make proud the enemy Whereupon all of them at once marched forth and slaughtered a great many of the enemies the residue being constrained to save themselues by a speedy flight The like did Anilaeus after being provoked by Mithridates another Chiefetaine of those parts This happened much about the yeare 3957. that of the Maccabees before remembred Ann. 3887. or thereabouts Happy it was these brethren lived not in Indaea for had they done so there the Scribes and Pharisees would have tooke an ord●r with them and cast them out of the Synagogues if not used them worse 2 For by this time those Sects which before wee spake of began to shew themselues and disperse their doctrines Iosephus speakes not of them till the time of Ionathan who entred on the Government of the Iewish Nation Ann. 3894. Questionlesse they were knowne and followed in the former times though probablie not so much in credit their dictates not so much adored as in the ages that came after Of those the Pharisees were of most authoritie being most active in their courses severe professours of the Law and such as by a seeming sanctitie had gained exceedingly on the affections of the common people The Sadduces were of lesse repute though otherwise they had th●ir dependants as men that questioned some of the common principles denying the resurrection of the dead the hope of immortalitie As for the Essees or Essens they were a kinde of Monkish men retyred and private of farre more honestie then the Pharisees but of farre lesse cunning therefore their tendries not so generally received or hearkened after as the others were In matters of the Sabbath they were strict alike but with some difference in the points wherein their strictnesse did consist In this the Essee seemes to go beyond the Pharisee 〈…〉 that they not onely did abstaine from dressing meat and kindling fire upon the Sabbath as probably the others did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But unto them it was unlawfull to remove a dish or any other vessell out of the place wherein they found it yea or to go aside to ease nature And on the other side the Pharisee in the multiplicitie of his Sabbath-speculations went beyond the Essee all which were thrust upon the people as prescribed by God and grounded in his holy Law the perfect keeping of the which seemed their utmost industry There is a dictate in the Scripture Exod. 16. that No ●an go out of his place on the Sabbath day This was impossible to be kept according to the words and letter
can be drawne from a casuall fact and that the falling of the Pentecost that yeare upon the first day of the weeke be meerly casuall the comming of the Holy Ghost upon that day will be no argument nor authority to state the first day of the weeke in the place and honour of the Iewish sabbath There may be other reasons given why God made choice of that time rather then of any other as first because about that very time before he had proclaimed the Law upon Mount Sinai and secondly that so hee might the better countenance and grace the Gospel in the sight of men and adde the more authority unto the doctrine of the Apostles The Feast of Pentecost was a great and famous Festivall at which the Iewes all of them were to come unto Hierusalem there to appeare before the Lord and amongst others those which had their hands in our Saviours ●●●ud And therefore as S. Chrysostome notes it did God send down the Holy Ghost at that time of Pentecost In Act. 2. because those men that did consent to our Saviours death might publickly receive rebuke for that bloudy Act and so beare record to the power of our Saviours Gospel before all the World 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as that Father hath it So that the thing being casuall as unto the day and speciall as unto the businesse then by God intended it will afforde us little proofe as before I said either that the Lords Day was as then observed or that the Holy Ghost did select that day for so great a worke to dignifie it for a sabbath 6 As for Saint Peters preaching upon that day and the baptizing of so many as were converted to the faith upon the same it might have been some proofe that now at lest if not before the first day of the weeke was set apart by the Apostles for religious exercises had they not honoured all dayes with the same performances But if we search the Scriptures we shall easily find that all dayes were alike to them in that respect no day in which they did not preach the word of life and administer the Sacraments of their Lord and Saviour to such as either wanted it or did desire it Or were it that the Scriptures had not told us of it yet naturall reason would informe us that those who were imployed in so great a worke as the conversion of the World could not confine themselues unto times and seasons but must take all advantages whensoere they came But for the Scripture it is said in termes expresse first generally that the Lord added daily to the Church such as should be saved Act● 2. 47. and therefore without doubt the meanes of their salvation were daily ministred unto them Vers● 42. and in the fifth Chapter of the Acts that daily in the Temple and in every house they ceased not to teach and preach Iesus Christ. Acts 8. So for particulars when Philip did baptize the Eunuch either he did it on a working day as we now distinguish them and not upon the first day of the weeke and so it was no Lords day dutie or else it was not held unlawfull to take a journey on that day as some thinke it is Saint Peters preaching to Corne●ius and his baptizing of that house was a weeke dayes worke as may be gathered from Saint Hierome That Father tels us that the day whereon the vision appeared to Peter was probably the Sabbath or the Lords Day as we call it now fieri p●tuit ut vel sabbatum ess●t vel dies Dominicus Adv●rs Iovini an l. 2. as the ●ather hath it and 〈◊〉 you which you will we shall find little in it 〈…〉 Sabbath In case it was on the Sabbath then Peter 〈…〉 keep the Lords day holy as he should have done in case that day was then selected for Gods worship for the Text tells us that the next day he did begin his journey to Cornelius house In case it was upon the Lords day as wee call it now then neither did Saint Peter sanctifie that day in the Congregation Acts 10 24. as he ought to do had that day then been made the Sabbath and his conversion of Corne●elius being three dayes after must of necessity be done on the Wednesday following So that we find no Lords day Sabbath either of S. Peters keeping or of S. Philips or els● the preaching of the Word and the administring the Sacraments were not affixed at all unto the first day of the weeke as the peculiar markes and characters thereof So for Saint Paul the Doctour of the Gentiles who laboured more abundantly then the other Apostles besides what shall be said particularly in the following section it may appeare in generall that hee observed no Lords-day-sabbath but taught on all dayes travailed on all dayes and wrought according to his Trade upon all dayes too when he had no employment in the Congregation That he did teach on all dayes is not to be questioned by any that considers how great a worke hee had to doe and how little time That hee did trauaile upon all dayes is no lesse notorious to all that looke upon his life which was still in motion And howsoever he might rest sometimes on the Lords Day as questionlesse he did on others as often as upon that day he preached the Gospel yet when hee was a Prisoner in the hands of the Roman souldiers th●re is no doubt but that he travailed as they did Lords Dayes and sabbaths all dayes equally many dayes together In Dominica●● 17. post Tri●it Of this see what Saint Luke hath written in the last Chapters of the Acts. Lastly for working at his Trade which was Tent-making on the Lords D●y as well as others Conradu● Diatericus proves it out of Hierome that when hee had none unto whom to preach in the Congregation hee followed on the Lords Day the works of his Occupation Hieronymus colligit ex Act. 18. vers 3. 4. quod die etiam Dominica quando quibus in publico conventu concionaretur non habebat manibus suis laboravit So Dietericus speaking of our Apostle Now what is proved of these Apostles and of S. Philip the Evangelist may be affirmed of all the rest whose lives and actions are not left upon record in holy Scripture Their Ministery being the same and their worke as great no question but their liberty was correspondent and that they tooke all times to be alike in the advancing of the businesse which they went about and cherished all occasions presented to them on what day soever What further may be said hereof in reference to Saint Iohn who lived longest of them and saw the Church established and her publicke meetings in some 〈◊〉 we shall see hereafter in his owne place and time Mean while we may conclude for certaine that in the 〈…〉 of the Church he used all dayes equally kept 〈…〉 holy then another and after
Which whosoever doth and is upright in thought word and deed adhering alwayes unto God our naturall Lord 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Every day is to him a Lords day It seemes too that he had his desire in part it being noted by the Mandeburgians that every day there were assemblies in Alexandria where he lived for hearing of the word of God Et de collectis quotidie celebratis in quibus praedicatum sit verbum Dei Hom. 9. in Isa. significare videtur as they note it from him Indeed the Proem to his severall Homilies seeme to intimate that if they met not every day to heare his Lectures they met very often But being a learned man and one that had a good conceit of his owne abilities he grew offended that there was not as great resort of people every day to heare him as upon the Festivals Of Sunday there is little doubt but that it was observed amongst them and so was Saturday also as we shall see hereafter out of Athanasius Of Wednesday and Friday it is positively said by S●crates Hist. l. 5 c. 21. that on them both the Scriptures were read openly and afterwards expounded by the Doctors of the Church and all things done appointed by the publicke Liturgie save that they did not use to receive the sacrament 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And this saith he was the old in Alexandria which he confirmes by the practi●e of Origen who was accustomed as he tells us to preach upon these dayes to the Congreg●●ion Tertullian too takes speciall notice of these two dayes whereof consult him in his booke adv Psychicos 10 About the middle of this Centurie did Saint Cyprian live another Af●ican and he hath left us somewhat although not much which concernes this busines Aurelius Lib. 2. Epist. 5. one of excellent part● was made a Reader in the Church I thinke of Carthage which being very welcome newes to the common people Saint Cyprian makes it ●●wne unto them and withall lets them understand that Sunday was the day appointed for him to begin his Ministerie Et quoni●m semper gaudium properat nec mera ferre potest laetitia dominico legit So that as Sunday was a day which they used to meet on so reading of the Scripture was a speciall part of the Sundayes exercise Not as an exercise to spend the time when one doth wait for anothers comming till the assemblie be complete and that without or choice or stint appointed by determinate order as is now used both in the French and Belgicke Churches for what need such an eminent man as Aurelius was be taken out with so much expectation to exercise the Clarks or the Sextons dutie But it was used amongst them then as a chiefe portion of the service which they did to God in hearkening reverently unto his voice It being so ordered in the Church that the whole Bible or the greatest part thereof Preface to 〈◊〉 Common prayer should be read over once a yeare And this that so the Ministers of the congregation by often reading and meditation of Gods Word be stirred up to godlinesse themselves and be the more able to● exhort other by wholesome doctrine and to conf●te them that were Adversaries to the truth as that the people by daily hearing of the Scriptures should profit more and more in the knowledge of God and be the more inflamed with the love of his true Religion Nor for the duties of the people on this day in the Congregation as they used formerly to heare the Word and receive the Sacraments and to powre forth their soules to God in affectionate prayers Decret l. 5. C 7. so much about these times viz. in Ann. 237. it had beene appointed by Pope Fabian that every man and woman should on the Lords day bring a quantitie of bread and wine first to be offered on the Altar and then distributed in the Sacrament A thing that had beene done before as of common course but now exacted as a duty for the neglect whereof Saint Cyprian chides with a rich widdow of his time who neither brought her offering nor otherwise gave any thing to the poore-mans Boxe and therefore did not keepe the Lords day D● pietat Eleemos as she should have done Locuples dives dominicum celebrarete credis quae Corbonam omnino non respicis quae in Dominicum here he meanes the Church sine sacrificio venis quae partem de sacrificio quod pauper obtulit sumis In after times this custome went away by little and little instead of which it was appointed by the Church and retained in ours that Bread and Wine for the Communion shall bee provided by the Churchwardens at the charge of the Parish I should now leave Saint Cyprian here V. l. 3 Epi 8. but that I am to tell you first that he conceives the Lords day to have beene prefigured in the eight day destinate to circum●ision Which being but a private opinion of his owne I rather shall referre the Reader unto the place then repeate the words And this is all this Age affords me in the present search 11 For other holy dayes by the Church for Gods publicke service those three Centuries precedent besides the Lords day or the Sunday which came every weeke Origen names the Good Friday as we call it now Cont. Cels. l 8. the Parasceve as he cals it there the feast of Easter and of Pente●ost Of Easter we have spoke already For Pentecost or Whitsontide as it began with the Apostles so it continues till this present but not in that solemnitie which before it had For antiently not that day onely which wee call Whitsunday or Pentecost 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but all the fiftie dayes from Easter forwards were accounted holy and solemnized with no lesse observation then the sundayes were no kneeling on the one nor upon the other no fasting on the one nor upon the other Of which dayes that of the Ascention or Holy-Thursday being one became in little time to be more highly reckoned of then all the rest as we shall prove hereafter out of Saint Austin But for these 50. dayes aforesaid De Coron 〈◊〉 c● 3. Tertullian tels us of them thus Die Dominico jejunium nefas ducimus vel de geniculis adorare Eadem immunitate a die Pasehae in Pente●osten gaudemus which makes both alike Which words if any thinke too short to reach the point he tels us in another place that all the Festivals of the Gentiles contained not so many dayes as did that one De Id● c. 14. Excerpe singulas solennitates nationum in ordinem texe Pentecosten implere non poterunt The like he hath also in his booke adv Psychicos the like Saint Hierom. ad Lucinum the like Saint Ambrose or Maximus Taurinens which of the two soever it was that made those Sermons Serm. 60. 61. In which last it is said expresly of those fifty daies that
c. as their bounden dutie doth require therefore to call men to remembrance of their dutie and to helpe their infinnitie it hath beene wholesomely provided that there should be some certaine times and dayes appointed wherein the Christians should cease from all kind of labour and apply themselves only and wholly unto the aforesaid holy works properly pertaining to true Religion c. Which workes as they may well be called Gods Service so the times especially appointed for the same are called holy dayes Not for the matter or the nature either of the time or day c. for so all dayes and times are of like holinesse but for the nature and condition of such holy workes c. whereunto such times and dayes are sanctified and hallowed that is to say separated from all prophane uses and dedicated not unto any Saint or Creature but onely unto God and his true worship Neither is it to bée thought that there is any certaine time or definite number of dayes prescribed in holy Scripture but the appointment both of the time and also of the number of dayes is left by the authoritie of Gods Word unto the libertie of Christs Church to bée determined and assigned orderly in every Countrey by the discretion of the Rulers and Ministers thereof as they shall iudge most expedient to the true setting forth of Gods glorie and edification of their people Nor is it to be thought that all this Preamble was made in reference to the holy dayes or Saints dayes onely whose being left to the authoritie of the Church was never questioned but in relation to the Lords Day also as by the Act it selfe doth at full appeare for so it followeth in the Act Bee it therefore enacted c. That all the dayes hereafter mentioned shall bee kept and commanded to be kept holy dayes and non● other that is to say all Sundayes in the yeere the Feasts of the Circumcision of our Lord Iesus Christ of the Epiphanie of the Purification with all the rest now kept and there named particularly and that none other day shall be kept and commanded to bee kept holy day and to abstaine from lawfull bodily labour Nay which is more there is a further Clause in the selfe-same Act which plainly shewes that they had no such thought of the Lords day as that it was a Sabbath or so to bee ob●erved as the Sabbath was and therefore did provide it and enact by the authoritie aforesaid That it shall be lawfull to every Husbandman Labourer Fisherman and to all and every other person and persons of what estate degree or condition he or they be upon the holy dayes aforesaid in Harvest or at any other times in the yeere when necessitie shall so require to labour ●ide fish or worke any kind of worke at their free-wills and pleasure any thing in this Act unto the contrary notwithstanding This is the totall of this Act which if examined well as it ought to bee will yeeld us all those propositions or conclusions before remembred which we collected from the writings of those three particular Martyrs Nor is it to be said that it is repealed and of no authoritie Repealed indeed it was in the first yeere of Queene Mary and stood repealed in Law though otherwise in use and practice all the long Reigne of Queene El●zabeth but in the first yeere of King Iames was revived againe Note here that in the selfe-same Parliament the Common Prayer-Book● now in use being reviewed by many godly Prelates was confirmed and authorized wherein so much of the said Act as doth concerne the names and number of the holy dayes is expressed and as it were incorporate into the same Which makes it manifest that in the purpose of the Church the Sunday was no otherwise esteemed of than another holy day 3 This Statute as before wee said was made in anno 5. 6. of Edward the sixt And in that very Parliament as before wee said the Common Prayer-Booke was confirmed which still remaines in use amongst us save that there was an alteration or addition of certaine Lessons to be used on every Sunday of the yéere 1. Eliz. cap. 2. the forme of the Letanie altered and corrected and two Sentences added in the deliverie of the Sacrament unto the Communicants Now in this Common Prayer-Booke thus confirmed in the fift and sixt yeeres of King Edward the sixt Cap. 1. it pleased those that had the altering and revising of it that the Commandements which were not in the former Liturgie allowed of in the second of the said Kings Reigne should now be added and accounted as a part of this the people being willed to say after the end of each Commandement Lord hav● mercie upon us and incline our hearts to keepe this Law Which being used accordingly as well upon the hearing of the fourth Commandement as of any others hath given some men a colour to perswade themselves that certainely it was the meaning of the Church that wee should keepe a Sabbath still though the day be changed and that wee are obliged to doe it by the fourth Commandement Assuredly they who so conclude conclude against the meaning of the Booke and of them that made it Against the meaning of the Booke for if the Booke had so intended that that ej●culation was to be understood in a literall sence according as the words are layd downe in terminis it then must be the meaning of the Booke that wee should pray unto the Lord to keepe the Sabbath of the Iewes even the seventh day precisely from the Worlds Creation and keepe it in the selfe-same manner as the Iewes once did which no man I presume will say was the meaning of it For of the changing of the day there is nothing said nor nothing intimated but the whole Law laid downe in terminis as the Lord delivered it Against the meaning also of them that made it for they that made the Booke and reviewed it afterwards and caused these Passages and Prayers to be added to it Cranmer Archbishop of Canterbury Ridley Bishop of London and certaine others of the Prelates then and there assembled were the same men by whose advice and counsaile the Act before remembred about keeping holy dayes was in the selfe-same Parliament drawne up and perfected And is it possible wee should conceive so ill of those reverend persons as that they would erect a Sabbath in the one Act and beat it downe so totally in the other to tell us in the Service-Booke that wee are bound to keepe a Sabbath and that the time and day of Gods publike worship is either pointed out in the fourth Commandement or otherwise ordained by D●vine Authoritie and in the selfe-same breath to tell us that there is neither certaine time nor definite number of dayes prescribed in Scripture but all this left unto the libertie of the Church I say as formerly I said it is impossible wee should thinke so ill of such
thereof not by the workmanship of the Stuffe but the glosse and colour In which it is most strange to see how suddainly men were induced not onely to give way unto it but without more adoe to abett the same till in the end and that in very little time it grew the most bewitching Errour the most popular Deceit that ever had beene set on foot in the Church of England And verily I perswade my selfe that many an honest and well-meaning man both of the Clergie and the Laitie either because of the appearance of the thing it selfe or out of some opinion of those men who first endevoured to promote it became exceedingly affected towards the same as taking it to be a Doctrine sent downe from Heaven for encrease of Pietie So easily did they beleeve it and grew at last so strongly possessed therewith that in the end they would not willingly be perswaded to conceive otherwise thereof than at first they did or thinke they swallowed downe the Hooke when they tooke the Bait. An Hooke indeed which had so fastned them to those men who love to fish in troubled waters that by this artifice there was no small hope conceived amongst them to fortifie their side and make good that cause which till this trimme Deceit was thought of was almost growne desperate Once I am sure that by this meanes the Brethren who before endeavoured to bring all Christian Kings and Princes under the yoke of their Presbyteries made little doubt to bring them under the command of their Sabbath Doctrines And though they failed of that applauded paritie which they so much aimed at in the advancing of their Elderships yet hoped they without more adoe to bring all higher Powers what ever into an equall ranke with the common people in the observance of their Iewish Sabbatarian rigours So Doctor Bound declares himselfe p. 171. The Magistrate saith hee and Governour in authoritie how high soever cannot take any priviledge to himselfe whereby he might be occupied about worldly businesse when other men should rest from labour It seemes they hoped to see the greatest Kings and Princes make suit unto their Consistorie for a Dispensation as often as the great Affaires of State or what cause soever induced them otherwise to spend that Day or any part or parcell of it than by the new Sabbath Doctrine had beene permitted For the endeering of the which as formerly to endeere their Elderships they spared no place or Text of Scripture where the word Elder did occurre and without going to the Heralds had framed a Pedigree thereof from ●ethro from Noahs Arke and from Adam finally so did these men proceed in their new Devices publishing out of holy Writ both the antiquitie and authoritie of their Sabbath day No passage of Gods Booke unransacked where there was mention of a Sabbath whether the legall Sabbath charged the Iewes or the spirituall Sabbath of the Soule from si●ne which was not fitted and applyed to the present purpose though if examined as it ought with no better reason than Paveant illi non paveam ego was by an ignorant Priest alledged from Scripture to prove that his Parishioners ought to pave the Chancell Yet upon confidence of these proofes they did alreadie begin to sing Victoria especially by reason of the entertainment which the said Doctrines found with the common people For thus the Doctor boasts himselfe in his second Edition anno 606. as before was said Many godly learned both in their Preachings Writings and Disputations did concurre with him in that argument and that the lives of many Christians in many places of the Kingdome were framed according to his Doctrine p. 61. Particularly in the Epistle to the Reader that within few yeeres three severall profitable Treatises successively were written by three godly learned Preachers Greenehams was one whose ever were the other two that in the mouth of two or three witnesses the doctrine of the Sabbath might bee established Egregiam verò laudem spolia ampla 8 But whatsoever cause hee had thus to boast himselfe in the successe of his new doctrines the Church I am sure had little cause to rejoyce thereat For what did follow hereupon but such monstrous paradoxes and those delivered in the pulpit as would make every good man tremble at the hearing of them First as my Author tells mee it was preached at a market towne in Oxfordshire that to doe any servile worke or businesse on the Lords day was as great a sinne as to kill a man or commit adultery Secondly preached in Somerset-shire t●at to throw a bowle on the Lords day was as great a sinne as to kill a man Thirdly in Norfolke that to make a feast or dresse a wedding dinner on the Lords day was as great a sinne as for a Father to take a knife and cut his childes throate Fourthly in Suffolke that to ring more bells then one on the Lords day was as great a sinne as to commit murder I adde what once I heard my selfe at Sergean●● Inne in Fleet-streete about five yeeres since that temporall death was at this day to be inflicted by the Law of God on the Sabbath-breaker on him that on the Lords day did the works of his daily calling with a grave application unto my masters of the Law that if they did their ordinary workes on the Sabbath day in taking fees and giving Counsell they should consider what they did deserve by the Law of God And certainely these and the like conclusions cannot but ●ollow most directly on the former principles For that the fourth Commandement bee plainely morall obliging us as straitely as it did the Iewes and that the Lords day bee to bee observed according to the prescript of that Commandment it must needs bee that every willfull breach thereof is of no lower nature then Idolatrie or blaspheming of the Name of GOD or any other deadly sinne against the first table and therefore questionlesse as great as murder or adultery or any sin against the second But to goe forwards where I left my Author whome before I spake of being present when the Suffolke Minister was convented for his so lewd and impious doctrine was the occasion that those Sabbatarian errours and impieties were first brought to light and to the knowledge of the state On which discovery as hee tells us this good ensued that the said bookes of the Sabbath were called in and forbidden to bee printed and made common Archbishop Whitguift by his letters and visitations did the one Ann● 1599. and Sir Iohn Popham Lord Chiefe Iustice did the other Ann● 1600 at Burie in Suffolke Good remedies indeed had they beene soone inough applied yet not so good as those which formerly were applied to Thacker and his fellow in the aforesaid towne of Burie for publishing the bookes of Br●wn● against the service of the Church Nor was this all the fruite of so bad a doctrine For by inculcating to the people these new