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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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piece of Reformation well becoming the Care and Conscience of the best of Princes 4. By the Law Ecclesiastical especially that Homilie of our Church which is established by a political Law which Hom. Of the time place of worship forbids all Labour and requires us wholly to give our selves to Religious Exercises and so by consequence strongly forbids and prohibits all kind of Recreations and the same Homilie forbids all toyish talking on the Lords day and so a majori ad minus from the greater to the lesser sports and pastimes Now therefore what is thus prohibited by the Law of God Nature Church and State is certainly a sinfull practice Recreations on a Sabbath are the wasts of time they alienate the time of a Sabbath from the intention of the Law-giver God never sanctified a piece of a day or ever set apart a few hours onely of his holy day for his service and worship and left the remainder to mans disposal either to pursue his Games or Delights Such sinfull encroachments Mat. 9. 16. to use our Saviours phrase are onely the putting a piece of new cloth to an old Garment Obj. And if the plea of the labouring person be brought in who labours hard all the week and therefore lays claim to Recreations on the Sabbath especially if it be considered that God will have Mercy and not Sacrifice To this plea and apology Mat. 12. 7. it may be replyed Sol. 1 This Argument may as well proceed against the Old Sabbath as against the Lords day and yet it is generally confessed Exod. 20. 8 9 10 11. that the Lord enjoyned the Jews a whole day and allowed them no bodily recreations on the Sabbath and therefore it is no violation of mercy to deny the like on the Lords day Ad minutula et leviora quibus nec corpus fatigatur nec mens à cultu avocatur ad illa non attendendum quia illa anxietatem potius servilem quàm libertatem filialem respicium modò libertatem illam in licentiam carnis non vertamus Wal. James 4. 14. The word Recreation is equivocal Indeed there is a Recreation which is mercy viz. the necessary refreshment of the body as eating drinking resting it self especially to those who have wearied themselves with labour yea to some sickly bodies some ordinary moderate and inoffensive Recreations may be allowed as a learned man observes But there is a Recreation which we call sports and pastimes when there is no necessity and to allow this is no work of mercy and if it be a mercy to the body it is severity to the soul and in this case God will have sacrifice and no such kind of mercy which pleases the fancy and the corrupt heart of man against the advantage of his better part This is to rob the soul that bears the Image of God to pay the body which beareth the Image of death and frailty The greatest mercy which can be shewed to such as labour hard all the week is to give them rest for their bodies and divine refreshments and recreations for their souls and for Dr. Turners Sermon at VVhitehall 1635. this the Lord himself was carefull And if their bodies have rest and repose the greatest mercy is mercy to their soul to breath the soul in holy meditation to draw out the soul Sic agamus in Sabbatho ut deum in nobis agere patiamur atque ita aeternum inchoemus Sabbathum Wal. Cant. 1. 7. Cant. 2. 5. in holy prayer to refresh the soul with divine truth to recreate the soul with singing of psalms to bring the soul to holy ordinances where it may meet with its Beloved these are the very spirits of mercy when Christs stays his beloved on a Sabbath with Flaggons and Apples in Gospel dispensations And if any desire to be mercifull the way is not to steal it from God but to allow it of his own Let the Labourer take his rest on his own day And some well observe If the Mr. C. and Mr. P. Voluptatem vicisse est m●●ima volupt●s neque est ●lla major victoria quàmquae à upiditatibus refertur Cypr. Sabbath be Gods it is no more true mercy to permit bodily recreations on that day then it is mercy to give men leave to steal other mens goods on the Sabbath because they have fared hard all the week before the person offending in the first b●ing far more guilty Can it be rational that Gods Commands should wait on mans conveniencies and happily this conveniency is created from mans neglect not necessity But supposing it was mercy to permit some bodily recreation which yet cannot be granted to such as have laboured hard all the week long yet what is that to such who have laboured very little or nothing in the week to such whose week is nothing but a Sabbath a rest and time of leasure and vacation and yet these are most ready to call and clamour for sports and recreations on the Lords day But as one wittily observes Those who are not annihilated Dr. Paul Micklethwait with hard labour have no title or claim to be recreated created again by delight and liberty If any can pretend to this plea They are such whose cheeks are moystened with sweat and hands hardned with toyle and work all the Epicuri disciplina multò ce●ebrior est non quia aliquid boni afferat sed quia multos ad populare nomen voluptatis invitat Lactant. Lib. 3. Divin week but such are most silent and modest in their claim and pretentious and therefore it cannot be any mercy to such who spend their time in Courtships and Dalliancings who converse like a wanton Epicurus or a plump Anacreon whose whole life is nothing else but a recreation and a successive chain of pleasures and worldly satisfactions and yet these as I said are they who are most importunate for sports and pastimes on Gods holy day And therefore to reassume that Argument from which we have a little diverted Recreations on the blessed Sabbath are inexcusably the wasts of that time which is wholly dedicated to the service of God and the soul as now comes to be shewed CHAP. V. The Whole Sabbath is to be spent with God THere are many persons both of Eminency and Learning who have taken much pains to prove the lawfulness of sports and pastimes on the Lords day I shall onely reply it was heartily to be wished such great parts had been improved on some other subject and the stream of Nemo non in ●itia pro●●● est ill● vincere diffi●illi mum est Lactant. their sweat had run in some other channel Alas in this Argument mans corrupt Nature will be the b●st Or●tour and produce the strongest ple●s we are naturally en●lined to fleshly ease and the flatteries of sense as other things which hasten to the Center Nature I say here can plead its own Q●i h●●er● vici●
of sin cannot over-rule the spot of sin cannot so unbeautifie him as to render him repudiate in the sight of his beloved sin may bring the Saint to the bar of conscience to be arraigned their but never to the bar of God to be condemned 1 Joh. 29. Jer. 31. 34. Heb. 9. 14. Isa 43. 25. Isa 44. 22. 1 Joh. 1. 9. there Christ hath satisfied for the sins of his people and divine justice will not require a double satisfaction The Apostle saith 1 Joh. 1. 9. If we confess our sins much more if Christ die for them God is just to forgive our sins Christ hath redeemed us from the killing power of death The Saints death is his alteration not his execution his Job 14. 14. Phil. 1. 23. Mors non est interitus sed introitus change but not his curse His priviledge and not his penalty Our death by the death of Christ is become a desireable thing the bitterness of Christs death hath put a sweetness and loveliness upon ours When the Saints die they only go to their Fathers house Death sees them safe home it Joh. 14 2 unites the body to the Earth their Mother and the soul to Tempus diversionis est te●● reversionis et regressionis ad Deu● Tertul. the Lord their Father who in the Resurrection will conjoyn these dissever'd pieces of Man and glorify them both for ever Tertullian calls the time of dying the time of return to God after the years of absence here below Cyprian calls death the time of a Saints assumption and conveyance to his Augustinus in 1 Tim. 4 7. Exultantis magis sunt verba ad mort●● praesentiam et ad cor●●●m ●● helantis quàm timentis et seipsum cruciantis Aug. Kingdom And it is recorded when the same holy Martyr heard of a sentence of death passed upon him by the Emperour Valerian he answered I thank God who is pleased to loosen the chains of my body that at last I may truly be at liberty Christs death indeed hath sweetned and perfumed ours the spices which were thrown into Christs grave are now taken up and thrown into ours Life to a believer is but an unkind Wall which parteth the Saint from his Beloved death throwes down this Wall and brings him into Luc. 24. 1. Joh. 19. 40. the same Heaven with Jesus Christ Death convey'd Lazarus from the comfortless gate of the rich man to the refreshing Luc. 16. 23. Heb. 9. 27. bosom of blessed because believing Abraham Christ hath redeemed us from the sting though not from the stroak of death from its hurt though not from its hold A Saint Rev. 14 13. 1 Thes 4. 14 16. now dies in Christ and though he die in his bed yet he sleeps in Jesus Death is only his ceasing to be any longer in a valley of tears and a wilderness of snares But a little farther to dilate on this point The Attributes resplendent in the work of Redemption In the great work of our Redemption all the Divine Attributes manifest themselves in their greatest lustre and splendor in this beautiful Orb they shine the brightest The Justice of God that if the sinner did not die the Son must One must die if the sinner be not cast into hell the Saviour must go out of his Fathers bosom Here was infinite 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 delectatus est Deus voluit et ejus beneplacito profectus est quòd infirmitatibus subjecerit filium su●m eumque afflictionibus contuderit Alioquin nihil actum esset si existimaremus illud accidisse vel nolente deo vel otiosè spectante Riv. justice here justice had a Selah put upon it That Text of Scripture is most remarkable in Isa 53. 10. It pleased the Father to bruise him he hath put him to grief c. God took a delight in bruising his own Son because in those bruises justice rid triumphant Innocency must bleed that the sinner may escape and that justice may be displayed Lycurgus once made a Law that Adultery should be punished with the loss of both the eyes his own Son being found guilty that justice might not be waved he puts out one of his Sons eyes and one of his own So the wages of sin is death Rom. 6. 23. That Law is unalterable now sin is committed there is an accursed thing in the Camp Iosh 7. 11. Either the sinner or the Saviour must die If the Principal cannot pay the Debt the surety must Divine Justice is so inexorable that the sinner escaping the Cup of Divine Rom. 6. 23. Heb. 7. 22. wrath must be put into the hand of an only Son Thus justice is eminent in the work of Mans Redemption The faithfulness of God God from eternity made a compact with his Son the Copy of which is laid up in that Ad successum mortis de quod attinet Rectè exprimitur videndi et saturandi verbis quibus omni moda fruitio rei conquisitae laboribus significatur et accipitur pro foelici et ubere sanctarum animarum messe Christus ad mortis suae tempus esuriebat grandi charitatis aestu c. Joh. 17. 4 5 6. Text Isa 53. 10 11. And one iota of this agreement must not pass away The substance of this compact is comprised in this main Article If Christ will make his soul an offering for sin he shall see the travel of his soul and be satisfied If Christ will die his Spouse his Church shall live his Cross shall make way for their Crown Now in the fulness of time Gal. 4. 4. Christ attempts and accomplisheth this stupendous undertaking he becomes incarnate and dies for his people and so his people live by his death the Father altogether comporting with this glorious agreement and not only gives his Son to redeem sinners Ioh. 3. 16. but likewises gives redeemed sinners to his Son Ioh. 17. 4 5 6. And thus Divine faithfulness gloriously breaks forth in the blessed work of our Redemption Every Article is made good and Christ meets with no disappointment not a soul miscarries for which he laid down a price and a ransom The Love of God did most transcendently appear in the work of M●ns Redemp●ion There was rich love on the Fathers part Ioh. 3. 16. Unspeakable bowels did the Father express to part with a Son a holy Son the Son of the bosom the Son from Eternity the very Character of his Father Heb. 1. 3. An only Son a begotten Son Psal 2. 7. to die Gen. 22. 12. for sinners Though Isaac was on the Altar yet he was rescued but our dear Jesus was on the Cross and he must die Christ begs his life of the Father Mat. 26. 39. But Non solum confi●mat Christus se discipulos suos dilexisse sed dilectionis suae magnitudinem exaggerat quod summo amorisgradu eos dilexerit Ger. the Father will not hear Great love was manifested in the
when we should be Prov. 24. 33. prosecuting our salvation It was Davids resolution He 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sunt homines electi studio zelo divinae gloriae servidi ardore salutis eorum flagrantes metaphora esthaec à bellatoribus Par. would follow hard after God Psalm 63. 8. What a contradiction to this holy man is a sleepy Hearer one who buries himself alive at an Ordinance The Scriptures assure us we must storm heaven and take it by force Math. 11. 12. And we must enter in at the straight gate by striving Matth. 13. 24. Nay we must make our way to Heaven by fighting the good fight of Faitb 1 Tim. 6. 12. And all these are actions most inconsistent with sleep and slothfulness Matth. 11. 12. It is too probable a sign we taste little sweetness in holy Matth. 13 24. 1 Tim. 2. 12. Ordinances and that Gospel-dispensations never shed their perfumes upon our soules when we can wish them away with a nod or a dream Rich Banquets will scarce meet with sleepy guests Sweet Musiques will court and captivate Verbum Dei satiat non saturat creat amantes non fastidientes our attention And had we the taste either of a Job Job 23. 12. Or of a David Psalm 19. 10. we should keep both eye and heart open in divine Ordinances Were Ordinances so pleasant or parturient to us as either to delight our souls or awaken our consciences we should not throw Siulte quid est somnus gelidae nisi mortis imago them away at so cheap a rate as the gratifying of the flesh with a little stupifying sleep Surely the design of sleep was to be the Nurse of Nature and not the enemy of Grace to Somnus aliquando vo●atur consanguineus leti support the body and not to hazard the soul Some learned men have called sleep the kinsman of Death O let it not be the Parent of our eternal Death It is a fatal change when sleep is metamorphosed into sin And thus much for the washing away of the paint of that excuse which pretends weakness and indisposition of body It is much to be feared the hand of Joab is in all this that neglect and carelesness close our eyes when we sleep away the precious Ordinances and opportunities of Grace But now succeed some ponderous considerations to be weighed in the ballance and seriously to be digested before we give our selves the sinful latitude to sleep in Ordinances Indeed many there are who sin away their souls and how many are there who sleep away their souls Before they come to Ordinances they sleep in sin and when they come to Ordinances they sin in sleep Sleep truly in the bed is the nurse of Nature but sleep in the Sanctuary is the nurse of vanity and breeds the soul up in Ignorance and Atheisme It is very strange that when our grace should be full of activity our sences should be chained with stupidity When Jonah slept the storm came Thou sleepest at a blessed soul-awakening 1 John 5. Psalm 11. 6. 2 Chr. 26. 20. Ordinance a storm of wrath may speedily fall upon thee as the Leprosie on a sudden rose in Vzziahs forehead But let us deliberatively weigh in our thoughts Wicken men do not sleep when they are about Satans work and while they are undoing their own souls If Judas have a plot in hand out of doors he will though in the night to bring his cursed design to pass John 13. 30. Nay the proud wanton envious eye in the Congregation will not fall asleep but will pry into every corner observe every fashion take notice of every beauty Satans work shall not be done sleepily and shall the work of God of Christ of Heaven of the Soul be done with drowsinesse and stupidity Here Ministers may make their appeal Hear O Heavens and give ear O Earth Isa 1. 2. It is strange the work of a Tormentor should be more faithfully done than the work of a Pay-master that the service of Apollyon Isa 1. 2. Vtitur Isaias prosopopei● ut Oratio sit gravior et plenior indignationis Cyril should be done with liveliness and activity and the work of a Saviour should be done with drosse and drowsiness It is much Ahab should be so restless for a Vineyard 1 Kings 21. 4. and we so drowsie for a Kingdome nay the Kingdome of Heaven Luke 12. 32. How will Ruffins Roysters and roaring Companions spend whole dayes nights in quaffing carowsing and gaming and we cannot spend one hour watchfully and actively for the pleasures of Eternity There are some Ordinances we will not sleep at when we come to the Lords Table it is no lesse then prodigious to fall into a sleep why then in Prayer or hearing of the Nemo potest fide credere nisi prius id quod credendum est sibi proponi et predicari audiat 2 Cor. 5 21. Word It is the preaching of the Word is the converting Ordinance Faith comes by hearing Rom. 10. 17. which faith espouseth us to Christ justifies our persons Rom. 5. 1. Seasons our Duties Heb. 11. 6. Purifies our hearts Heb. 15. 9. Unlades our guilt and layes it upon him who is mighty to bear It is faith by which we put on Christ Rom. 13. 14. and so being cloathed with the spotless robes of his righteousness we may stand with confidence before Gods tribunal Preaching is the Mother the Sacrament only is the Nurse of Grace preaching the Word of Christ fits us for feeding upon the body of Christ Paul gives preaching the preheminence 1 Cor. 1. 17. And so prayer it carries the conquest of omnipotency it self Isa 45. 11. Yet we are often Praecipuum Episcoporum munus est Evangelium praedicare Alap guilty of drowsie prayers and sleepy hearing when we tremble to think of sleeping with a Sacramental Cup in our hand Alapide observeth The predominant duty of Bishops is to preach the word And yet this Ordinance principally must be a witness of our shame This sleeping in Ordinances is a sin which Satan mightily promotes he knows of what fatal consequence it is for the soul to hear attentively to heed diligently the word of 1 Pet. 5. 8. Satanas suas infernales volucres quae sunt malae suggestiones hostium veritatis sophismata prava hominum prophanorum colloquia illusorum dicteria numquid omnia quae dicuntur credis quid vult tibi iste sermologus immittit quae sermonem auditum ex cordibus hominum ita eximant ut ne memoria quidem ejus maneat ne dum ut per illam ad fidem et pietatem et illius exercitia et fructus excitemur Lyser life and reconciliation this will batter his Kingdome and pluck Proselytes out of the paw of this roaring Lion And therefore when we come to a Sermon he either attempts to disturb and distract us and to throw in his cursed injections to procure a hurry
miles to hear heavenly Mr. Hildersham and it was not reputed their crime but their zeal We may on the Sabbath Numb 15. 36. alleviate winters cold with seasonable fires and God will not judicially turn our sticks which were to warm us into stones to bruise and destory us we may gather up Manna even spiritual Manna and it will not be our fault but John 6. 32. our happy frugality our Sabbath is the Souls feasting day Excessus in epulis cum naturâ pugnat Convivium enim ● vitâ non à morte nomen habet Chemnit and our provisions are no less then true bread from heaven We Christians are not denyed on our Sabbath the moderate furniture of our Tables Christ himself feasted with the Pharisees on the Sabbath day Luke 14. 1 7. Our greatest care in this case is that our tables be our support and not our snare To wind up then this particular Our Christian Sabbath though it hath less ceremony it hath more substance Psal 69. 22. though it hath fewer leaves it hath more fruit and though it is unhinged from legal observances it is more enrich'd with spiritual Ordinances It is a good observation of Learned Andrews That God imposed upon the Jews Bishop Andrews not to kindle a fire or to dress meat on the Sabbath this was meerly ceremonial and only belonged to them Therefore our Saviour sweetens our Sabbath in removing those burdens which were the servile badge of the Jewish pedagogy The Jewish and the Christian Sabbath differ in this upon the Jewish Sabbath there were carnal sacrifices offered Clariùs imperfectionem eorum describit cum dicit Dona victimas illas non posse perfi●ere conscientias Dona vocat Oblationes rerum inanimatarum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 victimas mactatas oblationes rerum animatarum Par. as well as spiritual services performed On the morning of their Sabbath there was offered two Lambs of the first year without spot two tenth deals of flower for a meat offering mingled with Oil and the drink offering thereof and this is the burnt offering of every Sabbath besides the continual burnt offering Numb 28. 9 10. There was likewise on the same morning burning of Incense Exod. 30. 7. So in the Afternoon both sacrifices and burning of Incense Exod. 29. 38. And to this alludes the Psalmist Psal 141. 2. So that much of the Jews Sabbath was spent in the offering of these legal sacrifices which the Apostle calls carnal Ordinances Heb. 9. 10. And which Alapide mentions as fleshly rites fit only for abolition to make way for more sweet Christus correcturus erat ritus illos legales et carnales iisque bolitis eorum loco spiritualem Dei cultum erat inducturus ut adoraremus deum et spiritu et veritate Alap Muscul in quartum praeceptum and spiritual Institutions Pareus superadds and calls them imperfect oblations the grosser victims of a people kept in the dark These shadowy offerings were only the Jewish Alphabet to teach them how to spell the meaning of better oblations to come And therefore Musculus calls the Jews Sabbath A legal a corporal an elementary a shadowy a pedagogical Sabbath But the Christian Sabbath knows no stone Altar no fleshly sacrifice no spilling of the bloud of Lambs no making a smoak with Incense and Perfumes These exterior varnishes and Types are a broken cloud to us which wholly disappears We on our Sabbath have no Altar but Christ no Incense but his merit no slaying of Lambs but of that Heb 13. 10. Rev. 8. 3 4. Rev. 13. 8. Jam. 5. 16. Heb. 9. 14. Lamb without spot which was slain from the foundation of the world we offer no burnt sacrifice on a Sabbath but a heart flaming with zeal nor do we bring any tenth deals of flower but those mean services of our souls which if we Altare nostrum Christus est qui pro nobis immolatu● fuit qui est sacrificium sacerdos et etiam Altare had better we should offer them to our dear Jehovah nor do we mingle any Oil with our offerings but only the acting of our graces in our holy performances The sacrifices of a Christian upon the Lord● day are of a more refined nature then the carnal sacrifices of the Jews upon their Sabbath The bending of the knee the lifting up of the hands the composing of the countenance the weeping of the eye are the offering up of his body as a reasonable sacrifice Rom. 12. 1. The acting of faith upon the word the dispensing Phil. 2. 17. charity to the poor the pouring out of prayers in Eph. 5. 2. holy addresses the rendring of thanksgiving for receiving Heb. 13. 15. mercies are the sacrifices of his soul they are his spiritual 1 Pet. 2. 5. oblations which he offers to God on his own day The Christians services on the Sabbath are so far sweet as they are soul-services and they have so much acceptation as they have of the heart The Jewish and the Christian Sabbath differ in the duration The Jewish Sabbath ended in the times of the Gospel but the Christian endures till the day of judgment when time shall be no more The Sabbath of the Jews was buryed in the grave of Christ and their its honour was laid in the Mat. 17. 2 3 4 5. dust But the Lords day shall stay till the Lords second coming and then it shall not be buryed but transfigured into an Eternal Sabbatism when all the Saints shall say It is Heb 4 9. good to be here and Moses and Elijah shall be our eternal Companions Our Sabbath is not so short-liv'd as that of the Jews but at the great day of account with the living Mar. 2. 28. Saints it shall be caught up to meet the Lords of it in the 1 Thes 4. 17. air and so shall it be ever with the Lord as a little to allude to that of the Apostle 1 Thes 4. 17. And in this regard the Christian Sabbath much outvies the Jews seventh day Duration and continuance sets a higher price on every thing which is valuable The Temple exceeds the Tabernacle John 14. 2. not only for the costliness but for the continuance of it Our possessions above Christ calls Mansions not only for their excellency but likewise for their permanency The Omnis homo est advena noscendo incola vivendo quia compellitur migrare moriendo Sed in domo caelesti non solum erimus sed manebimus unde coelum vocatur civitas manens Aug. Body of a man which is his inferiour part is called a Taberbernacle of clay 2 Cor. 5. 1. which is soon taken down But the soul which is mans better part is a piece of eternity and when disunited from the body it takes its flight unto an eternal condition and estate The prospect of a fair Landskip pleases us not so well because it is transient but it is
end or conclusion as Musculus well observes The Saints Eternal Rest shall not be disturbed with accidental afflictions Neither sorrow nor crying neither shall Luctus oritur ex morte amicorum et pri●atione eorum quos charos habuimus non erit dolor quia mors non erit erepti nobis amici restituentur videndi salutandi c. there be any more pain Rev. 21. 4. In our heavenly rest we shall neither grieve for the loss of friends nor cry for the smart of troubles nor roar for anguish or pain but eternal ease and tranquillity shall sweeten our glorious Sabbath and we shall for ever be singing our requiems There shall be no spot and therefore no sorrow no guilt and therefore no grief affliction being the inseparable companion of sin and deviation The Saints Eternal Rest shall not be disturbed by persecuting afflictions Neither shall the Sun light upon them nor any heat Rev. 7. 16. By this heat we may truly understand Rev. 7. 16. the heat of persecution Mat. 13. 21. Satans rage and wicked mens fury may reach gracious but not glorified Saints The Church Militant but not the Church Triumphant Eph. 6. 16. Heb. 12. 22. Satan cannot throw his fiery darts into the New Jerusalem the City of the first born Here the Sun of persecution may arise and scorch the Saints but in glory there shall be no need of Sun for light Rev. 22. 5. much less for beams to burn but the Lord shall give them light which will be only the shining forth of eternal grace and favour the light of his own blessed countenance Our Eternal Rest shall not be disturbed by toyle or labour In the Earthly Paradise man was to dress the Garden Gen. 2. 15. and this he was to do in his state of innocency Luke 23. 43. 2 Cor. 12. 4. so that there was labour though no pain there was some kind of care though no corrosive But in Paradise above Rev. 2. 7. there shall be no minding of the fruits of the Earth but the Saints shall be alwayes tasting the joyes of Heaven What should we toyle with in our heavenly Sabbath with our hearts There is no corruption with our hands there is no want or capacity of addition with our enemies there is no temptation neither of fury from Satan or flattery from the world and what should we labour for To gain more there is no defect to be better there is a full and absolute perfection And therefore the rest of our present doth sweetly shadow forth the perfect rest of our future Sabbath Our Sabbath here resembles our Sabbath hereafter in its splendour and external beauty On our Christian Sabbath In Sabbato vestes mundiores induimus mutamus priores sic in Sabbato aeterno veterem hominem exuem●● induemus novum dabitur sanctis ut se cooperiant bissino splendenti Chemnit we put on our best attire we array our outward man with our choycest and best apparel as well as adorn our inward man with holy and gracious dispositions The Sabbaths festival calls for our ornaments the deckings of our body we come to the assemblies of the Saints with the neatness and elegancy of our wear that both body and soul should be dressed to meet with their beloved nasty hearts and sordid cloaths if it may be prevented are both undecent on the Lords day When Joseph was to go into the presence of Pharaoh he changed his cloaths Gen. 41. 14. How much less doth neglect and despicableness become the presence of the Divine Majesty That which is civil and comly doth adorn holy worship and religion Mans body is Gods workmanship and is a piece of rare curiosity Psal 139. 16. The texture indeed and artifice of divine wisdome and power Non decuit sordidum prodire in regis conspectam civilitas decor pietatem et prudentiam ornat and therefore we must not eclipse the honour of this body by attiring it sordidly and more meanly then there is necessity when we come to worship God on his own day The best of our Garments sute the best of our dayes On the Subbath we meet our Bride-groome Mat. 18. 20. And Brides usually are dressed with the greatest care and exactness Fatui sunt Monachi aliique superstisi●s● qui in sorditie vestimentorum sanctimoniam ponunt Par. Indeed Pride of Apparel is a stain but decency is an Ornament to Gods blessed day nor must we put on our choicest attire to waste the time but to honour the day of a Sabbath Paraeus observes only foolish Monks place holiness in tattered and nasty garments but such rags are adequate and fit for such a mimical superstitious rout And so in our heavenly Sabbath we shall be cloathed Haec accipienda sunt de Beatorum munditie puritate laetitiâ perpet●â festivitate Ger. with brightness splendor and glory as with a garment Indeed it is a great question among Divines whether properly we shall be cloathed with rayment in our Eternal rest and it is by the most concluded the contrary Indeed there i● mention made of white rayment Rev. 4. 4. But this onely signifies purity as likewise of exact attire Rev. 19. 7. Scholasticè statuunt Beatos habituros vestes non quidem ex auro vel seri●o sed lùce But this only signifies perfection nay of fine linnen Rev. 19. 8. But this only signifies glory that kind of wear which becometh Kings Houses Mat. 11. 8. The Schoolmen observe that the blessed shall have garments but not of gold or silk but of light And indeed garments though never so rich would speak something of imperfection Garments Beati nudi erunt sed omni decore sulgebunt non plus de illis membris quàm nunc de gratiosis oculis erubescent Ansel are for adorning and that speaks want of Ornament they are for the repelling of the injuries of the weather which speaks an inferior condition not to speak of their primitive use which was to cover nakedness I might add garments are the veiles of modesty but glory is incapable of shame And therefore cloathing properly is not requisite in our heavenly Sabbath Adam in his innocency before the fall needed not raiment much less the Saints shall want it in a state of glory Indeed we shall put on our best apparrel in our Sabbath above but they shall be garments of innocency Rev. 7. 13. Sweet smelling odoriferous garments Psal 45. Cant. 4. 11. Rev. 19. 8. Exod. 28. 2. 8. Bright shining and illustrious garments Dan. 12. 3. Beautiful rare and comely garments Isa 52. 1. Garments of praise and glorious thanksgiving Isa 61. 3. Such garments the Saints shall wear in their future rest embroydered with all varieties of joy and happiness And indeed if there be so much ornament in a spirit of quietness and meekness 1. Chr. 16. 27. as the Apostle speaks 1 Pet. 3. 4. how ornamental must a spirit of
saepiùs Christus in die Sabbati officia charitatis praestitit quàm aliis diebus Iren. dayes And let us in this imitate both our Priest and Pattern who died for us and must go before us and we taking up this practice weekly let us follow him Surely melting bowels do bear a symphony with mercifull Sabbaths On the first day of the week the day of our Sabbath God created Gen. 1. 2 the world out of a chaos of confusion Christ restored the Mark 16. 2. World from sin and destruction and on the same first day Acts 2. 3. of the week the holy spirit enlightned the world in falling down solemnly upon the Apostles and redeemed the Church from Judaical misapprehension And shall these glorious works which have put such a bright emphasis upon the Christian Sabbath not soften our bowels to pity the groans of the sick the sights of the prisoner and comfort those who are in trouble and dejection On this day the spark Buc. in Mat. 12. 11. of our love should turn into a flame the drops of compassion should swell into a stream Bucer makes the visitation of the Luke 10. 33. sick to be a principal duty of our Sabbath On which day Infundit vinum et oleum Samaritanus vinum denotat legem oleum gratiam Evangelii Sacramenta sunt quasi alligamenta quibus labia vulnerum alligantur Chemnit Christians should turn good Samaritans they should drop tears into those wounds they cannot drop Oyl into and pour in the wine of consolation if they have no other to offer as a sacrifice of mercy Bleeding hearts become a blessed Sabbath One well observes It doth behove us as occasion is offered to spend some time of a Sabbath in visiting the sick because this will fill our minds with holy meditations and fill our mouths with heavenly discourses and fill our hearts with serious apprehensions of death and judgement which will shortly encounter us and there is no avoiding the stroke of the one or the Bar of the other There is Charitas spiritualis spiritual Charity which is Verbis exprimi non potest quantum homo qui ad imagirem dei conditus est et pro quo unigenitur dei filius proprium suum sanguinem fudit quem denique sp sanctus per verbum Evangelii ad communionem filiorum dei vocavit et sanctificavit irrationalibus et brutis animalibus praestet Lys most apposite to the Lords day One well argues If our mercy on a Sabbath must extend to the Oxe and the Ass Luk. 13. 15. much more to man who is Gods Vice-Roy upon Earth bears his own image and is enriched with that nature which Christ himself took upon him and if in outward things we must minister to him viz. man much more in spirituals and heavenly by how much the soul transcends the body and the wants of the soul are more dangerous and for the most part less felt then those of the body and therefore to succour them is more necessary and less dispensable Surely this is the highest mercy to pull men out of the pit of despair out of the mire of prophaneness out of the dungeon of ignorance to unfetter chained sinners to consolate and advice distressed souls It is observable our Saviour did not only heal the poor woman of her bodily infirmity on the Sabbath but delivered her from the chains of Satan with which she had so long been held Luke 13. 16. It is our great work on a Sabbath to shew mercy to distressed souls On the Lords day Christ rose for our justification Rom. 8. 34. which was a spiritual benefit not for supply but for our justification not for the encrasie of our bodies but for the rescue of our souls And the Apostle notes it with a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yea rather in the Text forementioned And in soul advantage every Christian may have a share they may have soft bowels who have not full purses every one may give savoury counsel put up ardent prayers labour to set home convictions nay enter into heavenly discourses and so endeavour to draw those who go astray to the Sheepfold of the Great Shepherd of their souls Every one may 1 Pet. 2. 25. bleed over sinful revolters and as St. John who ran after 1 Pet. 5. 4. the young man when he was extravagant in his practice they may run weeping after straying transgressours This willing mind as the Apostle speaks 2 Cor. 8. 12. may lodge 1 Thes 5. 14. in the breast of the meanest person there may be zeal in the heart when there are rags on the back and when their apparrel is more contemptible then John the Baptist's leathern girdle and Camels hair Mat. 3. 4. And that which enforces this duty is 1. The excellency of the work To instruct to admonish comfort and pray for Brethren is the greatest mercy the softest pity nay even the work of Christ himself who shed not only his tears but his blood to ransome immortal souls how did Christ grieve for a hard heart weep over an unbelieving City and lay down his life for poor lost sinners To Mark 3. 5. rescue poor perishing souls is a heavenly work and well Luke 19. 42. is becoming a heavenly Sabbath Mat. 18. 11. 2. The reward of the Service Not a tear we drop over a wandering sinner but will turn into a pearl The Apostle speaks expresly Jam. 5. 19. Brethren if any of you have erred from the truth and one hath converted him let him know that he hath converted a sinner from going out of his way he shall save a soul from death and shall hide a multitude of sins This text it seems informs us of a double reward Rom. 10. 14. 1. The salvation of a soul the purchase of Christ himself 1 Tim. 4. 16. souls were the gains of his victories Isa 53. 11. The Redemption of souls was the reward of all his sufferings Luke 22. 32. 2. Here is the covering a multitude of sins which onely Heb. 12 15 16. speaks blessedness Psal 32. 1 2. And it may likewise be inferred from this text of Scripture That God hath made us Heb. 3. 13. Guardians one of another Acts of spiritual charity belong to the care of all Christians God hath not onely set conscience to watch over the inward man but hath set us to watch over the outward conversation one of another We must exhort one another while it is to day Heb. 3. 13. especially Luke 24. 17. while the light of Sabbaths continues to us When the two Disciples were travelling to Emmaus Christ joyns with them this blessed Physician came to comfort to satisfie and to inform them they were poor distracted timorous persons and these he visits Christ will not leave them in a maze and intricated with inexplicable apprehensions but he will bring them home to the knowledge of the truth and this is Christs
not drinking things luke-warme nor walking measured paces not rejoycing in dances c. And Chrysostom urges with much holy fervency That on the Sabbath we should lay aside all the affairs of this life and withdraw our selves from them and spend all the leisure of the Sabbath in things spiritual and divine which concern our souls This eminent Person makes a difference between sloth and rest the one concerns the body the other the soul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Tom 5 p 225. and he clearly states the Question that the Sabbath was never given us to please a piece of clay but to serve the interest of that piece of eternity which every one of us carry in our own bosoms And on this manner Augustine courts his Auditors We must know dearly beloved That it is therefore August appointed of our holy Fathers and commanded to us Christians that upon the Lords day we should rest that reposing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Concil Load Can 29. from all worldly business we might be more fresh and prompt for Gods divine worship and may with more ease attend upon the will and service of God Nay a whole council viz. of Laodicea in the twenty ninth Canon hath these words It doth not become Christians to Judaize and to be idle on the Sabbaths This was the spirit and temper of the Primitive times they press that our Sabbaths might be spiritualized not that our work should wholly cease but only should be changed that the labour of the hand should be turned into the working of the heart that manual operations should be turned into mental contemplations and on this day our work must not be servile but seraphical we must not throw away the Pen but we must write the fairer In the middle times of the Church when such dark Thom. Aquin. 22dae quaest 122. 4 3. 11. 3 dist Art 15 Quest 1. clouds had over-spread it that spiritual worship was as Saul among the Prophets rare to a Proverb yet then the employing of the time of a Sabbath in holy service was accounted morall in the fourth Commandments and scoffs were bestowed freely by the writers of those times on those who wasted the Sabbath in plays or idleness This bright Alex de Alens p. 3. quaest 32. Scol l. 2 de instit qu 4. Artic. 4. truth like a star in the night made its way to shine in the darkest times The fine spun disputes of the Schoolmen could not distinguish it away but it brake through all their curious webs This truth was so fastned in the Church it could not be disputed out by the School And let Semper eadem not only be Queen Elizabeths Motto but the Sabbaths holy observation In the dawning of Reformation there was light enough to discover this truth many eminent Divines those burning and shining lights which blaze more because they are nearer to us give in their suffrage for spending the Sabbath in holy exercises sharply decrying Hinc colligimus deum non de re nihili aut fl●cci loqui cùm sanctificationem Sabbati nobis commend●verit Calv. sluggishness and sloth on this blessed day It is the grave observation of incomparable Calvin That God speaks not of a small matter when he commands the sanctification of the Sabbath but doth exhort us to a diligent marking of it and our want of care to mark is a breach of this Commandment This worthy man could not imagine that a Memento should Preface a day of sloth and idleness that we might take our carnal ease without such an alarm To walk in the fields to sit idling at the door of our house to chat in a room upon a Sabbath are no such importances as to require such diligent attention or exact observation there is little holiness in any thing of this A carnal man may rest from labour and never much mind or need a command Nature will let us to take our case without any special command from the God of nature The great Jehovah had never needed in the midst of thundrings and lightnings with great Exod 10. 18. terrour and Majesty to give out a command for us to go to a Bench to sit on to a couch to talk on or to a bed to lie on A School-master need not make a set speech or tune his language to strains of Oratory to perswade his Scholars to go to play and be idle Idleness needs no great enforcements wants no arguments of reason nor paintings of Rhetorick we can prate of worldly affairs and take our pleasing pastimes without any attractive engine Zanchy speaks very pregnantly to this purpose I call saith he this dayes rest Zanch. de oper creat p. 3. l. 1. c. 1. divine and holy because as God is never idle so he would have us take rest in soul and conscience after that manner that yet notwithstanding we be alwayes employed in those things which are of Gods spirit and which appertain to the glory of God and to the good both of our selves and others The cause of commanding rest upon the Sabbath was not for rest sake and that man might be idle but that he might altogether spend that whole day in divine worship Thus this Reverend Person Sed ut toto illo die possint vacare cultui divino Zanc. in quartum praecept rightly state● the Question and truly asserts that as rest is included in the Commandment so holy and spiritual worship is the end of that rest God calls us off from Earth to mind Heaven and the body must have a vacation that the soul may have a Term the body must decrease that the soul may increase Corporal rest is only the means by Non igitur cum Ethnicis sentiendum festos dtes tantúm quiet●s remissionis causa suscipi quorum finis ●sset reco●datio beneficiorum dei in convocatione sancta c. which we may pursue our eternal rest This learned Rivet looks upon it as a brutish and heathenish Opinion to think that God should give us a holy day for sloth and remisness and he positively tells us That the end of the Sabbath must be the recordation of divine benefits and to refresh our memories with most grateful rehearsals of Gods bounty and to put up prayers for future grace for the leisure of Saints must not be fruitless The eccho of this golden sentence is true and sweet A godly mans leisure must not run waste When the world gives him a short quietus est he must rest in God His spare hours from his outward affairs must be his serious hours for his soul The Saints have alwayes work to do on this side eternity but especially on that day when rest is commanded us to look after eternity Hospinian here accents Finis tertius est Sabbati ejusque otii ille est subli●●or Vt vir spiritua●is ad aeternam sui salute● propior accedat ut vitae sanctae ●ffici●● occupetur
the bread of life when we attend upon the preaching of the word and generally as our Estate is better than the condition of the Jews in respect to the whole worship of God so likewise more especially in our worship upon the Sabbath our priviledges are more and our burdens are less than theirs our worship is more spiritual more easie more sublime and heavenly and more above the Alphabet and rudiments of their Religion Their lisping Sacrifices proclaimed their minority but ours speak more plainly the Dialect of Heaven Nay which is very considerable in those things wherein we are equally bound with them we much exceed them are we bound to meditate in the law of God day and night yet Psal 1. 2. we are not commanded to carry it about in the skirts of our Numb 15. 38. garments and upon our bracelets Deut. 6. 8 9. And though Rom. 32. it is our duty as well as theirs to teach our Children the Oracles of God Deut. 6. 7. yet we are not charged with Scripturae sacrae in iisque promissiones et Pacta Divina et suturorum mysteriorum prae dictiones haec fuerunt eloquia dei Judaeis concredita Alap the writing of them upon our gates and the posts of our doors Deut. 6. 9. And so in our Sabbaths we are free from the servilities and rudiments with which the Jews were chained as a signe and token of their bondage and servitude Though we are charged to rest upon the Lords day and so keep it holy yet we are not over-charged with Sacrifices and Ceremonies they are all laid asleep in Christs Grave and we are freed from these Fetters and so enjoy a more glorious liberty The inference of the whole will be this Hath God filed off all Chains of servility plained off all knots of difficulty hath he put an end to all legal Sacrifices and chased away all shadows of Ceremony that nothing might encumber our Christian Sabbath How exact then should we be in the observation of it Divine indulgence as it is properly a curb to sin so it is a forcible spur to duty the Lord hath abundantly sweetned therefore let us more carefully sanctifie our blessed Sabbath he hath freed it from the Jewish thraldom let us therefore keep it with Christian freedom the Sabbath of the Jews like the Infant Moses floated among the Reeds but ours hath its Nest among the Stars Obad. 4. Let its sublimeness and spirituality engage us more strongly to a due and holy solemnity nothing can more soften unto obedience than love and indulgence which is written in the fairest character upon the Christian Sabbath It is a most natural Induction that we being loosed and unfettered should run with more swiftness the way of the fourth Commandement now spiritualized to us by Jesus Christ Our Sabbath triumphs in a more glorious occasion then that Gen. 2. 3. of the Jews doth That which occasioned the Old Sabbath was the finishing of the work of creation but that which Mat. 28. 1. occasioned ours was the accomplishment of the work of redemption which glorious work far surpasses the other as the Temple exceeded the Tabernacle The work of Redemption is more precious As mans gaining the world cannot recompence the loss of the soul so Gods making the world doth not equalize Christs redeeming the Mat. 16 26. Inutile est mundi lucrum cum perditione animae conjunctium perditio enim animae est irreparabile damnum Chemnit soul Christs recavering must needs exceed Gods creating a world to draw men out of an enthrall'd bondage is more then to bring man out of a confused Chaos In the Creation God was to deal with no Enemy but in the work of Redemption Christ was put to combat with all the Devils in Hell and to over-power men opposing their own mercies The work of Redemption is more pressing It made the soul of Christ heavy unto death Mat. 26. 38. In this work Christ did not only fight with the Devils but God Himself seemed to combat with Christ and to put him to grief Isa 53. 10. The worlds creation was finished without difficulty but the Redemption of mankind was a work knotted with much pain and grievance The world was created with the speaking of a word it was only Let it be done and this was all the Sun the Stars and all other Creatures they sprang from the Energy and power of a Command from the force of an omnipraevalent fiat but the work of Redemption was not wrought but by the expence of Christs dearest blood The work of Redemption is more profitable Indeed to have Earth to tread on Air to breath in Meat to feed on Christus vicit triumphavit non virtute et sudore aliorum ●t mumdani Imperatores solent sed suâ solâ passione suâ solius virtute Daven Light to walk by these are benefits and good natural supports but the subduing of Satan the removing of the sting of sin with all the astonishing and sad sequels of it the pacifying and quenching of the flames of Gods anger the reparation of mans nature these are transcendent benefits and bid defiance to an hyperhole The work of Redemption yields a far greater crop and harvest of joy peace and happiness We may be Gods creatures and yet fall upon the spikes of eternal ruine But Christs Redeemed ones shall come with singing to Zion and everlasting joy shall be upon their heads and they Quomodo illum diem qui a domino dicatus est nosque ab exilii dedecore liberavit venerari par est Isych shall obtain gladness and joy and sorrow and mourning shall flee away Isa 51. 11. Isa 65. 17. The work of Redemption is the fullest treasury of mans happiness And as it was long ago prophesied Hag. 2. 9. That the glory of the second Temple should out-shine that of the first So the glory of the Redemption out-shines the glory of the Creation Indeed the work of Creation is a lesser good to us as the Law is a lesser good then the Gospel and the Old Testament then the New Redemption must be owned as the greater work inasmuch as things spiritual are more valuable then things natural and Gods last works are his best the first being only preparatory to the last and indeed he who shall question whether Redemption be a greater work then Creation knows little what a Redeemer is or what the ransom of an immortal soul is worth Psal 49. 8. In creating the world God did much for me he gave me a body admirably and curiously wrought Psal 139. 15 16. He likewise endowed me with a rational soul and endowed this soul with rare and excellent faculties but all these had been only capacities of misery and receptives of wrath and ruine had not the work of Redemption interposed And therefore Christ in shedding Eph. 1. 7. his blood in conquering death in satisfying for sin hath done more for me
sweet promises the first made to Charity the best of duties 10 11. Verses the second made to a Holy Observation of the Sabbath the best of dayes Verse 13 14. And thus much may serve as a manuduction to lead you to the Text. CHAP. II. The Explication of the Text. IN the Text we have two remarkable Parts An Eminent Duty enjoyned Duties they are the Cords of a man to use the Prophets Phrase by which we are Hos 11. 4. sweetly drawn nearer to God they are our Travel towards Canaan While we are in a way of duty we are in Bona opera sunt via ad Regnum our way to the Kingdome Holy Duties are our spiritual intercourse our traffique with Heaven and such a duty is enjoyned in the Text. A Precious promise entailed on the accomplishing and right acting of this duty and indeed God doth not usually send our duties when duly performed empty away Duties Evangelically acted they are like Noahs Dove with the Gen. 8. 11. Gen. 44. 2. branch in her mouth like Benjamins sack with the silver Cup in the top of it God will not leave unrewarded the sweat of the soul But of these in their order For the Duty it self in the whole of it is a spiritual observation of the Sabbath The Sabbath day as God ordained it for his own Rest so it must be observed for his own Honour The Sabbath is Gods by his own Institution and by our sanctification As we receive it from God so we must keep it to God But in the Text there are many branches sprouting from this common stock God directs us many wayes and in many methods how to observe his Sabbath and we will trace and open these Directions in an orderly progress and proceeding These Directions they are partly negative and partly positive These Negative Directions call us from some practices which are prohibited and from some language which must be restrained Now there are four sorts of actions we must be abstemious from upon the Sabbath or to speak in Gospel language upon the Lords Day CHAP. III. Secular and servile works utterly unlawfull on the Sabbath day ACcording to the Text we must abstain ab actionibus civilibus from Civil Actions from the works of our Secular actions to be forborn on the Sabbath day we are in no wise to follow the works of our Calling Alap Callings the Shop and the Change-business must be laid aside on a Sabbath so the Text If thou turn away thy foot from the Sabbath Now Alapide gives us the genuine interpretation of that phrase Omne opus servile quod pedibus fit aut manibus hic erat prohibitum All servile works which the feet or hands accomplish is here prohibited Indeed the feet are quick and ready to prosecute the gains of the World and therefore here we are commanded to keep our feet from being exercised in servile or secular imployments on this Holy Day not any work must ●xod 20. 10. be done saith God in the fourth Commandment a Commandment in which we may truly-say digitus Dei the Exod. 31. 18. Finger of God We must not mingle the Week with the Sabbath Oecolampadius well descants on this phrase in Oecolamp in hunc locum Judas Macchab We are to abstain from all servile work that having no work of our own we may be wholly taken up with Gods work that he may speak with us and reveal himself fully and familiarly to us as friends do when they get alone Shep. p. 84. the Text Si quicquam rerum tuarum in Sabbatho if thou hast appointed to do any of thy works upon the Sabbath and shalt draw thy foot away from the Sabbath intermiseris illud opus propter Sabbathum that is shalt intermit and lay aside that work for the Sabbath-sake because of the Sabbath in remembrance of the Sabbath then thou shalt sanctifie the Sabbath for such a Sabbath is acceptable to God Whatsoever work we have purposed we must break it off and turn our feet from it upon a Sabbath One well observes that Judas Macchabaeus whom God raised up for the defence of his People against the Tyranny of Antiochus that he having a great Victory against Nicanor and his Host and putting to the sword nine thousand and chasing away the rest the day before the Sabbath after that they had gathered the spoyle together they did rest upon the Sabbath and praised God for the Victory and after the Sabbath was past then they took order for the dividing of the spoyle Indeed should we labour upon Prohibeturopus nostrum scil servile mechanicum laboriosum quaestuosum ordinarium tum privatum tum publicum quae cum prohibita fuerint in festis aliis solennioribus Lev. 23. 7 8 25 32 35. Num. 28. 25. Multo magis Sabbatho Leid Prof. Luke 23. 56. Psal 1. 2. the Sabbath day this would breed confusion and confound Gods day with ours we labour six dayes and should we labour on the seventh where is the distinction this is to mingle light and darkness and to abolish the Sabbath name and thing The Sabbath is the Souls Monopoly then we must not labour with our hands but with our hearts and not seek the gains of the Earth but the Kingdome of Heaven we must not then follow our Callings but our Christ Mary Magdalen and Mary the Mother of James would not prepare odours to annoin● Christs body when he was dead on the Sabbath day but rested that day least while they went about to Embalm his body they might indeed eclipse his Glory On this day Physicians must not study Galen nor Philosophers Aristotle nor Mathematicians Archimedes but their delight must be in the Law of the Lord. The Sabbath is sanctum otium a holy leasure to pursue Eternity We must so give rest to our bodies and our souls upon this day that nothing trouble us for here we must take up that of the Philosopher Postulandum secessum Toto hoc die vacandum Domino ut melius intendamus we must have our repose that we may the better intend the great work of our souls and therefore not onely worldly cares but worldly businesses are forbidden that so our whole body may be at command to serve God It is most eminently remarkable that we have in the Scriptures six Commandments for the observation of this Rest In Exod. 16. 22. The Israelites were to cease from gathering Manna on that day They were to gather a double measure on the day before that they might not be diverted to gather any on the Sabbath day On this day you have mercatur animae merchandise for your souls wherein are better things then Manna to be gathered Manna not like Coriander Joh. 6. 53. 1 Pet. 2. 3. seed Exod. 16. 31. but Manna which is the seed of the Word which is able to save our souls In Nehem. 13. 15 16 17. Where holy Nehemiah forbids all Traffique on the Sabbath
day Indeed the Sabbath is the market-day for the Soul as Mr. Rogers used to call it but other markets on this day are not the supplies of provision but of profanation in other merchandizing we treasure up not wealth but wrath In Jer. 17. 22. There must be no carriage of burthens on this day such servile employments are black spots upon the feast of a Sabbath It is most uncouth and unseemly that I should be tiring out my body on that day which is given Jer. 17. 27. me for the strengthning of my soul The Sabbath is not the bodies Term but the souls holy Vacation it's consecrated leisure to look after its blessedness No not in harvest ●ime must we labour on a Sabbath when Nature it self would go a gleaning and be busie with Joseph to bring the grain into the store-house and although Gen. 41. 56. Deus nullam dispensationem admittit etiam cum periculo communis jacturae Calv. in Loc. the uncertainty of the season the necessity of the Commodity and the sweetness of the grain all plead for a toleration in this matter yet it must not be for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it Exod. 34. 21. Nature like Naaman might here say only spare me in this thing 2 King 5. 18. but Gods positive Law gives no dispensation There must be no journeying on this day all our travels must be the travels of the mind our journey must be to Canaan with our faces towards Sion thus God expresly Exod. 16. 29. Obj. And as for the Objection of a Sabbath days journey Acts 1. 12. Sol. To that it may be replyed That the Text answers it self for the distance allowed to travel on the Sabbath is very small no further then Mount Olivet from Jerusalem an inconsiderable distance Learned men differ in the interpretation but all agree in this that it was a very small distance Calvin saith it was two miles and of that judgement Calv. in hunc Locum Aliquantulam itineris facere non erat contrà traditiones Phorisaeorium Chemnit are the most of the Latin Interpreters Tremellius in the Syriac Paraphrase readeth the Text thus The Mount of Olives which is near unto Jerusalem and is distant from it about seven furlongs that is not a mile And that learned man observes that the Jews in their Talmud with one consent say that the space which it was lawful for a man to go upon the Sabbath was two thousand Cubits or Spaces which make but one mile and not two And Beza very well Beza notes That all the Hebrews whose testimony is most authentical in this case make a Sabbath dayes journey only one mile Josephus who was very well acquainted with the Joseph Antiq. Lib. 20. place counted Mount Olive but five furlongs from the City But to dilate no further we may conclude with holy Mr. Greenham That this journey was no farther then one might conveniently travel for some holy purpose without hinderance of the ordinary exercises of this day or without wearisomness either to body or mind whereby he should be unfitter for the Lords Worship or his own Duties Not so much as to build Gods House though of very great use and great haste of it Exod. 31. 14 15. a most signal Text compare it with the foregoing verses not any work is indulged though Gods house should call for it The Sabbath calls for Worship not Work for the Service of the Sanctuary not for the Building of it Obj. And now if the poor man shall bring his Plea and urge the necessities of his Condition and that he cannot spare the time of a Sabbath but must work upon that day to satisfie the clamours and importunities of his family Sol. this Answer must be put unto this Plea saith in Deut. 5. 14. On the Sabbath thou shalt not do any Shall the Worm debate it with the Almighty The Lord work Is not this to impeach the wisdome of the Law-giver Deut. 5. 14. as if all cases did not fall under his consideration The Fourth Commandment is a Commandment overflowing with mercy God considers and compassionates Children Servants and Strangers nay the very Beasts of the Field the Oxe and the Asse and the poor mans case should not have been left out had divine wisdome thought a dispensation necessary he should have been left to his work as well as the stranger left to his rest It is the blessing of the Lord makes Rich as the wise man speaks Prov. 10. 22. And what can entail this blessing on Lev. 25. 3 4. comp with Vers 18 19 20 21. thee but obedience Thy Duty shall more prosper thy Estate then thy Work Can'st thou possibly be endammag'd by keeping of the Commandments which Solomon makes the sum of all Religion and Happiness Eccles 12. 13. To which the Psalmist fully accords Psal 19. 11. The best way to sill thy Cruse is to fulfill Gods Commands Godliness hath the promise of the things of this life 1 Tim. 4. 8. To disobey the Command in working on a Sabbath is the only method to drive thee to greater exigence Disobedience like intemperance shall cloath thee with rags Prophanation Prov. 23. 21. of the Sabbath will be a certain moth in the little thou enjoyest This is to fill thy bag not with Coyne but with Curses And as the wise man There shall be no reward for the evil Prov. 24. 20. man Prov. 24. 20. To rob God of his time is such a piece of sacriledge as will assuredly fill thy bags with holes which Hag. 1. 6. will hold no wages Hath not the poor man a soul to look after and when shall he lay up provisions for this piece of eternity his precious soul but onely on a Sabbath He cannot spare time on the week and shall his soul have no time at all Shall the soul which is more worth then a world not be worth that little pittance he gets by working on a Sabbath The Mat. 16 26. poor man pretends necessity certainly he hath the greatest necessity to look after his immortal soul to feed his family will he starve his soul The just man lives by faith whether he be rich or poor and surely that faith runs dregs which will not trust God Hab. 2. 4. for the provisions of a day and how irrational is it not to trust that God who could send a Raven to feed Elijah dost 1 Kings 17. 4. thou not know the Earth is the Lords and the fulness thereof Psal 24. 1. And cannot he furnish thy Table for a Sabbath thou hast spent with him And will thy poor Earnings on a Sabbath compensate the prejudice thy soul endures Whilst thou hast been labouring for ●he meat that perisheth thou mightest have gained that John 6. 27. Omne studium omne conatus eò conferamus ut habeamus non externa corruptibil●● hujus mundi bona sed ut habeamus cibum qui
non ipse tantum permanet sed etiam affert vitam aeternam Chemnit Amos 2. 6. meat which endureth to everlasting life Shall the gain of a penny or some inconsiderable profit with draw thee from pursuing thy spiritual good on thy souls market day Thy gain on this day may be as the God of the Tholouse which was fatal to all who stole of it or as the Coal brought to the nest setting the young and all on fire The Sabbath as one saith is the School day the Faire day the Feasting day of the soul and the body is little interested in the affairs of it this holy day is the souls harvest and not set apart for the gleanings of the world and thus while the poor man works on the Sabbath he sells himself for a pair of shooes a little to invert the Prophet And Reverend Mr. Calvin observes This is onely a wile of Satan for saith he All of us naturally are of that mind that if we endeavour to mount on high to the heavenly life and bestow our studies therein we think we shall dye for hunger and this shall be to turn us from our Profits and Commodities And indeed the Devil cometh alwayes to perswade us under this Calvin on Deut 5. Serm. 35. shadow and wiliness that if we employ our selves in the service of God we must needs dye of famine and we shall live to be the objects of others pity for our meanness and misery Thus far that holy man who presently adds Of a truth we cannot serve God unless we cast away from us these distrustfull cares Lev. 25. 20 21. Mat. 6. 33. 1 Tim. 4. 8. Pietas habet promissionem vitae quae nunc est ut scilicet hîc vitam pacatam longaevam rebus omnibus necessariis instructum agamus Alap Jer. 25. 20 21. Exod. 16. 22. Sex●â die deus pluit Manna ab●ndè ut toti populo suffi●eret ad biduum Riv. Haec sun●●●era tenebrarum carnis Buc de Regno Christi Lib. 2. Cap. 10. which press us over much And how doth this unholy distrust which often draws the offendor to a breach of the Sabbath contradict those indulgent promises of the Scripture both under the Law and in the times of the Gospel where the giving Religion and our Souls the precedency is ensured not only of a better portion in future Glory but of a satisfying provision even in this Life And to wind up this particular The Jews of old enjoyed a special promise that no lack should come to them by their resting on the Sabbath and God gave them a sure pledge in the Wilderness when on the day before the Sabbath a double portion of Manna was given to all that gathered Exod. 16. 22. Nor can the promise be straitned to believers under the Gospel And so we have at last done with the poor mans Plea leaving him for the future to act his Faith and study Obedience rather then frame his Apologies Labouring on a Sabbath in the works of our Calling or in any other unnecessary toyle is a practise so manifestly sinfull that it is not only prohibited by the Great Law-giver in the Fourth Commandment in the times of the Law but it is likewise forbidden by all Authority both Civil and Ecclesiastical in the times of the Gospel Constantine the great Constant Mag. who deserved that noble Title more for his Religion then his Victories sets out a pious Edict to this purpose strictly forbidding all secular labour on the Lords day The very words of the Statute are these He commands that every one Statuit ut curcti Romano Imperio subditi diebus de Servatoris nomine nuncupatis ab opere feriarentur Euseb Lib. 4. de vitâ Constantini c. 18. 2 Pet. 2. 13. Jud. vers 12. Car. Magn. Leges Ecclesiast lib. 6. cap. 202. Lud. Pius ib. addition c. 9. Leo Philos who lived in the Roman Empire should rest from labour that day weekly which was instituted to our Saviour and moreover that all Judges Citizens Artificers should rest on the Sabbath Thus this holy Emperour who first brought rest to the Churches for a long time scorcht with persecution and discomposed by Pagan fury takes care that the Sabbath be not prophaned by servile works which are truly spots in that holy feast Charles the Great Anno Dom. 789. not willing to blemish his Title the same with Constantine's speaks Constantine's language Viz. We do ordain as it is commanded in the Law of God that no man do any servile work on the Lords day And this he explicates in several particulars Viz. Husbandry dressing Vines Ploughing c. and almost all kind of Manufactures And the words of Leo Philosophus the noble Emperour of Constantinople in his pious Edict for the better observation the Lords day are very memorable Viz. We ordain according to the true meaning of the Holy Ghost and of the Holy Apostles by him directed That on that sacred day wherein we are restored to our intogrity all do rest and surcease from labour that neither the Husbandman nor others put their hands to forbidden work c. I might mention Clothaire King of France Gunthram and many other Princes expressing the same zeal to the Sabbath but it would be altogether supervacaneous onely let me not denude our own English Princes of their just and due Honour in this particular King James of famous memory 15 James at his first entrance into his Kingdome he sent out his Declaration to this effect Viz. That for the better observation of the Sabbath day he straitly charges That there be no Interludes Pastimes unlawful exercises on the Sabbath day And King Charles the First he enacts a Law in his 15 Charles first Parliament That there be no Pastimes no Carrier Waggoner Drover travel on the Lords day no Butcher kill or sell any Victual on the said day c. Thus the English Throne hath not been devoid of necessary Zeal for the suppression of unnecessary toyle on the Lords day And labouring on the Lords day hath not onely been condemned by Civil but by Ecclesiastical Authority both swords have been drawn against this practice And Ecclesiastical Authority hath condemned it Take it distributively for eminent persons Zerubbabels who have been famous in building the Temple in the primitive times Origen thus expresses his holy fervour for the Sabbath and for the cessation from Die dominico nihil ex mundi actibus agendum ex omnibus secularibus operibus feriandum est Orig. Homil. 23 in numer Augustine fervile or secular works on that day On the Christian Sabbath day we ought not to do any worldly business If therefore thou dost surcease from all secular affairs and dost nothing but imploy thy self in spiritual negotiations this is the right observation of the Christian Sabbath Thus this mirrour of piety and learning And Augustine the miracle of the fifth Century in one of his Sermons
part of our inheritance above whereof our Sabbath is but a sign and pledge When we come to glory we shall cease from all sweat and painfulness and as there shall be no tears lying upon our cheeks so there shall be no sweat bedewing our brows Our toile shall be turned into triumph our pains into pleasure our industry into rest our hard labours into soft loves and glorious rewards and therefore Lazarus lies in Abrahams hosome a place not of sweat but repose and all this our present Sabbath is but a harbinger of So the working upon a Sabbath doth not onely destroy the Observation of it which is to be Rev. 14. 13. The holy rest of the Sabbath is the twilight and dawning of heaven Shep. Treatise of the Sabbath p. 79. Luke 16. 23. Sabbathum nostrum perpetuum illum caelestem Sabbatismum consequentem et perfectum figurat ubi fideles à propriis malisque operibus sint in aeternum feriantes Leid Prof. with no manner of work but the very significancy of it Working on this day eclipses the Sabbath as it is our earnest of a better rest and undervalues this noble end of a Sabbath finis sublimior as some call it to represent the perpetual sabbatisme the Saints shall enjoy in a better place and state Let us consider the equitableness of mans resting from worldly labours on the Lords day Shall Man that frail piece of dust be like a Salamander alwayes in the fire of toyle and painfulness Shall there be no time for him to interferiate and feast with God and consecrate himself to Exod. 31. 17. holy observances God was refreshed on the Sabbath as was hinted before and shall trembling flesh have no leisure Omnis actio de● nobis pietatis et virtutis regula est Basil to pause and walk with Christ in his ordinances Doth devout sequestration to pious and holy exercises no way belong to him Or shall God in the fourth Commandment that grand Charter of the Sabbath take care for the repose Quia durabile non est quod requie earet otium quoddam sanctum deus praecepit ut insatiabilem hominum cupiditatem frae naret qui tam seipsos quam servos suos nimiis laboribus exhauriunt modò lucrum faciunt Gualt of the Oxe and the Ass the beasts that perish as the Psalmist speaks Psal 49. 20. and no care of Man that sublime piece in the Creation which is little lower then the Angels Psal 8. 5. To conclude this large Argumentation The Labourer who defiles the Sabbath with his sweat opposeth divine command universal authority and the dictates of sound Reason which are the cords of a man But now for works of absolute necessity which could neither be done before the Sabbath nor deferred till after the case is far otherwise here to labour is not our crime but our duty To breath a vein to one sick of a Plurifie is the duty of a Sabbath so to quench our neighbours house on fire is our proper work on the Lords day to stop inundations Psal 8. 5. of waters which else would break forth to the prejudice Hos 11. 4. of the adjacent parts this is not to defile but to honour Acts 20. 10. a ●abbath Paul on the Sabbath day uses means to recover Luke 13. 15. Lutichus who was dead for the present The Jewes Mat. 12. 5. in their greatest strictness were not so bound up as not to do works of necessity They might fight against their enemies on a Sabbath take and destroy the Cities of their adversaries Jericho is encompassed seven dayes and taken the seventh Josh 6. 20. Excipiantur illa opera quae singulari aliquâ necessitate nobis imponantur quo in numero illa non sunt habend● quae homines sibimetipsis quasi necessari fingunt Ames probably the Sabbath Josh 6. 20. which was no blemish to Israels Victory but an inhancement to the praise of Israels God Works of necessity they do sweeten they do not soyle a Sabbath they shew the love of God they do not break the law of God It no wayes hinders my Soul from being put in joynt upon the Lords day because my leg is put in joynt which was broken by a sad and afflictive providence And works of necessity are secured from Sabbath-prophanation by a four-fold warrant and dispensation Our Saviours holy example signs this dispensation He wrought his cures on the Sabbath for the most part Mat. 12. Luke 6. 10. Mark 3. 5. Mat. 2. 28. 13. and many other places The wound should not bleed to death because our Saviour would not act the Physician on this holy day Christ who was the Lord of the Sabbath would oftentimes cause an Ordinance to wait on a Cure and many times the Preacher must yield to the Physician Our dear Lord well knew a dying Patient was not fit to be a devout Worshipper The necessities of the Disciples being gratified were no blemish to the holiness of the Sabbath upon that day they Mat. 12. 1. Christus sumptâ occasione ex discipulorum facto viz. spicarum fricatione et comessione factum illud defendit Lysit pluckt the eares of Corn. They carried bodies of clay about them which must be shored up or their souls would fly out at the cracks of them If the glass be broken the cordial will be spilt Our bodies must be indulged or our souls will be uncapable of services or ordinances Faint bodies are listless to lively duties The very plea's of Reason have warranted a dispensation Our Saviour urges three rare Arguments to indulge cases of necessity The first Argument is a majori from the stronger and more forcible inference which argument we find Luke 13. Luk. 13. 15. Verbis exprimi non potest quantum homo qui ad imaginem dei conditus est et pro quo unigenitus dei filius proprium suum sanguinem fudit quem denique spiritus sanctus per verbum Evangelii ad communionem filiorum dei vocavit et sanctificavit irrationelibus animalibus praestat Chem. 15. where our Saviour urges most sweetly and wisely that if we can secure and take care of the beast on the Sabbath man should not in his necessity be neglected on that holy day Man is not onely more worth then many Sparrows Mat. 10. 31. but then many Oxen or Asses or more valuable Cattel If the beast must be pluckt out of the ditch on a Sabbath shall the plucking of a man from the jawes of death on that day be a polution of it This Argument the great Master of the Assemblies is pleased to use to indemnifie works of necessity The second Argument is a meliori from the better which we find Mark 3. 4. where our Saviour sharply expostulates Mark 3. 4. Finis est praestantior medie salus hominis est finis propt●r quem Sabbathum est institutum Par. and queries whether it be lawful or no to do good on
a Sabbath whether good actions are not becoming a holy day this must needs be undeniable Now to cure a sick person quench a burning-house resist an incroaching adversary they are actions immutably good and therefore they must be so on a Sabbath There is no time when to save a dying person can in it self be unlawfull it is an obedience to the law of Nature a compliance with those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 common principles which are concreated with us Therefore such actions cannot pollute the holy Sabbath or defloure the purity of it The third Argument our Saviour takes à potiori from that which is more eligible which is most fit to be done in case of a Dilemma and this Argument is urged Mat. 12. Mat. 12. 3 4. Generalis est haec doctrina non Davidem tantum ut sanctum Regem et Prophetam Domini licitè edisse panes propositionis quasi personale fuisset privilegium sed e● famulos qui cum ipso erant non peccasse manducando in casu necessitatis Lyser Mal. 4. 2. 3 4. Our Saviour tells us what David did in case of necessity It was far more eligible for David to make bold with the shew-bread then for the holy Saint and King to die for hunger his life was more considerable then an appointed observation A substantial good is more to be valued then a shadow which onely signifies something to come and would fly away at the rising of the Sun of Righteousness and therefore as necessity intrenched on extraordinary food without blan●e so it may presume on an extraordinary day without crime The light of Nature warrants a discharge and gives in not guilty to works of necessity on the Sabbath If my wound bleeds to death because it is not dressed on the Sabbath or my disease send me to the dust because medicinal applications are not made on the Sabbath this is my errour not my duty If I have no being God can have no worship and so acts of necessity are dispensible God will have us to worship him with all chearfulness and alacrity which cannot be with an undrest wound or a disease not to be lookt after because it is the Sabbath I cannot chearfully joyne in Divine Worship and in the mean time the waters break into my house and there must be no stoppage of them because the time of Gods holy day will not permit it Cases therefore of indispensible necessity neither pollute nor prophane the Sabbath But to wind up this particular of working on a Sabbath which hath been the more copiously handled because of the greatness of its importance we read that the holy Apostle Paul sometimes laboured with his hands but yet his Acts 20. 34. Acts 20. 7. 1 Cor. 16. 2. works on the Lords day were Sacred and Divine nothing but preaching the Word administring the Sacraments pouring out his Soul in Prayer taking care of the poor and those duties which are the just companions of a Sabbath He acts then not as a Tent-maker but as an Apostle his Acts 18. 3. heart works not his hands In a word this particular shall be shut up with the confession of learned Master Breerwood Breerw Tract of the Sabbath p. 47. who improved so much parts and pains in asserting an undue liberty on the Sabbath yet we may hear him thus acknowledge It is meet that Christians should on the Lords day abandon all worldly affairs and dedicate it wholly to the honour of God And one of our Church Homilies hath these words Gods obedient people should use the Sunday holily and Hom. Of the time● place of worship give themselves wholly to heavenly exercises of Gods true Religion and Service and this was the practice of all Gods people in all ages And so much for this large particular But secondly there are a second sort of actions we must forbear on the Lords day viz. Sensual actions so the Sensual actions to be forborn on the Sabbath day Text from doing thy pleasure on my holy day We are to forbear indulging our appetites we must not please a wanton eye or a luxurious palate on the Sabbath which is a day not to feast the Body but to feast the Soul Feasts and Banquets are not the Celebration but the Prophanation of a Sabbath then our fat things must be the fat things of Gods house Psal 36. 8. Isa 25. 6. A full luxuriant table where no necessity requires it is fitter for the day of a Bacchus then the day of Jehovah who is all purity and perfection A moderate repast for Nature doth best become the holy Sabbath The Disciples feed upon a few ears of Corn upon a Sabbath Mat. 12. 1. De caenâ nostrâ hoc dicendum est nihil utilitatis nihil immodestiae admittit non prius discumbitur quam oratio ad deum praegustetur editur quantum esurientes capiunt bibitur quantum pudicis est utile ita saturantur ut qui meminerint etiam per noctem adorandum etiam esse doum ita fabulantur ut qui sciant dominum audire Tertul. Exod. 16. 22 23 24 c. Numb 28. 10. Exod 35. 3. On this day a Table spread with dishes is more spread with temptations It is dangerous then to study to please a palate when we are more especially to look after a soul On this holy day the Word must be our food tears must be our wine singing of Psalms our musick the Sanctuary our parlour and place of repast and our festivity must be joy in the Lord our eare must be taken up in holy attention our heart in spiritual devotion our eye in divine speculation The Sabbath is the Souls not the Senses feastival then to please the curiosities of sense is not to keep but to lose the Sabbath The Jewes had onely the usuall proportion of Manna for the Sabbath they had no exceedings and though they were to offer double Sacrifices on the Sabbath they were not to eat double meals to have an increase of outward provisions They could not lawfully kindle any fire on the Sabbath and surely those preparations could not be plenteous where there was no fire to make them We Christians make the Sunday a day of spiritual rejoycing saith Bishop White and he quotes it out of Turtullian Our pleasures on this day must not be in our Meats but in our Messiah not in our varieties unless it be of Ordinances Chrysostome reports that the Love-Feasts of the Christians in the Primitive times consisted of divers Viands provided by a common purse and collation of which they took as much as would suffice the Communicants Diem solis laetitiae indulgemus Tertul Chrysost On the 1 Cor. Cap. 11. Hom. 27. and so celebrated the Lords Supper together which done they presently fell to the spare and slender chear entertaining and solacing themselves with spiritual and divine Colloquies And indeed here we have our pattern in the purest times The Golden Christians
speaketh will choak the Word much more the pleasures of the world when they are more soft and sutable to delicate flesh and corrupt nature As in the Primitive Times more Apostates were made by the flatteries of Julian then the fires of Dioclesian and smiles more harm'd the Church then smarts Nothing more likely then to shoote away bowle away whatever we have been affected with Hos 6. 4. in holy Ordinances and Administrations Mat. 13. 22. Nay the very Liturgy of our English Church composed with so much exactness and deliberation as is often urged by the admirers of it commands the fourth Commandment to be read as well as the other nine and there pardon is begg'd for the breaches of this Commandment for time past Lord have mercy upon us and then Grace is importun'd to observe it better for the time to come where it is prayed and incline our hearts to keep this Law Where these three things are considerable 1. That by the Sabbath the Church understands the Lords day only 2. That she takes the observation of the Lords day founded upon the fourth Commandment 3. That she intended that day to be kept as a Sabbath and therefore begs pardon and grace which if so there can be no room for unnecessary labours and needless Recreations both which are but presumptuous incroachments on Gods appropriated day As holy Augustine forbad hunting and all worldly pleasures And Leo the Emperour Nullis Augustine Leo the Emperour volumus voluptatibus occupari Our will is No pleasures to be used as being the great obstructions to the spirituality of a Sabbath they discomposing the soul for sublime and heavenly intercourses to be spiritually raised and to be pleasurously 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Rev. 10. addicted on the Lords day being strange inconsistencies Recreations on the Sabbath they are too much the evidence of a formal spirit To the holy soul the Temple is his Triumph Prayers his pleasure Ordinances his delight the Sanctuary his satisfaction David counts one day in Gods Courts better then a thousand Flashy and frivolous Recreations Psal 84. 10. on a Lords day to a gracious spirit they are his little-ease and the clipping of his wing the Souls confinement and Psal 63. 2. restraint the Prison grate between him and Christ no way his Pleasure but his Purgatory and where they are received Psal 43. 4. with gratefulness and contentment they loudly Proclaime too much froth and vanity David danced at the enjoyment of Cant. 2. 4. the Ark but these leave the Ark to sport and dance 2 Sam. 6. 16. Recreations on the Lords day They are the debasements of spiritual mercies as if there were no captivating power in Divine Ordinances to hold the soul intent for a day no Psal 19. 10. Psal 42. 4. honey comb in the Word to please the taste no pleasing vent in prayer to ease and satisfie the Soul as if singing of Psalms made no musick and reading the Scriptures did yield no delight Ah with what patience and content did the Jewes hear the Law read in the time of Nehemiah The people stood Nehem 8. 7. in their place saith the Text quoted as if they were staked and fastened without any desire of removal Their serious attention chained them to their present station Paul preached Acts 20. 7. till midnight the sweet Oracles of God drowned all wearisomness and distaste Ordinances have a savour in them Rom. 3. 2. which refresh and raise the Saint and there is no need of carnal sports to wear off any tedious abhorrency To affect or use these pastimes on the Sabbath is to embase the value of Divine exercises and to charge holy duties with abortive Hos 9. 14. emptiness as if they were barren wombs and dry breasts Let the Umpirage in this case be referred to the holy Psalmist in the Text quoted in the Margin Psal 1. 2. Recreations on the Sabbath they are the spring of impertinent discourse which is expresly forbidden in the Text for saith the Text Nor speaking thy own words In our sports more especially Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth will speak as our Saviour saith Sports are the very Mat. 12. 34. Malitiae sermonis sons est malitia cordis ex quo necessi est ejusmodi maledicta per os ebullire sicut ex faetido fonte non possunt nisi fatidae aquae per f●stulas effundi Par. Dr. B. Mark 6. 22. Mark 6. 27. James 3. 6. Peccatum quod alter incurrit operando tuum facis obloquendo fuel of vain and frothy discourse A holy man observes That some men they never make an end of their pleasures nor an end of talking and hearing of them their Hawkes are not only on their fists but on their tongues There are two things which spring a mine of impertinent discourse Feasts and Sports We may as well separate blackness from the cloud as frothy language from frothy pleasures Nay how often are pastimes stained with sinful protestations the fatal taking of Gods Name in vain nay with Execrations and Oaths the scum of Hell it self Where did Herod make his wretched promise which was died in the blood of the Baptist but at a dancing when Herodias her Daughters feet did not trip so much as Herods tongue And if at any time the tongue is set on fire of hell as the Apostle James speaks Games and Pastimes presently become the bellows to blow up the fire Sports are usually the tongues Courtizan to draw it to folly and wanton intemperance with frothy rejoycings and carnall triumphs nay heats and passions are mixt with our recreations and the tongue is to proclaim them The mirth which attends pastimes will not be cag'd up in the breast but will fly out inimpertinent and unsavory language How often in sports do we call our Brother fool and yet our Saviour Iracundiae litis vanitatis censurae verba a Satana procedunt et ad Satanam tendunt illic incipiunt et illic rapiunt Mat. 6. 22. Psal 39. 1. saith that very expression puts us in danger of hell fire And therefore let any serious Christian make his own conscience the Tribunal to which I dare appeal whether this flatulent and unseemly discourse the inseparable companion of Games and Pastimes be not a sinful undecency on Gods holy Sabbath and an opposition to the very Text surely then if ever with David we should take heed we offend not with our tongue Recreations on a Sabbath They are an indignity offered to the noble and precious soul Shall the body that mass and Isa 2. 22. pile of dust cemented onely with a little flying breath that Corpus est ergastulum animae Plato bag of flegm and cholar that prison of the soul as Plato used to call it enjoy the time of six whole dayes and the soul that piece of eternity in the bosome the breath of God the saving
of which was the grand and forcible attractive of Corpus hoc vinculum carcer est animae ex quo exire cupit sanctus esse cum Christo Hierom. Christs incarnation and death this darling of Heaven not enjoy one day but it must be retailed and canton'd into divers divisions Some parts of it must be spent in the labours of our Callings and some in solemn Duties in the publick Congregations and some in sports and delightful Recreations when the publick is over and some in private Duties if there be any time and this torn and rent Sabbath something like Joseph's Coat of many colours must be the Gen. 37. 3. onely morsel for the immortal soul But how irrational is it for the soul that better part of man which shall live as long Mat. 16. 26. as God himself to be straightned and pinnion'd to a few Vita carnis tuae anima est vita animae tuae deus est quomodo moritur caro amissâ animâ quae vita ejus est sic moritur anima amisso deo qui vita est ejus August hours It must not enjoy one whole day onely the leavings of our work and recreations the crumbs which fall from the bodies table Let the Christian who is solicitous of his souls eternal interest consider whether this pittance of time onely a few hours on a Sabbath be sutable to the vast and unlimited soul especially if we observe that the soul sways the body the body follows the condition of the soul and not the soul the estate of the body Labours are forbidden on the Sabbath much more Recreations That labours are prohibited the fourth Commandment is the pregnant testimony of now sports toys pastimes Melius est in Sabbato araro quam saltare Aug. Enar. in Tit. are of less avail then labours It is a memorable speech of Augustine Melius est in Sabbatho arare quam saltare It is better to plow then to dance upon a Sabbath Labours may bring in some Income so not sports there is a temporal profit and emolument in the one none in the other Concerning sports we may say that the Gamesters labour for that which is not bread there can be no supplies Isa 55. 1 2. from the breast of a recreation Pastimes are clouds without water Recreations more tempt and flatter the flesh then Labours do Toyle doth not pamper dancing hunting shooting do they are sun-shines which make the dunghill of mans heart reak with noysomness It was once the expostulation of a holy man worth the transcribing his words are these What shall I say of the Zeal of worldlings which may controule Mr. Greenham the security of our sins worldly men never seek for pleasure Vita in delitiis agens mors est umbra mortis quantum enim umbra propè est corpori cujus est umbra tantum pro certo vita illa voluptuario inferno appropinquat Bern. Serm. 48 in Cantic 15 James 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 52. whilst profit doth drop and so long as they may gain a penny how diligent are they they will not sport or play But the Sabbath is the market day of our souls where we should gather whilst the sun shines Here is profit and so there ought to be diligence and therefore we should lay aside pleasure and we should say what have we to do with Recreations any more yet how many neglect their pleasure for the world and we will not for heaven or our souls But after the publick Ordinances are over nay multitudes in the very time of publick Worship follow their sensual Recreations I was going to say Abominations It was a saying of King James Though without superstition Playes and lawful Games may be used in May and good Chear at Christmas yet alwayes provided that the Sabbath be kept holy and no unlawful pastime be then used And as a worthy and holy man observes No man can think Dr. B. upon that day to be so disordered as to follow his ordinary pleasures without great contempt of God and Man Vpon that holy day all sorts of men must utterly give over shooting hunting hawking bowling c. and they must no more deal with them then the Artificer with his Trade or the Husband-man with his Plow I shall shut up this particular with a pious Bp Hall of Exeter Contemp Lib. 17. Ejaculation of a Holy and Reverend Bishop who thus vents himself I wonder what these kind of men viz. those who bathe themselves in pleasures upon the Lords day will do when they come to Heaven if ever they come there where there is a continued Sabbatisme without intermission surely they will wish themselves on Earth again unless they keep a Sabbath better here below Do we not pray Thy will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven there the Angels do nothing but praise God Do we hope to be like them in Glory and not endeavour to be like them in duty Our Heaven above is a continual Sabbath our Sabbath below should be a continued Heaven The Sabbath not the sports on the Sabbath should be our delight Recreations on the Sabbath are forbidden by all kind of Laws 1. By Divine Law viz. the fourth Commandment Requies requiritur in quarto Praecepto cōmendatur et ubique amatur sed illa requies in solo deo certa et sancta invenitur Aug. where Labours are expresly forbidden and sports are an equal if not a greater impediment to the duties of the Sabbath both publick and private the sweets of Recreation influencing the mind and withdrawing the heart much more then the sweats of Labour Surely if we must not toyle we must not trifle on Gods holy day 2. By the Law of Nature which requires a total abstinence from all works both of Labour and Pleasure during the time allotted and consecrated to Gods service publick Dies dominicus abipsis Apostolis sacris actionibus est consecratus Bucer and private But the Lords day is that time allotted we cannot work and worship both at once and if when we should worship we follow our pleasures or our profits Is not this to subordinate the Divine Will to mans Fancy 3. By the Law Political which requires a total resting from all kind of labour or diversion and applying our souls Edw. the 6th wholly and onely to Religious Exercises as the Statute of Act. Primo Carol. Primi King Edward the sixth of blessed memory a Law yet unrepealed That English Josiah the morning Sun of Reformation Ad Sabbathi rectam observationem duo requiruntur quies et quietis illius sanctificatio Ames med Theol. in England began early to confine the Sabbath to the two great designs of it Rest and Sanctity and in this he shewed himself to be Custos utriusque Tabulae a Keeper of both the Tables And indeed the enjoyning of the holy observance of Gods blessed day is a rare
holy services it shall be sufficient I am sure the same word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 jom a day is in both both the six dayes and in the seventh and how comes the signification to be altered if jom a day signifies a whole day in the one why not in the other why not the whole seventh day engaged in divine service as well as the whole six dayes taken up in secular employments Chrysostome and Theodoret observe that from the very beginning God taught man this lesson that one whole day in the circle of seven is to be employed in holy services And many famous lights of the Reformed Church conclude that whatever is moral in the fourth Commandment this must needs be that the seventh part of every week be consecrated to the worship of God So Zanchy Bucer Martyr c. That famous person mentioned last speaks roundly when he saith That it is perpetual and eternal while the Church remains upon Earth that one day in the week be designed for the service and worship of God and this saith he is firme and unshaken Augustine in one of his Sermons adviseth the people That from the Evening of the Saturday till the Evening of the Lords day they avoid all vain sloth and idleness and all secular toyle and labour and wholly set themselves apart for the worship of God This excellent man gives the full current of twenty four hours to the holy observation of the Sabbath And this saith he is rightly to keep the Sabbath and truly if God gives us six natural dayes to labour in is it not fit that the seventh should bear an equal proportion with every working day And therefore it is a natural day consisting of twenty four hours which we must in conscience allow to God to be the Sabbath day But besides the force of Divine Command which as clearly enjoyns the seventh day for holy Rest as indulges the other six dayes for toyle and labour the very plea's of the soul may come in to affirme the sanctification of one whole day in the week to spiritual and divine services Let us consider The Soul in the Nobleness of its Original it is a Heaven-born soul Gods breath in mans bosome Mans soul onely bubbles from the fountain of spirits our soul is but a beam The Soul is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the glorious Sun God beam d into man a glittering soul and shall not this noble soul so worthily descended lay claim to one day as well as the body that dusty case of the principle of life the soul that body which is onely the sheath of the soul the cabinet for this jewel to lye in put in its title and right to six What is this but to degrade the soul from the honour of its Excellent Original Let us look on the soul in the excellency of its capacity what is not a reasonable soul capable of It is capable of Gods Anima est ex Deo non ut ex materia et ex traduce dei ●eu ejus quadam particula sed ut ● causâ efficiente accessu quodam naturae propiore ad essentiam dei divinarumque proprietatum assimilatione Leid Prof. 2 Cor. 5. 1. Image There is little of Gods Image to be seen in the body God is a spirit and so stamps his Image on the spirits of men and shall not the soul which bears so noble a superscription enjoy the priviledge and latitude of one day as well as the body that earthly tabernacle which is soon taken down and wrapt up in a silent grave enjoy the immunity of six whole dayes But must the abatement fall on the souls portion Consider the multiplicity of a souls work and therefore let not its day be shortned by frothy pleasures or servile labours John 9. 4. Praeclarae sunt arimae dotes eff●ctus divinae functiones miranda solertia ingenii cogitationis celeritas facilitas perceptionis judicii acrim●nia dis●ursus et ratiocinatio de rebus omnibus memoria rerum praet●ritarum contemplatio praesentium futurarum praevisio et maxime inse ipsam conversio et reflexio suaeque contemplatio c. Lied Prof. The work of the soul is very great and very various there are many duties to perform many graces to act many ordinances to wait upon much knowledge to acquire many corruptions to subdue Now he that is to ride far let him not want day-light the souls task is great let not its time be short especially shorter then God hath made it The body hath onely two things to get viz. food and raiment it hath but two rooms to go thorow the Kitchin and the Wardrobe But the soul hath more and nobler atchievements to pursue It hath a Pardon Grace Christ God Heaven to look after and obtain and shall its owne day given it more especially for these great attempts be subject to an unhappy diminution Let us look on the soul in the eternity of its duration The soul saith one is a bud of eternity the business of the Anima●e 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Domine aufer à me hanc tunicam grave● corpus scil terrestre ponderosum et aerumnosum et d● mihi levi●rem soul is of everlasting concernment But the body is a shattered piece of dust a shaking fa brick which is soon unpinned the paint of its beauty is soon washed off the vigour of its strength is soon weakned and enervated a thousand diseases can crack this piece of frailty and yet this tottering piece of flesh must have its full six dayes and the eternal soul not enjoy one whole day without allowance made for pleasure and secular employments Let us consider the soul in the importance of its wellfare The body follows the condition of the soul but the soul doth not follow the condition of the body If thy soul miscarry it had been better as our Saviour speaks thou hadst never been born Man fares as his soul fares It was Mat. 26. 24. Sic alloquitur anima sancta suspirans O civitas sancta civitas speciosa de longinquo te saluto ad te clamo te requiro desidero verè te videre et in te requiescere O civitas desiderabilis Muri tui Iapis unus Custos tuus ipse deus Cives tui semper laeti semper enim gratulantur visione Dei Hug. Victor the Redemption of the soul that drew Christ from Heaven to tabernacle amongst us and to offer up himself a sacrifice to Divine Justice and therefore how rational is it that the precious soul should enjoy a full Sabbath without any sensual vacancies for pleasures and pastimes seeing the whole man is dependant upon its disposal and is happy or miserable according to its state or condition But to wind up this particular Argument if we consider either the force of the fourth Commandment or the pregnant plea's of the immortal soul whose interest is much pursued on a Sabbath nay the Sabbath is the very
much talk upon the Sabbath about worldly affairs doth as much hinder the sanctification of the day as much work nay we may work alone but we cannot talk alone and so we must hinder others as well as our selves Discourse it either doth cast a stench or a perfume among others according as it is good or bad Now let us take these five Glasses to see the sin of vain discourse on the Sabbath day We may see it in the clear Glass of a Command Frothy language is onely the foam of a carnal heart at any time much more on the Sabbath it is alwayes the breath of vanity Eph. 4. 29. and therefore called corrupt communication by the Apostle who here severely forbids all such communication And indeed Mar. 12. 36. worldly discourse on the Sabbath is no less then corrupt discourse putrid rotten and unsavoury language which is prohibited by a strict command Eph. 4. 29. The same Apostle saith Evil communication corrupts good manners I am 1 Cor. 15. 33. sure it corrupts good Sabbaths it is nothing but spittle cast Versus hic est senarius menandri ait Hier. Mar. 16. 19. upon the face of a Sabbath its affront and shame prophane talkers dealing with the day of a Sabbath as the Jews with the Lord of the Sabbath they spit in its face In the Glass of Example Should I reassume the divine example of our dear Lord Luke 14. 7. No pattern more pure and pregnant his language on a Sabbath was as the dropping Luk. 14. 7. of a honey comb the langudge of Heaven the triumph of Acts 20. 27. words the salvifical discoveries that he brought from his Fathers bosome But let me lay down the wonted custome of a late Minister now with God Holy Mr. Dod briefly he thus Mr. Dod. spent his Sabbath He preacht almost all day long on the Mr. Clark in the life of Mr. Dod. Lords day first in the morning he opened a Chapter and prayed in his Family after preached twice in publick and in the interim discoursed all dinner while to those who sat with him at his Table he would say this is not a day Quàm augusta erit ista Synodus in quâ convenient omnes sancti cujus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 erit Christus in quâ non erit necessarium sollicitè inquirere veritate●● sed omnia omnibus erunt nota et manifesta to feast the body but the soul at the first sitting down he would bid them help themselves and one another and see none want let me said he bid you but once for I would not speak a vain word to day After the two Sermons in publick were ended the house would be filled and then he would fit in his chair and then he used to say if any one have a good question or a hard place of Scripture to open let them say on and when he was faint would call for som● refreshment and so on again till night And thus this man of God spake nothing but the language of God on the blessed Sabbath of God This sin of using unholy language on the Sabbath may be seen in the Glass of Equity If idle discourse be not forbidden in the fourth Commandment then that Commandment is straighter and not so comprehensive as the rest for the sixth Commandment doth not only prohibit bloody 1 John 3. 15. murder but the very hating of our brother the seventh Commandment doth not onely forbid acts of Adultery but Mat. 5. 28. Quod fecit Christus in casu homicidii hoc etiam facit in casu Adulterii et non actum solummodo sed impudicum quoque coercet aspectum ut discos ●bi consistat illu● quod sepra Scriburum et Pharisaeorum nostra precipitur obundare justitia Chrysost lascivious looks wanton glances nay effeminate speculations and shall not the fourth Commandment be as large to condemn worldly discourses as well as secular labours Or shall our obedience to the Commandments of the second table be more exact and strict then our conformity to the Commandments of the first Shall our behaviour be more precise to our neighbour then to our God Surely he that hath said we must not work on the Sabbath hath likewise said we must not word it on a Sabbath about our secular affairs our bargains our pleasures our pleasing vanities In the Glass of Religion We should converse as Saints on Gods holy day our language then more especially should Mat. 26. 73. betray us to belong to Jesus Christ Every thing should be Qnemad modum Moses et Elias in transfigurations cum Christo colloquuntur sic in vitâ aeternâ vigebunt inter sanctes perpetua et jucundissima colloquia Gerard. Rev. 1. 10. Psal 39. 1. holy on a Sabbath we should converse with God in holy duties tread accurately in holy practices breath out nothing but holy affections trade in nothing but holy devotions and edifie one another with holy discourses Vain and idle talking becomes not those who would serve God more seraphically then others and who are in the spirit upon the Lords day Where are our hearts when our tongues range and licentiate in sinfull liberties Religion will cause a Saint to make a Covenant with his tongue on this day that the offend not with his lips At this time our tongues should be a mine of Gold not a pile of Dross And lastly we may see this sin of foolish talking on a Sabin the Glass of future Glory The glorified Saints converse Neque enim beati erunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sed suavissimos invicem sermones conserent de admirandis divinae sapientiae decretis de stupendis divinae potentiae operibus de infinitis divinae gratiae et bonitatis argumentis Ger. one with another in a most holy manner What the method or the way is of their Communications one with another is not so easily discernable but this is clear that it is most holy We should study to spend our Sabbaths here as we shall spend them above in all holy and divine communications there shall be no vain word no senseless prate about the things of this life Let us begin Heaven betimes and in observing a temporal eye our Eternal Sabbath CHAP. VII The Text further opened and explained ANd thus I have run through the negative directions in Isa 58. 13. the Text I now come to the positive There is something Commanded as well as some thing prohibited on a Sabbath something for us to do as well as something for us to forbear Now these practical and positive directions they are not very many but very rare and what they want in number they make up in weight they are ponderous though not numerous and they are principally four like the four Elements to constitute the holy observation of a Sabbath There is a Command for delight so the Text and call the Sabbath a delight Our Sabbaths must be our
Lords day is the day of Commemoration for Christs Resurrection and the day of Preparation for ours The Sabbaths are as the rounds of a Ladder by which we climb up to our Fathers house our present Sabbaths work being sanctified becomes the way to our future Sabbaths rest On this holy day the soul more especially waits at wisdomes gates and brings its corruptions to the slaughtering power of the Word inricheth it self with Gospel-treasures feeds its graces upon Gospel provisions and every way accommodates its self for the imbraces of eternity There is another command in the Text viz. of fruitfulness so the Text and shalt honour him Now there is nothing more honours God then our holy fruitfulness this gratisies his Will this magnifies his Grace this adorns his Gospel this glorifies his Name Our Saviour saith expresly John 15. 8. Herein is my Father glorified that ye bear much fruit We exceedingly honour God when on a Sabbath day we Sint submissi tractabiles et sequaces mores Cyr. weep much in the Closet pray much in the Familie hear much in the Sanctuary when we tremble at Gods Word rejoyce in Gods Ordinances melt in Gods presence when Sabbaths soften us ripen us raise us and bring us to a nearer conformity to Christ when this sun-shining day of a Sabbath melloweth us and maketh us look fairer and more beautiful Thus we spread our branches and Gods Name together CHAP. VIII The Promises in the Text made over to Sabbath-Holiness explicated and unfolded ANd thus far we have assayed to unfold the duty enjoyned in the Text which is the holy and strict observation of the Sabbath and the Sabbath may be sanctified by forbearing what is criminal and by pursuing what is commendable and what is both displeasing or satisfactory we have amply laid down in the Text and hitherto hath been discussed Now we come to the glorious reward of a due sanctification of the Sabbath which is folded up in a Tria hic praemia Sabbathum deumque colentibus promittit Deus Alap Com. in Isaiam three-fold promise mentioned in the Text for one promise is not thought sufficient by divine bounty to be a spur to this holy observation It must not be a single Diamond but a Casket of Jewels Here is a constellation of happiness promised a Tree of Life with many branches as if God would tell us in the Text how pleasing how grateful what a Prov. 11. 18. sweet sinelling sacrifice the conscientious keeping of the Sabbath was to him such a Saint the Promises troope after him they cluster together to refresh him God gives the Bond and the Counterpane too But more particularly these promises they are not onely rare but comprehensive they are both temporal and spirituall Gods bonds for left hand and right hand mercies And first God promises Vbertatem Voluptatis abundance Prom. 1. Si in Sabbath● te abstraxeris ●● deli●ii● carnis deus dabit tibi suas delicias longe majores scil pro carneis dabit spiritusles pro teciporalib●● aeternas pro humanis divinas Psal 104. 34. Cant. 4. 9. of Pleasure so the Text then shalt thou delight thy self in the Lord. As if God should say if my Sabbath be thy delight then my presence shall be thy delight if thou take pleasure in my day thou shall sind pleasure in my self the same word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gnanag delight which is used in the former verse for our delight in the Sabbath is here used for our delight in the Lord. Our duty shall not exceed his bounty if we on a Sabbath delight in him we on a Sabbath shall receive delights from him God will meet the gracious soul its breathings after God shall be compensated with his blessings in God thou shalt never lose by satiating thy self in God thy understanding shall be delighted with meditation thy desires with satisfaction thy heart with exhileration he that is an Ocean of delight in himself shall be thy delight If thou takest pleasure in Gods holy day thy heart shall be more sweetned in the thoughts of God of his Faithfulness of his Fulness Incomprehensibleness Goodness Tenderness then in all sliding and secular delights for our delights in God are Most Pure they are Christalline pleasures without spot or faeculency they are incapable of excess The soul may rejoyce Psal 94. 19. in God and fear no surfet There is no tang of sin or mistake cleaves to them as holy David In the multitude of my thoughts Passim Haeresiarehae et Haeretici fuerunt voluptuarii eaque de causâ plurimos habuerunt assectus sicut et Epicurus plures discipulos habuit quàm alit Philosophi Epiph●n within me thy comforts delight my soul Now as for the pleasures of this life their object is sordid what is a Field or a Bag or a Hawk or a Hound The excess is easie we mostly over-do in outward delights their satisfaction is sensual only the smiles and laughter of dust their time is short the frolicks of this life are onely for this life as long as a vapour lasts and their end for the most part is heaviness a smiling countenance a wanton palate a catching eye and a prancing phancy for the most part ending in a heavy heart But our pleasures in God are holy and undefiled their rising is their rarity and their exceeding is their excellency Our delights in God are most abundant they exceed the pleasures of this life as far as the receptive faculty of the Anima nostra delectatione carere nequit unam si non habet quaerit si non divinam tum humanam soul exceeds that of the body A whole world cannot fill the soul it is too vast in its desires and entertainments but a little prospect can fill the theatre of the eye a little wine the wanton vagaries of the palate a little game the galloping fancies of the hunter Our pleasures in God are a soul full of delight Thy Comforts delight my soul saith David they are over-flowing waves of love rising and ravishing Psal 94. 19. waters which cover the sea of mans heart Most satiating Our pleasures in the Creature cloy us Our pleasures in God comforts us outward delights surfet not Ecles 1. 2. Voluptas est duplex vel Terrestris vel Coelestis Coelestes voluptates sariant nonsatur●ne ideò diuturniores terrestres s●turant non satiant ideò breviores quòd etiam jam dileximus pieni quidem pr●rsus nauseamus Baron satiate they have something of the flesh and that will not alwayes go down Solomon the great Chymist of pleasures at last after a thorough gust of them extracted nothing but wind from them or the waters of Marah either vanity or vexation of spirit But the pleasures we have in God relate not to the body which is a tiresome piece of flesh but to the soul which is full of life and activity and delighting in God which is its center
Shall we prepare no more for a Sabbath that bright spot of time God gives us for our souls then for another day Will we approach the Princes presence with the same disregards we will converse with the Peasant Esther purified Est 2. 12. and perfumed her self with Oyle of Myrrh and sweet Odours before she came into the prefence of Ahashuerus and shall our Families have no holy anoynting no divine quickning before the day come we must enter the presence of the King of Kings nay the God of Kings Shall there be nothing to put a Selah upon a Sabbath Eve Let us take some time the evening before the Sabbath to teach our little ones the holiness and Solemnity of a Sabbath let us tell them how jealous God is of his Sabbaths what severe punishments he hath overtaken Deut. 6. 7. those with who have violated his holy day Let us Numb 15. 36. bring up our servants in the Holy Trade of Sabbath observation let us leave it upon their Consciences the night before the Sabbath how accurately and carefully God will be served on his own day and inform them what it cost Aarons Sons for offering strange fire Governours Lev. 10 3. of Families should take pains with those subordinate to them in begetting an awe upon their hearts and so fit them for Sabbath duties Surely we should more solemnly prepare for the day of the Soul then for the dayes of our Calling for the services of the Sanctuary then for the gains of the Shop God's day gives us a more solemn summons then mans day doth And now having thus prepared our selves in the discharge of the forementioned duties let us retire our selves to our rest and let the hand of faith draw the curtains about us and so quietly repose our bodies till the approaching Psal 4. 8. morning of Gods holy day and how that must be passed and solemnly observed comes next under our most serious discussion CHAP. XII It is most advised and necessary to rise early ●n Gods Holy Day DIvine providence unclasping our eyes in the morning of the Sabbath let us lose no time as we lye on our beds let us think now the Lord looks down from Heaven and bids us make haste get you up for this day I must Luke 19. 5. abide in your hearts and this day I must transact with you about the great importances of your souls When Abraham was to offer his Son in sacrifice to God He rose early in the morning and sadled his Asse and took two of his servants and Gen. 22. 5 6. Isaac his Son with wood cleav'd for a burnt offering and went to the place of which the Lord had told him And shall not we on a Sabbath morning be early up our selves and our families to go to the place where the Lord hath appointed and offer up our bodies and souls in service to God The Israelites who lay in siege against Jericho upon the seventh Josh 6. 15. day they being to compass the City seven times the text saith And it came to pass on the seventh day that they rose up early about the dawning of the day and they compassed the City after the same manner seven times Upon the Lords day we are today siege to Heaven and to compass it many times and to plant our batteries by holy and invincible prayer and therefore we should be early up And there are two things which would much advantage this duty viz. rising early on the morning of the Sabbath First A timely going to rest the night before It is too common a fault among Christians and Professors too for them to clog themselves the night before the Sabbath with a multitude of worldly busin●sses which causes them to sit up late hence in the morning when they should be up with God they lye sleep-bound in their beds Secondly An intire love to the work of the day that follows Alas we have too little love to the Lords day work and so but little list to be at the work of the day Were there love to it we should long to be at it Our minds run Pius se paritè● velle jugiter deum mente animo ge●ere illum colere illum desiderare tum nocte tum interdiu Alap upon the things we love We should think of the Sabbath even in the night time and we should catch the very first hour of the day with my soul have I desired thee in the night and with my spirit within me will I seek thee early saith the Prophet to God Were we for several months kept without a Sabbath how would our spirits spring at such a days appearance Why should the Commonness of the Sun-shining Isa 26. 9. and the Sabbaths coming diminish the mercy How should we every Lords day morning have our minds mounting and say behold the Sabbath of the Lord it is come it is come Now there are many Alarums to awaken us betimes on the morning of a Sabbath and to throw off carnal sloth and fleshly case Let us eye Christs pattern he rose early from the Grave even while it was yet dark before the Sun had guilded the World with its bright appearance On the morning of his Joh. 20. 1. Resurrection the Sun of Righteousness prevented the Sun of Mal. 4. 2. Mar. 16. 9. Nature Can we indulge our sloth on the Sabbath morning and think of Christs Resurrection He was up early to save us and shall not we be so to serve him shall not we take the wings of the morning as the Psalmist speaks and Psal 139. 9. retaliate this kindness of our Redeemer That Christ arose from the dead there was the truth of our redemption that he arose early there was the love of our redemption Christ's longing to arise and finish our work should enforce us to rise betimes to set upon his Job saith the morning stars sang Job 38. 7. together Our meeting with Christ on a Sabbath morning will make the sweetest musick When carnal sloth surpriseth us let us survey the History of Christ and as he left his tomb let us leave our down betimes Let not the Sun of Ortos●le i. e. ad or●um appropinquante Cyr. Righteousness shine in our faces with our curtains drawn about us May I not here expostulate Is the Disciple greater then his Master Betimes he left his lodging and shall not we The Master among us doth not usually rise before the Servants In a word Love to the Spouse to the Church made Christ betimes draw the curtains of his grave and let love to our Husband to our Duty to our Souls cause us betimes to draw the curtains of our beds so shall we seasonably Orientem solem adorant Persae adore this morning Sun Let us hear the clamours of the soul The Lords day is the souls market day the souls fair day its term time its Mr. Rogers busie opportunity for the
must meet with Christ at a Sacrament A contrite heart is the fittest company for a Crucified Saviour Eph. 5. 19. In singing of Psalms there must be holy joy we must make August in lib. confes Deplorat dolet q●●d concentibus musi●is plus attentionis adhibuit quàm quae sub ill●s prof●reb●ntur Zanch. melody in our hearts Holy affection must make the reading of the Word savoury and saving to us The Sabbath then without we act our Graces on God on Christ on the Word and in the Ordinances is onely a day of theatrical shews and spiritual pegeantries which when it is over leaves the soul empty of any purchase or satisfaction And if so many graces must be drawn out into act we had need take the wings of the morning and speed to our Sabbath employments which are so numerous and important There are many faculties and parts to employ on the Sabbath All that is within us and all that is without us must serve and praise the Lord every part of our bodies and Psal 109. 30. every faculty of our souls the whole man is but a reasonable Rom. 12. 1. sacrifice to be offered this holy festival First Our outward man the tongue must be employed in prayer the ear in attention the heart in devotion the eye in speculation the knee in submission And Secondly Our inward man the understanding must be improved to drink in truth the will to entertain truth the Recta ratio dictat deum mag●● interna fide spe pietate amore et puritate mentis quàm externis corporis ceremoniis colendum esse Alap memory to retain and record truth and our affections have a three-fold office First To espouse the Word by receiving it in the love thereof 2 Thes 2. 10. A careful attention opens the door to 2 Thes 2. 10. the word but a lively affection opens the heart to the word The preaching of the Gospel layes a treble injunction upon us 1. To receive it 2. To love it 3. To live in it But the Second office of our affections is to heat our prayers it is love makes that sacrifice to smoak and flame And James 5. 16. Thirdly To scale Heaven in longing for a better Sabbath more durable more sweet more full and superlative Psal 63. 1. There are many persons to converse withall on the Lords day First We must converse with God The Sabbath is called the Lords day not onely as it is the commemoration of Rev. 1. 10. his glorious resurrection and his appointment and institution but likewise because our business is with him on that day then more especially our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ Our praying on a Sabbath 1 Joh. 1. 3. is the pouring out of our souls into Gods bosome our In Patrea et in Christo sunt omnia verae ecclesiae bona Zanch. hearing is onely receiving and being acquainted with Gods mind in Ordinances we wait upon God in the Sacrament we feed upon Christ in our Services we do homage to God in our Praises we pay tribute to God The Sabbath is the souls meeting day with God its spiritual Mart in which it traficks and drives its trade with Heaven Take away God from a Sabbath and the Ordinances are dry and parcht duties are heartless and unprofitable the Sanctuary is filled with emptiness the people and professors hunt after a Isa 55. 2. shadow and at last shall catch that which is not bread All our addresses on this holy day are to God our delights are in God our expectations are from God our fellowship and sweet communion is with God and therefore holy David Psal 63. 2. speaks of Gods Power and Glory in the Sanctu●ry and makes its only request to behold the beauty of the Lord in the Temple Psal 27. 4. and magnifies a dayes opportunity in Gods house The Psal 84. 10. Spouse enquires where Christ feedeth and where he makes his Can. 1. 7. flock to rest at noon Our great and principal business is with God on the Sabbath Secondly We must converse with the Ministers of God they are on this day the stars to guide us Rev. 1. 10. they Rev. 1. 10. are the Stewards to provide for us and give us our meat in due season Luk. 12. 42. 1 Cor. 4. 1. 1 Pet. 4. 10. they Luke 12. 42. are the salt to season us Mat. 5. 13. they are the wise Duo docet Apostolus unum communionem cum Apostolis ideòq eorum Doctrinam eô spectare ut omnes unum fiamus cum Christo ejus Patre Zanch. 1 Cor. 3. 10. Mal. 2. 7. builders to edifie us in the increases of God their lips preserve knowledge their feet appear beautifull in bringing the glad-tidings of Peace their voice is sweet to the hungry soul On the Sabbath we must wait on the Ministry of Gods faithfull Ambassadors Thirdly We must converse with the Saints of God on his holy day then Gods people must gather together and pursue Rom. 10. 15. a joynt interest Publick Assemblies adorn the Sabbath Cant. 2. 14. Grapes are best in clusters There are many strings to the 2 Cor. 5. 20. Lute which is the sweetest Instrument Flocks are most pleasant when gathered together in one company and Armies most puissant when kept in a body their dissipation is both their rout and ruine Christs sheep must flock together Suggerit Apost constantiae adm●nicula Primò Vtament et diligenter frequentent caetus Ecclesiasticos Secundò Vt se mutuò ad veritatem tuendam cohortationibus excitent maxime qui firmiores sunt infirmiores juvent confirment et hortentur ad constantiam in fide Deus enim publicis presentiam suam et eruditionem promisit In Ecclesiae congressi●us doctrina fidei reperitur et declaratur ad singulorum aedificationem et preces pro constantid publicè funduntur ad deum quas juxta promissionem exaudit Par. on Christs holy day Paraeus gives us four solid Reasons for it which I shall mention for their substantial worth First The Congregating of Gods people especially on the Lords day is the soder of unity like many stones so artificially laid that they appear all but one stone Every Congregation is a little body whereof Christ is the head Vnity is the strength and beauty of the Saints nothing so preserves it as frequent and holy Assemblings Secondly It is the preservative of love Many sticks put together kindle a flame and make a ●laze Frequent visits multiply friendships In Heaven where all the glorified Saints meet together how ardent is their love Absence and seldome associations beget strangeness as between God and us so between one another To meet to worship the same God is the best way to attain to the same heart like the Primitive Saints who were all of one company and all of one mind Acts 2. 46. Acts 2.
so is the sugar at the bottom When the plummets Egressus Isaac in agrum ad m●ditandum accepit praemium pietatis sponsam scil gratissimam of our souls have been running down in worldly affairs and businesses in the day time then in the Evening to draw up that weight of the Clock in holy meditation is most suitable and commendable nor can any thing better become a Christian then in this duty to give God the Alpha and the Omega of every day The third season for holy Meditation is the night time when nature hath rockt every thing asleep and silenced the world from interrupting noyses This David leaves as The third season for meditation the matter both of his command and example Psal 63. 6. The night season is sequestred from worldly affairs and is Psal 63. 6. not checkt with their clamorous importunity nor is it a time Psal 4. 4. distracted with the incursions of sensible objects it is likewise a time not accosted or besieged with frivolous or dangerous temptations There are two things which do much fit and dispose the soul for Meditation viz. Rest and Silence Sancti laetantur dei patefactionibus sed timore et tremore both which are to be found in the night And to this may be added when the curtains of darkness are drawn over the world we are then filled with a religious fear of God our hearts are more composed and we entertain more solemn and awfull apprehensions of the Divine Majesty Stulte quid est somnus gelidae nisi mortis imago there is then a holy terrour struck upon the soul And when we lie upon our beds the bed is an image and representation of the Grave and at such a time a man may be more serious and composed for the duty But above all let us consider the Sabbath is the fittest time for meditation On that day our Saviour arose from the The fourth season for meditation Earth and our souls should ascend and raise themselves towards Heaven And meditation doth not onely become the morning but the whole day of a Sabbath it must not onely be our morning dress but the attire we must wear all the day We should think with our selves the Lords day it is a type of Heaven and contemplation is the work of Heaven The Heb. 4. 9. present Sabbath is onely the abridgement of that eternal rest which the Saints shall enjoy with God And they which disrelish this duty how can they expect that glorious reward which principally consists in the view and contemplation of God A gracious soul upon the Lords day by meditation may converse with God and with the inhabitants of another world he may enjoy as much of God as this interposing vail of flesh will admit of And thus much for the proper seasons of meditation The next thing which will further illustrate this blessed duty of meditation is the evidencing of the great advantages The great advantages of meditation of it which are both rich and many As several Diamonds are found in the same Rock and much Gold crowded into the same Mine Let us therefore take these manifold Emoluments in their Order Meditation is a vigorous antidote against sin It is rare physick to purge away or prevent that poyson Most sin for want of meditation There are two great snares which take most The first adtage of meditation men and intangle them in sin viz. Ignorance and Incogitancy when we either not know our danger or not consider our duty Men certainly would not be so brutishly sensual as they are if they did seriously weigh things in the ballance by solemn and holy meditation If they did meditate on the strength of Gods Arme on the strictness of Gods Justice Exod. 15. 16. on the consuming power of his Wrath if they seriously considered how infinitely evil sin is how much it Nehem. 9. 33. affronted Divine Purity and broke in pieces Divine Laws Heb. 12. 29. how exceedingly it endangered the soul and how deeply it Psal 5. 3. wounded the conscience surely men would flee all appearances 1 Joh. 3. 4. of evil and repulse a temptation in its first onset It is sin which puts a worm into Conscience a sting into Death 1 The● 5. 22. a curse into the Law and fire into Hell Men meditate not Rom. 2. 15. on these things and so they are entangled in the snare Holy meditation is a golden shield against the darts of sinfull temptations In this case meditation would be as the Angels Judg. 22. 23. sword to stop us in our sinfull cariere and to strike us into clammy sweats and heavy damps that we should not sport our selves in the wayes and traverses of sin and provocation Joseph's meditation on Gods presence and omnipotency Gen. 39. 9. Josephus circumseptus fui● pulcherrimarum virtutum choro quarum hortatu victor evasit spoyled the design of his Mistris her dalliance and kept him within the limits of holiness and chastity Meditation makes the heart like we● tinder it will not take the Devils fire In a word it is strange rashness in men that they will be taken in the ambushes of sin before they seriously meditate on what they are going about Holy meditation keeps vain and foolish thoughts out of the heart it prepossesseth the soul that frivolous imaginations The second advantage of meditation tions are wholly shut out God complains of the people of Israel that they were wholly taken up with vain thoughts Jer. 4. 14. Jer. 4. 14. And so it is with most men their minds are filled with froth and vanity and varieties of foolish thoughts croud in upon them as flyes swarm to the place where the honey lies and those incautelous persons consider not that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost sin begins at the thoughts which are the first plotters and contrivers of all evil the heart is the womb whereall sin is conceived and framed and outward acts onely midwife the sinfull birth into the world and make it visible The mind and fancy is the stage where sin is first acted The malicious O quàm vanae sunt hominum cogitationes una cogitatio foelix est cogitare de domino Hieron in Psal man acts over his sin in his thoughts he plots his revenge the impure person acts over his concupiscence in his thoughts he contrives his lust And it is much to be deplored how much wickedness is committed in the chambers of our thoughts Now meditation on things Divine the Purity of God the Promises of God would be a Soveraign means to exite and banish such vain and flatulent thoughts Hierome 2 Cor. 7. 1. cries out How vain are the thoughts of men there is but one thought considerable and that is to think on God If David had carried the Book of the Law about him and meditated 2 Sam. 11. 2. on it
duty is properly the task of the understanding The Tongue works in prayer the Ear bends in hearing the Hand is stretcht out in Sacramentall receiving the Eye toyls in reading the Heart is or ought Jam. 5. 16. Mat. 11. 15. to be employed in every sacred service but the Mind is taken up in meditating on sublime and supernatural objects The Eagles of the thoughts fly upon this Carcass to allude Mat. 24. 28. to our Saviour Meditation fructifies duty without which the truths of God will not stay with us The heart is naturally hard the memory slippery and all lost without meditation every drop Mark 8. 17. runs out again and the whole web of divine service is unravell'd The Apostle compares the word to rain Heb. 6. 7. Heb. 6. 7. Now it is meditation onely which saves this rain water that it sheds not and run in waste This necessary duty of meditation it fastens truth upon the heart and is like the selvedge which keeps the cloath from ravelling It is the engraving of letters in Gold or Marble which will endure without this piece of holy duty all the preaching of the Cor est sons sapientiae Word is but writing in sand or pouring water into a sieve Reading and hearing without meditation is like weak physick which will not work The Word cannot be in the heart Deut. 6. 6. unless it be wrought in by holy meditation this is the hammer which drives the nail to the head Ordinances without this duty are but spiritual pageantries a pleasant landskip which when we have viewed we presently forget Jam. 1. 23. Knowledge without meditation is like the glaring of a Sun-beam upon a wave it rushoth into the thoughts and is gone There is very much in this duty to fix truth upon us Carnal mens thoughts they are usually flight and trivial they know things but they are loath to let their thoughts dwell upon them Musing makes the fire burn Men musing and meditating Psal 39. ● on the Word are much affected and then they are ready to say now we taste the sweets of our beloved we lie Psal 119. 93. under the force and power of the Word Meditation it sweetens our life here below The contemplative Christian lives in the Suburbs of Heaven How did meditation cast a flavour upon Davids soul and fill it with Psal 63. 5. aromatick and perfuming impressions Geographers are at a loss to find the place where Paradise was now to stop their curiosities it may be replyed it may be found in the fragrant tract of heavenly meditation When we meditate upon the sweetness of scriptural promises upon workings of Christs heart towards believers upon the watchfulness of Gods eye over his people upon the all sufficiency of our Saviours merit for 1 Cor. 2. 9. life and salvation upon the recompence of reward so great that 2 Cor. 12. 1. mans thoughts cannot grasp it how do these and such Rev. 1. 10. like things raise us to St. Pauls rapture or St John's extasie which were the initials of Glory to those heavenly Apostles Quid est quòd futura laetitia in cor non ascendit qui● sons est et ascensum nes●it Bern. It may be averred for certain that the neglect of this duty brings a searcity of comfort upon our lives which otherwise might meet with a plenteous harvest and a constant revenue of joy and satisfaction CHAP. XV. What we must meditate upon on the morning of the Lords day HAving thus drawn the portraicture and given a description of this duty of meditation with the blessed appendices which do attend it as its seasons advantages c. I now come to present suitable objects for this duty to prey upon and so to raise a little stock for meditation to trade with And as to the Queries viz. What we must meditate on in the spring and morning of the Sabbath It is answered Dies vitae nostrae est dies parasceves in quo laboramus et cum Christo patimur succedit dies quietis in sepulchro quem sequitur dies resurrectionis ad vitam Ger. whatsoever is spiritual any thing of a spiritual nature we may meditate on the promises of God the loves of Christ the strictness of the Law the sweetness of the Gospel on the filthiness of Sin on the vanity of the Creature on the excellency of Grace we may muse and fix our thoughts upon the estate of our souls and of the fewness of them who shall be saved so likewise upon Death or Judgement As holy David sometimes he meditated on the works of God sometimes on the Word of God and sometimes on God himself But I shall onely open a double fountaine to feed our meditations Psal 143. 5. Psal 119. 148. Psal 63. 6. on the morning of the Sabbath Viz. 1. Let us meditate on the God of the Sabbath 2. On the Sabbath of God These two superlative objects are like mount Hor and mount Nebo where Moses and Aaron took their prospects Numb 33. 38. Deut. 32. 49. before they were conveighed to the mountane of Spices we Cant. 8. 14. will handle them distinctly And 1. Let us meditate on the God of the Sabbath Indeed this Divine and admirable object takes up the views and contemplations of holy Angels and the inhabitants of glory Mat. 18. 10. who spend eternity in beholding God face to face But yet some glances we may have of this soveraign being by holy Cor. 13. 12. and spiritual meditation CHAP. XVI God is most glorious in his essence and nature LEt us meditate on the essence of God He is an infinite being the fulness of Heaven the mirrour of Angels Exod. 15. 11. Creasti nos domine propter te et irrequietum est cor nostrum donec perveniat ad te August the delight of Saints so glorious in himself that he is onely perfectly known by himself God is an Ocean of goodness a fountaine of life a spring of grace a father of mercies mans center to which he must come before he find quietation or rest for his soul He is so infinitely glorious that he must be described by removing from him what he is not rather then by asserting what he is The eyes of Angels are too weak to behold him and must make use of a vail alittle to remit De deo dicisacilius potest quid non sit quam quid sit Rivet the beams of his glory Our knowledge of him is onely borrowed from his own discoveries Let us then meditate on The everlastingness of his nature He is the antient of dayes He was before time was fledged and had either wing Dan. 7. 9 22. Psal 102. 28 Psal 29. 9. Rev. 4. 8. Rom. 16. 26. Isa 57. 15. Psal 90. 2 or feather His duration admits neither of beginning or ending God is the first and eternal being He did shine in perfections before the
break the hardness of mans heart the love of God can heal Rom. 12. 2. Formam vitae spiritualis induantus Forma enim constantior est et interior et ad substantiam pertine● Chrysost natures kill lusts plant graces change hearts convert stubborn sinners and accomplish whatsoever is strange and glorious If God love thee he will conform thee to his will and carry thee through all the hazzards and difficulties of this life and never leave thee till he hath lodged thee in his own bosome It is an omniscient love God sees from eternity the waywardness and obstinacy of those whom he chooseth to salvation Eph. 1. 4. and yet the force of his love is not overcome by that foreseen petulancy but he in time removes it and mans unworthiness puts grace upon a greater attempt but no way Dilexit deu● quos praescivit fore ingratos immo hostos suos drives God to a sentence of neglect or rejection Indeed here is the wonder of Gods love he from eternity sees us a mass of corruption and sin and yet no discouragement withstands or weakens his love but in due time he beautifies his chosen ones and loves them everlastingly for their comliness and beauty he foresees all disengagements but decrees to remove them It is a just love God loves not but where he sees something lovely Indeed the duties of sinners are distastfull to Isa 1. 13. Prov. 28. 9. Job 1. 1. Psal 7. 10. Psal 112. 2. Prov. 15. 8. God But God loves the Saints because of their uprightness The wise man saith The upright in their way are the delight of the Lord Prov. 11. 20. The curious work of grace in the heart of a Saint pourtrayed with so much wonder and drawn with so much exactness by the pencil of the divine spirit is a beauty God is pleased with and fixeth his love upon and doth evidentially declare that though he is free yet he is most just in his favour and affection CHAP. XVIII God is much to be admired in his Works of Creation LEt us meditate in the morning of the Lords day on the works of the Lord. David was much busied in this contemplation Psal 77. 12. He usually took his views and Psal 77. 12. Psal 143. 9. prospects of the beautifull issues of creating power which are the evidences of the wisdom goodness and almightiness of the Great Creatour How doth the Psalmist in the beginning of the nineteenth Psalm fall into the admiration Psal 19. 1 2 3 4 5. of the heavens that bespangled Court where God took up his eternal abode and residence How is Davids prospect checkerd and delighted with beholding the firmament which is embroydered with stars that large branch which holds those twinkling tapers which enlighten the world in the Psal 8. 4. Est autem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ob ornatu appellatus tota haec pulchra machina quod eâ nihil sit Ornatius et pulchrius non tam propter pulchras rerum formas formosamque coeli faciem et splendidissimam lucem quam etiam propter pulcherrimam totius mundi rerumque omnium inter se 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quatenus à deo creantur et reguntur Zanch. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plato Job 28. 4 5 6. Si quis varia motuum genera circularem rectum obliquum et alias temporum vicissitudines et distinctiones in momenta horas menses annos si quis attento animo omnia haec contemplatur et perpendet poterit faciliùs sentire nihil h●c mundi machinâ pulchrius night-season And in the eighth Psalm especially in the fourth verse David goes down stairs into the lower room of the Earth and there he contemplates on man that Microcosme the world bound up in a lesser volumn and how doth he enlarge his wondring thoughts on this Vice-Roy of God Man who is the Vniverse contracted And in these meditations let the Psalmist be our pattern for meditation on Gods works becomes the blessed Sabbath In that Psalm whose title is a Psalm for the Sabbath viz. the ninety second David begins it with holy admiration of Gods works in the world Psal 92. 5. And truly it is a dishonour to a workman to manifest abundance of skill and ingenuity and none to take notice of his workmanship for a Limner to draw a rare piece and no eye to admire his Artifice to draw the curtain from before the Picture and to observe its Curiosities God hath his mighty works to be remembred and wondered at It is said of Pythagoras that he lived sequestred from men in a Cave for a whole Year together that he might meditate on the abstruse points of Phylosophy On the Lords day let us take some time to ponder the infinite perfections which appear in the operations of Gods hand Alas the choicest works of man compared to the smallest works of God are but as the childrens houses of cards or dirt compared to the loftiest Courts or the stateliest Palaces of the world The Lilly hath more magnificence and beauty in it then Solomon in all his glory Mat. 6. 29. Solomon was not so gorgeous in his richest Attire as the Lilly in its beautifull colour and blush The meanest of Gods works hath more rarity and wonder in it then Archites his wooden Dove which was soequally poysed with its own weight that it hung firm in the Air without falling or Archimedes his Horology wherein the motions of the Sun Moon and Stars were so lively depainted There is so much of God appearing in the Heavens that many have taken them for a God and gave them divine worship The Persians adore the rising Sun and admire the daily visit of that glorious body which they think little less then a Deity When we meditate on the works of God we have a large field here our souls may wander from Sea to Land from Earth to Heaven from Time to Eternity yea we may walk upon the Sun Moon and Stars and enter into Heaven it self the Paradise of God Every Creature we cast our eye upon on the blessed Sabbath should be a flower to refresh our Meditations we should now feed our Graces by our Senses and the meditation on created beings should conduct us to Christ When we look upon the Sun we should look up to Christ the Sun Mal. 4. 2. Numb 24. 17. 2 Pet. 1. 19. Joh. 10. 7. Eph. 1. 22. Isa 61. 10. Rev. 15. 3. Joh. 14. 6. Joh. 1. 1. Joh. 6. 51. Gal. 2. 20. of Righteousness every star may mind us of the star of Jacob that bright morning star when we look on our houses Christ is the door when we look on our bodies Christ is our head when we look upon our cloaths Christ is the garment of Salvation when we look upon our friends and relations Jesus Christ is our husband Cant. 2. 16. our Friend Joh. 15. 10. our Beloved Cant. 4. 16. our King Rev. 15. 3. If we walk he
Heaven viz. the Stars and shews us their Aspects Dispositions and Motions which were hid in the day This darkness unbends the world and gives a short and necessary truce to mans labours and recreates their wasted spirits The Sun finisheth its compass about the world in twenty four hours a very short space for so long and tedious a circuit The diversities of seasons proceed from the motion of Psal 19. 1 2 3. the Sun and as the motion of the Sun from East to West makes day and night so its motion from North to South causes Summer and Winter and by both these the world is preserved Summer crowns the Earth with flowers and fruits and Winter which seemeth to be the death of nature robbing the earth of its heat and life contributes very much to the universal good it prepares the Earth by its cold and moisture for the returning Sun and seasons Indeed the motion of the Sun is admirable running ten or twelve millions of leagues every day without failing one minute of its appointed stage and inviolably observes its due and constant order Let us meditate on the Air whose extent fills the space between Heaven and Earth it is of a pure and reviving nature and easily transmits the influences of the Heavens And as One observes It is the Arsenal for Thunders Lightnings whereby God summons the world to dread and reverence Pedro d' Mexia Imper. Histor Diaphanus est Aer nisi verò talis esset species rerum coloratarum et figurarum adeòque omnium rerum visibilium recipi non possit nec ad oculos nostros deferri ac proinde nihil à nobis videri qu●●e igitur est hoc beneficium quodnam speculum hoc pulchrius c. insomuch that Caligula Rome's Emperour was wont to fly under his Bed at the noyse of the Thunder The Air it is the treasury of the clouds which dissolving in gentle showers refresheth the earth and calls forth its seeds into flourish and fruitfulness it fans the earth with the wings of the wind allaying those intemperate heats which otherwise would be injurious to the worlds inhabitants The Air is the region for the birds wherein they pass us so many m●ving Engins praising the Creatour the Air being onely their larger musick-room The Air serves for the breath and life of man and is divided into several Regions there are three Regions of the Air all usefull and admirable in their kind And as Zanchy observes By the Air things become visible and colours are seen in their proper comliness and beauty Let us meditate on the Sea that vast body of waters which fill the hollow and excavated places of the Earth as the Oceanus totam per circuitum terram eamque ex●avatam instar magni et latissimi circuli ambiens efficit ut terra supra et infra sit ●quis detenta idque ex dei mandato tum ad perfectionem ornatumque universi tum ad plantarum et animantium salutem blood doth the veins of man Here the Leviathan playes and sports it self in its liquid traces and windings the high and proud waves serving to racket and bandy this Sea-Monster from one place to another Job 41. 1. Psal 104. 26. And in these great waters Gods admirable power is seen that they should be reined in by so weak a bridle as the sand and its rage should be snaffled by it when the wayes beat upon the shore in their insultation you would fear they would swallow up all but they no sooner touch the sand but all is turned into froth and its watrish insolence evaporates How doth the Lord descant upon these mountanous billows and this swelling Ocean Job 38. 8 9 10 11. Who shut up the Sea with doors when it brake forth as if it had issued out of the womb When I made the cloud the garment thereof and thick darkness a swadling-band for it and Job 38 8 9 10 11. brake up for it my decreed place and set bars and doors and said Hitherto shalt thou come and no further and here shall thy proud waves be stayed The extent of the Sea is likewise to be considered it washes the four parts of the world and becomes the Bond of the Universe by it the most distant Nations are united it is the medium of Trade and Commerce in which Divine goodness is much to be observed and adored and Commodities peculiar to several Countries are made Common to all Thus great advantage and delight accru●s to man who sails upon this kind Element to the Port of his desire Let us meditate on the Earth Consider its position it hangs in the midst of the Air to be a convenient habitation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plato in Cratylo for us It s stability is rare the Air it self is not able to bear a feather and yet the whole Earth remains in it fixt and unshaken notwithstanding all the storms and tempests which beat upon it surely the invincible and powerful hand of God must needs support and sustain it We may likewise contemplate on the various dispositions of the parts of the Isa 44. 24. Job 38. 4 6. Terra corpus est simplex grave solidum et densum in medio mundi tanqu●m fundamentum ipsius collocatum eoque proprio in loco immobile et rotundum Zanc. earth the Mountanes Vallies Rivers which are as the veines to carry nourishment to this great body Nor are Plants to be pretermitted their roots whereby they draw their nourishment and the firmness of their stalk by which they are defended against the violence of the winds the expansion of their leaves by which they receive the dew of Heaven So now all the parts of the world may afford fuel for holy meditation The Heavens give light the Air breath the Sea Commerce the Earth habitation all these things being pondered and medita●ed on in them we may read the Name of God indelibly printed Our meditation may flutter its wings over these considerables and fly into admiration of the Infiniteness Power Excellencies and Perfections of the Great Creatour Let us meditate on Man the abridgement and recapitulation of the whole Creation Let us consider and observe Psal 139. 15. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the composure of his body He was fearfully and wonderfully made as the Psalmist speaks Psal 139. 15 16. Let us take notice of the powers of his soul and who but an infinite Agent could unite this soul and body and clasp them together an immaterial soul with an earthly body Who but God the great Jehovah could assign them both their form situation temperature and fitness for those uses to which they serve Acts 17. 27 28. We may indeed see God in the activity of our hands in the beauty of our eyes in the vivacity of our senses and if we look inward what distinct and admirable faculties is the soul endowed and enriched with The understanding exercises the Empire over all
did so love the very nature of his Elect that though for the present he had them not all with him in heaven yet he must have their picture in his Son to see them in and to love them in O let us meditate much on this admirable strain of love till it melt our hearts Luk. 24. 32. Zach. 12. 10. Isa 53. 2 3. and make them burn within us Thirdly From the incarnation of our Saviour we may trace him through the several passages of his life to his death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and passion and here with an eye of faith look upon him whom we have pierced and view that man of sorrows suffering 1 Pet. 2. 24. bleeding dying on that tree of shame and ignominy there we may dwell upon the death of Christ till it put life into our dead hearts and then let us follow Christ in our meditations from the Cross to the Sepulcher and by the way ponder deeply of the severity of Divine Justice of the sinfulness of sin of the inexpressible love of Christ and the rare worth of souls which are not redeemed with corruptible 1 Pet. 1. 18 19. things as silver and gold but with the precious blood of Jesus Christ as a lamb without blemish and spot 1 Pet. 1. 18 19. Acts 20. 7. And why did the primitive Saints sacramentally shew forth the Lords death on the Lords day Acts 20. 7. but to signifie to us that to contemplate and commemorate the death of Christ is a special duty of that day But a little more distinctly to supply our meditations on this glorious subject Let us meditate on the Author of our Redemption he that carried it on from the first to the last Let us contemplate Mat. 3. 17. Hag. 2. 7. Isa 29. 19. Promissiones in Christo constantes et verac●s sunt in eoque impletae sunt Alap on our dear Redeemer He is the Son of God the wonder of Angels the desire of Nations the joy of Saints All the prophesies of old were fulfilled in him Luk. 24. 27. All the favours of God are conveyed to us by him Eph. 1. 4 5 6 7. All the types of the Law were the shadow of him Col. 2. 17. Heb. 10. 1. Nay all the promises of the Gospel are yea and Amen in him 2 Cor. 1. 20. Let us meditate on his person it is altogether lovely Cant. 5. 16. Let us meditate on his natures The Creatour and the Creature never met in any but in him such a person 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God-Man Joh. 4. 19. Rev. 15. 3. Heb. 9. 28. Heb. 4. 15. 1 Tim. 1. 15. never was nor never will be in the world besides him Let us meditate on his offices they are necessary and glorious Let us meditate on his behaviours they are spotless and fructiferous Let us meditate on his designs they are affectionate stupendous Let us meditate on the objects of redemption viz. Gods Elect a company of poor helpless succourless sinners Isa 29. 22. whom God out of eternal pity hath designed for himself to be ransomed by the blood of his dearly beloved These redeemed ones are sometimes called his people Luk. 1. 68. Peculium hebraicè 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 peculium selectum thesauros pretiosiores et charos significat Hieron Chaldaeus vertit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Syrus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 novum populum Exod. 28. 29. sometimes his Israel Luk. 24. 21. sometimes his peculiar people Tit. 2. 14. sometimes his treasure as Hierom observes his New people as the Syriack translation renders it There are a few scattered up and down in the world in all places in all times and in all ages whom God set his heart upon from everlasting and Christ leaves heaven and is incarnate to purchase and redeem these scattered ones Aaron was to have the twelve Tribes engraven on his breast-plate and to bear them before God when he was to go into the holy place Exod. 28. 29. Our dear Redeemer whom Aaron was onely to typifie did bear the names of his Israel upon his heart when he did sacrifice himself to divine justice upon his shamefull but fruitful Cross Let us meditate on the price of our Redemption And here as the Apostle speaks we must conceive We are not Redeemed 1 Pet. 1. 18 19. with corruptible things as silver and gold but with 1 Cor. 6 20. the precious blood of Jesus Christ Tears not treasure Col. 1. 14. not silver but sighs not full coffers but emptied veins were Agnosce ô homo quam gravia sunt vulnera pro quibus necesse est filium dei vulnerari Bern. the price of our redemption Eph. 1. 7. All the mines in the world could not have purchased the life of one soul for as the Psalmist speaketh Ps 49. 8. The redemption of the soul is precious Nothing but precious blood could redeem the precious soul our sinfull wounds are onely healed by Christ's sacred wound we are cured by stripes Christs chastisements are our peace Our Olive leaf is dipt in blood Christ trod Isa 53. 5. the wine-press alone and his garments were sprinkled with blood Isa 63. 3. There are four wayes by which the Isa 63. 9. Isa 63. 3. Rev. 5. 9. redeemed person attains his freedom 1. When the Captive is freely manumitted and let go without price or ransom But this is not our case for neither would Satan have ever dismissed us from his thraldome of his own accord and freely nor yet our sin would leave us freely and spontaneously it stuck so close to us When the Captive is freed by way of exchange Nor is this our condition what bartery could we make with God to Quorundum permutatione fieri potest omnium electorum redemptio Gravius est peccatum quàm ut ullâ permutatione puraealicujus creaturae tolli et ita captivum redimi potest Zanch. purchase our freedom Could the Elect be redeemed by their own sweat or services or by the sacrificing of the purest Creatures This is no way proportionable to divine justice which we have provoked these means are too weak to file off our chains Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of Rams saith the Prophet or with ten thousand rivers of Oyl which yet is impossible or shall I give my first-born for my transgression or the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul Mic. 6. 7. Observe in this Text of Scripture here is offered all varieties of creature-contributions for mans redemption Here are inanimate creatures offered ten thousand rivers of oyl here are irrational creatures made proffer of thousands Mic. 6. 7. of Rams nay here rational creatures are tender'd the fruit of our bodys nay further here are the most beloved creatures frankly and pathetically presented for an oblation our first-born the heirs both of our love and revenue and yet all this to no purpose All these great offers can contribute nothing to our
release or redemption Sin is not expiated but by blood and not by the blood of a Ram a Bullock or a Goat but by the blood of him who was God as well as Man Acts 20. 28. and therefore our Saviour expostulates the case What shall a man give in exchange for his soul Suppose he should pick Mat. 16. 26. up the excellencies of the whole Universe and sacrifice them for the souls redemption will they be accepted Surely no. When the Captive is rescued by force from his thraldom as Israel was from their Aegyptian Task-masters as by a Pro●●e verè Christus vocatur redemptor noster quia ut frater noster primogenitus dato pretio redemit fratres suos Zanch. mighty hand and a stretched-out arm as Lot was by the prowess and valour of Abraham and his company Gen. 14. 16. But this is not the way of our Redemption we are rescued not by killing but by dying not by giving wounds but by receiving them When the Captive is bought with a price And this is our case Empti redempti sumus We are bought we are re-bought or redeemed as the primitive Christians sung it out 1 Cor. 6. 20. Quanto sibi pretio deus nos sibi comparavit scil sanguine suo Alap usually and triumphantly but by what price are we bought Not by furnisht mines which are the rich linings of the earth but by the large effusions of spotless and chrystalline blood Let us meditate on the slaveries from which we are redeemed There are four Cardinal Miseries from which our blessed Redeemer hath rescued us From the slavery of Satan Christ in managing the work of our Redemption hath trod Satan not onely under his own D●o in cruce affixi intelliguntur Christus visibilitèr sponte suâ ad tempus Di●bolus invisibilitèr invitus in perpetuum Fidei ergooculus conspicit Christum in summitate crucis quasi in curru triumphali sedentem Diabolum in imâ parte cruci allig●tum et Christi pedibus conculc●tum Orig. feet but under our feet Rev. 16. 20. By death he hath conquered him who had the power of death which is the Devil Heb. 2. 14. It is true even still Satan tempts but not triumphs over the Saints his conflicts are for the tryal of our grace but not for the trampling upon our souls he may raise a dust but not give a mortal wound to the poor believer Luk. 22. 32. he may sift us but not sink us he may winnow us but not win us Christ hath redeemed us from his destructive power It is a rare speech of Origen There were two fastned to Christs Cross Christ visibly of his own accord for a time the Devil invisibly unwilling and for ever therefore the eye of faith may behold Christ at the top of the Cross as sitting in a triumphant Chariot the Devil at the bottom of it bound and trampled upon by the feet of Christ Look upon Satan as a Serpent Gen. 3. 1. Christs death took away his sting as far as concerns believers Look upon Satan as a Dragon Rev. 20. 2. Christs death cut off his tail Gen. 3. 1. and look upon Satan as a roaring Lion Christs death dashed Rev. 20. 2. out his teeth and made his paw unserviceable 1 Pet. 5. 8. Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law so the Apostle fully and elegantly Col. 2. 14. Blotting out the Subnectit Apostolus ipsum ch●●ographum esse delet●m sed fort●sse non tam deletum quin p●ss●t●lis nova suboriri Addit igitur Apossolus in super sublatum esse sed fort●sse aliquid l●tet absconditum et in posterum proferri possit immo inquit Apostolus est cruci affixum dilaceratum et in frusta abs●●ssum Daven Gal. 3. 13. Gal. 4. 5 Christus emendo nos exemit dato pretio et in christianam vindicavit libertatem Eras hand-writing of Ordinances that was against us which was contrary to us and took it out of the way nailing it to his Cross And Bishop Davenant descants most sweetly upon that Text The Apostle saith he proceeds here in a most pleasing gradation and consults the case of trembling consciences for saith the Apostle the hand-writing was blotted out but answers the doubting Christian but new controversies may arise the Apostle adds but it is taken away but replyes the doubting Christian but some other may lie hid and be brought to light hereafter therefore saith the Apostle The hand-writing is nailed to Christs Cross it is rent and torn to pieces by the same nails by which Christ was pierced and fastned to the Cross Indeed the Law is now Directory but not Damnatory to the believer his rule but not his ruine his glass to see himself in but not his rock to dash himself upon The Apostle avers Gal. 3. 13. that we are redeemed from the curse of it The Law is our Copy but it cannot be our curse we may steer by its purity but believers cannot fall by its power Gal. 4. 5. The Law is our Teacher but not our Task-master we are delivered from the tyrannical domination though not from the guidance and sacred instruction of it we may be advised but we viz. believers shall never be endangered by it Christ hath redeemed us from the power and destructiveness of sin A believer may mourn over the spot but he shall not Rom. 6. 2. 12. Christus meritò fuit percussus non suo sed alieno pe●cato nos illum attrivimus nos illum ●ulneravimus qui illi nostra peccata tanti dol●ris causam tanti cruciatus materiam attulimus Riv. fall under the weight of sin Sin may abide in but not reign over a Saint it may be his grief but not his condemnation Rom. 8. 1. Christ hath redeemed us from the destroying though not from the disturbing power of sin He hath redeemed us from all iniquity Tit. 2. 14. He hath purchased our forgiveness Eph. 1. 7. so in the Col. 1. 14. In whom we have redemption through his bloud even the forgiveness of sins And it is observable there are two Texts of Scripture viz. Eph. 1. 7. and Col. 1. 14. which speak the same thing in the same words which is unusual that by the mouth of two witnesses this great truth may be confirmed Our pardons are written in Christs bloud 1 Joh. 1. 7. And so most 1 Joh. 1. 7. excellently the Apostle Peter speaking of Christ saith Who 1 Pet. 2. 24. Christus spirituales n●stros mo●bos s●n●vit ●t in●● recepit ●●●●llerit et a●●leret ne●pe per imputationem et paenae persolutionem Riv. his own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree Now if Christ hath born our sins then they are taken from us our souls must not die for them they are his charge and not our condemnation So then the In●itement of sin cannot reach the believer the guilt of sin cannot cast him the power
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
cares the body shall not be wasted with toyle nor the spirits spent with labour or the heart torn with griefs but soul and body shall be calmed into an eternal quietation The Apostle saith Heb. 4. 9. There remains therefore a rest to the people of God The Greeks call it a Sabbatism our future Sabbath and Rest being all one When the Apostle wrote his Epistle to the Hebrews the rest of the legal Sabbath was over and the rest of Canaan was first disturbed by Nebuchadnezzar and upon overthrowing and quite taking away by Titus the Roman so now then there remains onely a rest in Heaven a heavenly Sabbath for the people of God In this life our Laudabile Sabbati otium sanctorum vitam requie et sanctificatione exprimit tum futuram ostendit cùm omni hujus vitae curâ de positâ bonis aeternis fruimur Cyril Alex. Sabbath it self is disturbed sometimes with vain thoughts with deadness and coldness in duties it is disquieted with the iniquity of our holy things we cannot pray as we would and we do not hear as we should we often displease Christ at his own table when we come with polluted hands and unprepared hearts and when duties are over we either dash upon sins of omission or rush upon language or practices unbecoming the Lords day there is still something to discompose our spirits our hearts are sad and our moans are great but however the week treads upon the heels of Sabbat●m Coeleste est requies illa Coelestis patriae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our Sabbath and then like the Sons of Adam we get our livelihood in the sweat of our brows then we toyle our brains harden our hands and weary our bodies and all for that which is not bread Isa 55. 2. And besides as Master Herbert that sweet and excellent Poet observes our Sabbath doth but leap from seven to seven it flies away and then recurs in a constant revolution One Sabbath passeth over and we must press through the croud of weekly and worldly Rabbin affairs which will make us sweat and faint before we attain Isa 55. 2. to another But our Sabbath above is A rest from sin In it we shall enjoy absolute purity and spotless perfection we shall there be a Glorious Church Excitat sibi Christus ecclesiam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 multo decore et gloriâ illustrem non habentem maculam peccati aut rugam vetustatis Alap not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing Eph. 5. 27. Sin cannot dwell in Heaven with God it is impossible if Achans wedge one sin disturbed the whole Camp of Israel John 7. 11. How would one sin disturb the Court of Heaven It would put a damp upon all the triumphs of it there cannot be perfect joy where there is the least relique of sin A rest from troubles and afflictions In our heavenly Sabbath there shall be no groans but musicks no sighs but songs no tears but triumphs not a drop of the waters of Marah in a whole ocean of joy and satisfaction if any grief remain'd our joy would not be full The Saints in glory shall be freed from natural afflictions They shall hunger no more nor thirst any more Rev. 7. to 16. Rev. 7. 16. to which accords that of the Prophet Isa 49. 10. The Isa 49. 10. Saints cannot hunger in their eternal Sabbath for the good Shepherd of our souls doth not onely f●ed us to eternal life Psal 16. 11. but likewise in eternal life and there he shall feed us with fulness of joy with the smiles of his face with the fruits of his love and with the over-coming influences of his grace and favour And moreover the Saints cannot thirst in glory The Lamb shall bring them to living fountains Rev. 22. 1. of waters Rev. 22. 1. They shall have waters for their necessity Rev. 7. 17. Rivers of water for their plenty nay pure rivers of water for their greater extasie and these rivers of water shall proceed out of the Throne of God and the Lamb for their superlative complacency Nor shall the Saints Eternal rest be disturbed with pressing afflictions All tears shall be wiped from their eyes a Isa 25. 8. sentence mentioned three times in Scripture Isa 25. 8. John 7. 17. Rev. 7. 17. Rev. 21. 4. As if every person in the Trinity Rev. 21. 4. would severally assure the Saints of future undisturbed felicity A learned man observes this phrase of wiping tears from our eyes is a metaphor taken from tender mothers Lacrymae malorum sensu exprimuntur who give their breasts to their infants when they cry for want and then wipe off their tears from their pretty cheeks which were bedewed with that emblem of sorrow Tears Altera foelicitatis pars est quòd nullis miseriis aerumnis molestiis hujus praesentis vitae obnoxii erimus Malorum immunem esse maximum est bonum cujus Author deus est Par. are those drops which fall when the fire of affliction is put under the sense of some evil the feeling of some corroding sorrow squeizeth them out as the extremity of pain makes the patient sweat But such oppressive calamities shall not seize upon the Saints in their Sabbath and Rest above here indeed they are in a valley of tears but one tear shall not interrupt the joyes of the glorified Saints The Psalmist saith Psal 30. 6. Weeping endures for a night but joy cometh in the morning and when the Saints are arrived at their rest above all night is past to return no more the morning is begun to pass away no more The Saints Eternal Rest shall not be disturbed with privative afflictions There shall be no more death Rev. 21. 4. Rev. 21. 4. Isa 25. 8. 1 Cor. 15. 57. John 3. 16. Then death shall be swallowed up in victory 1 Cor. 15. 57. and it shall rally no more to do any execution upon the Saints in glory Our Sabbath in heaven is eternal and therefore our life is eternal Indeed here below death is alwayes Sabbatum hoc coeleste est sempiternum sicut omnia alia bona quae ad perfectionem pervenerunt Musc to be expected Job 14. 14. But above death is never to be dreaded there that King of terrours as Job calls it Job 18. 14. hath lost both his Scepter and hs Sithe both his force and his prevalency There is neither fear nor expectation of death in glory were it not so it would turn those rivers of pleasure memorized by the Psalmist Psal 36. 8. into Psal 55. 4. salt and unpleasant waters and upon the very possessions of heaven would be written bitterness in the latter end But faith in Christ gives us eternal life John 3. 16. A full assurance and security against the approaches and seizures of death or conclusion Perfection which is the character of the Saints future condition excludes and denies all
et gaudiorum percipiu●t corda eorum vix possunt capere divinam illam dulcedinem quid ergò de futura coeli dulcedine censeamus quando non primitias tan●ùm c. we shall love God and our blessed Saviour better then our selves and Christ shall love us better then we can love our selves or one another O how many joyes shall he possess who shall keep an eternal Jubilee in the enjoyment of so many and so great beatitudes and felicities of others as truly as of his own The Jewish Doctors call the pleasures of our heavenly Sabbath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 everlasting breathings our delight stirring up our desires and our desires feeding upon our delight The joyes above shall not onely be transcendent but universal filling all the faculties of our souls refreshing and ravishing all the parts of our bodies they shall be continued not interrupted most sweet most sincere elevated to the highest degree of pleasure extensively reaching to all eternity intensively wound up to the highest peg of satisfaction and delight Psal 36. 9. And the fountane of divine sweetness shall not distill or drop upon the glorified Saints as Gums from the Tree or Rose-water from the Still or Chymical drops from the Alymbeck but streams of delight shall gently dash upon them to fill them with joy unspeakable and full of Glory Rev. 22. 1. We may conjecture at the body of the Sun by the brightness of the beam so may we guess what those extasies of joy shall be which shall sweeten our eternal Sabbath by those fore-tasts and prelibations of joy which the Saints here sometimes feel 1 Pet. 1. 8. The first fruits of this joy how do they transport the believer and carry him even above the world Insomuch that he scarce knows whether he be in the body or out of the body 2 Cor. 12. 2. His sences and faculties are wrapt up to drench in unusual pleasures Now if the present clusters yield such generous wine what will the over-flowings of the Vintage yield What fruits shall we gather from an everlasting harvest This made Augustine Aug. de Civit dei lib. 22. Cap. 30. Quest Supr Exod. Quest 173. call our Sabbath above Sabbatum maximum our greatest Sabbath Plenitudinem Sabbati The fulness of a Sabbath Nay Sabbatum Sabbatorum The Sabbath of Sabbaths Indeed the sweets of our future Sabbath here they may be admired but they cannot be comprehended hereafter we may be filled with them but we shall not dive to the bottome of them The two Sabbaths differ in this the one is the representation of the other Our Sabbath upon Earth doth onely adumbrate Fuit illud Sabbatum typus aeterni illius sabbati in coelis in quo electi an●mâ et corpore a peccatis calamitatibus et miseriis hujus vitae requiescent Ger. and shadow out our Sabbath in Heaven On our Sabbath below the body rests from labour in our heavenly Sabbath both body and soul shall rest from sin calamity and misery and God shall rest in us and we shall rest in him In the legal Sabbath there was no Manna fell on that day Exod. 16. 27. In the Sabbath above there shall be no ministry that usefull and necessary ordinance shall wholly and for ever cease In our Sabbath below we leave the world and the affairs of it while we go up into the Mount and converse with Jesus Christ In our Sabbath above we shall Dies dominica est imago futuri seculi Bas get above the world and with Elijah let fall our mantle our loose garment of mortality and put it on no more but converse with God eternally on the Mount of joy and delight There are indeed many rare types and representations 2 Kings 2. 13. of our heavenly Sabbath Paradise which was a promptuary of beauty pleasure delight especially when mans innocency did accent the Paradisus univers● sensibilis venustati● inte●ligentiam excedit Damasc lib. 2. de Orthod fid cap. 11. sweetness of it How fresh the trees how sweet the flowers how musical the birds how lushious the fruits of this transcendent place till Adams fall folded up this land-skip and turned himself out of this Garden of God that he might dress it no more and since it is over-grown insomuch that the remains of it are not known to the most curious searchers after them But before this breach the pleasures of Paradise were so transcendent that the delights of our supernal Sabbath are called Paradise Rev. 2. 7. 2 Cor. 12. 4. Onely the Paradise of the Second Adam where he met with August Epist 112. Cap. 13. the saved Thief Luke 23. 43. transcendently surpasses the Paradise of the First Adam In that the presence of God is Clem. 5 Stromat Ansel Thom. Aquin. secunda secundae quest 175. Art 5. immediately in the Paradise above which inhanceth all enjoyments to the supreamest height And therefore Augustine Clemens Alexandrinus Anselme and Aquin as affirm that Paul when he was rapt up into the heavenly Paradise he saw the Divine Being entring the place of the blessed who eternally see God face to face So that when we 1 Cor. 13 12. mention or contemplate on the Coelestial Paradise we must cast a shade on Adams Paradise his pleasant Seat as falling short below all degrees of comparison Secondly It might be added that the fruits and delights of Adams Paradise were more calculated to please the sence and refresh the outward man But the delights of the upper Paradise are more refined and principally influence the soul mans better part The Tabernacle doth sweetly resemble our Sabbath above Psal 84. 1. Luke 16. 9. Psal 15. 1. Rev. 21. 3. especially Tabernaculum Mosaicum propter pelles hyacynthinas ipsam co●perientes coelum è long inquo aspicientibus representabat Joseph lib. 3. Antiq. Cap. 7. if we look upon the furniture of it First There was the Ark of the Testimony Exod. 40. 21. which as a learned man concludes denotes the blessed Trinity whose sight is our happiness above In the Ark there were the two Tables of the Law Deut. 10. 12. The golden Pot of Manna and Aarons blossoming Rod Heb. 9. 4. In our heavenly Sabbath the Father will govern us with most holy Laws which answers to the two Tables The Son shall be bread of life to us to feed upon John 6. 33. which answers to the pot of Manna The Holy Ghost shall Numb 10 33 eternally fill us with fresh and flourishing graces which answers Charitas ibi erit lex Filius dei erit rex et modus erit aeternitas to Aarons blossoming Rod. Secondly Over the Ark was the Mercy-Seat Exod. 25. 21 22. which expresses our dear Redeemer who hath promerited not onely grace but glory for us And from the Rom. 3. 25. Numb 7 89. Mercy-Seat answers were given which signifies that blessed familiarity which the Saints shall enjoy with the Lord in Glory Exod.
Shepherd of our souls the musick of the Gospel allures us the truths of the Gospel enlighten us the power of the Gospel saves us Rom. 1. 16. Take the Gospel out of the world and it is onely a larger Dungeon a wast howling wilderness the broad rode which leads to eternal destruction If the people of Constantinople so honoured the Ministry of Chrysostome as they could rather want the Sun then want it of how much more value is the light of the salvifical Gospel And Thirdly This glorious and necessary work of the Gospel is much furthered by prayer The Minister preacheth not without annexing prayer to the word and sometimes the Saints prayers obtain that for the Minister which his own doth not However a multitude of prayers must carry the greater force and be the most likely battery against Heaven The wise man saith Eccl. 4. 9. Two are better then one and as in other things so in devotion Single prayers may be like the single hairs of Samson but united devotions are like the locks of Samson which were full of extraordinary strength The prayers of many are an united troop which promises more probably victory and success and Rev. 6. 2. therefore let us earnestly beg in our Closets and in our Families Hic est effectus ministerii Evangelici ut Satan instar fulguris ex toto suo regno verbi ministerio ejiciatur et vana est sine viribus ira et hoc facit mirc●ilitèr ad piorum consolationem Ger. John 6. 20. on the morning of the Sabbath that the Gospel may ride on triumphantly in conquering and to conquer and that many may fall captive before the power and force of it The conquests of the Gospel are most amiable when the engine of our captivity becomes the object of our love and we who are taken are not prisoners but proselytes The Sword of the word saves not slayes and it is onely sharp when it is ineffectual This was the glory of the primitive times that the Gospel encreased Acts 6. 7. That the Gospel was spread Acts 13. 49. That the Gospel grew and multiplyed Acts 12. 24. This was the gold of those golden times the Gospel made a multitude of converts and with its Doctrine leavened the world And so we should be earnest in prayer for Gospel propagation that the heaven of the Church might Regnum Christi ponitur pro promulgatione et cognitione Evangelii et deus dicitur transferre illos in regnum filii sui quos eruit ex tenebris ignorantiae et illuminat cognitione Evangelii Daven be full of stars And to spirit this argument now before us Let us take notice that by the propagation of the Gospel the Kingdom of Christ is much enlarged It must speak a pleasant day when the Sun of Righteousness scatters more plenteously his enlightning and refreshing beams Christs Glory in the World is the Saints both wish and happiness as the Members are honoured when the Crown is set upon the head and nothing more advances Christ on the Earth then the stupendous success of the Gospel And by the Gospels progress Satan his power is enfeebled in the world which is most complacential to the friends of the Bridegroom This blessed spread causeth Satan to fall Josh 6. 20. like lightning Luke 10. 18. His cursed walls fall down at the sounding of the Trumpet of the Gospel it is deplorable to consider what power Satan hath had in those Nations Diabolus instar fulguris è toto suo regno Ministerio verbi ejicitur Chemnit which have wanted the Preaching of the Gospel How did he bring the Philistims to worship a Dagon the Sidonians Ashtaroth the Graecians to worship Apollo the Latins Jupiter and other Gods and Goddesses wanton and lascivious Deities nay others their God Remphan Figures which they made Acts 7. 43. Such abominations have clouded the Land 2 Kings 23. 13. where the light of the Gospel Praedicatio Evangelii ceu potiùs res praedicata in Evangelio per Evangelium viz. Christ● mors merita c. Dei virtus est per quam potenter in credentibus oper●tur salutem fidem justitiam immò vitam aeternam Alap hath not broken forth nay where the Gospel makes no progress there Salvation is wholly exiled Rom. 1. 16. And how lushious soever the enjoyments of such a place may be their souls must pay the reckoning Though such a Nation had the milk and honey of Canaan the spices of Arabia the gums of Aegypt the gold of India yet wanting a glori-Gospel Eternal death is mingled with all these dainties this Jubilee only reacheth to the grave And the Inhabitants of such a place only tread on Carpets and Roses to hell life is not within their walls nor Salvation within their Pallaces When the Apostle would dispute the priviledges of the Jews he brings in this as their greatest To them were committed the Oracles of God Rom. 3. 2. Christ is the Sun the Ministers are the stars and the Gospel is the Amos 8. 11. light of a Nation The famine of the word is the plague of a place To enjoy Pastors after Gods own heart is the sweetness Jer. 3. 15. of a promise Jer. 3. 15. Golden Mines which are the rich linings of the Earth may make a place or a Nation Mat. 13. 16. gaudy but it is the Gospel only can make a Nation glorious And Satan hath least footing there where the Gospel is most scattered and disseminated where the Gospell is either wholly Luke 10. 18. wanting or penned up what prodigious evils over-run that place and how doth Satan reign and rage The Scriptures tell us of the unnatural lusts of Sodom the pride and wantonness of Tyre Ezek. 27. 3. The cruelty and ambition of Gen. 18. 20. Babylon nor may we omit the Turkish Polygamy the Heathens Jer. 4. 13. Idolatry the Indians brutish nakedness at this day Jer. 8. 16. where the Gospel takes no place It is no wonder to hear of bloudy Nero's lascivious Caracalla's and frantick Domitians Nero dictus fuit Pestis humani generis those monsters of men who were strangers to the sweets the power and light of the Gospel It is the Gospel lays the ax to the root of Satans power and where this Mat. 3. 10. blessed light shines not or very faintly the Prince of darkness Eph. 6. 12. exercises a cursed sway and a destructive Soveraignty By the progress of the Gospel our consummate blessedness is hastened and secured for the more efficacious the Gospel is the more maturated and mellowed we are for heaven and eternity The Gospel is like the Sun to the 1 Pet. 2. 2. fruits or the shower to the flowers which ripens the one and blows and draws out the scent and sweetness of the other we grow in strength and spiritual stature by the 2 Pet. 3. 18. power and efficacy of the Ordinances and Preaching of
holy day Then they are in season as the harvest in the year as Courts of Judicature in the Term as a Psal 111. 1. shining constellation in a dark night Davids resolution was to praise God in the great Congregation Psal 29. 9. The Psal 89. 7. Lord esteems it his glory to have many beggars thronging at the beautifull gate of his Temple for spiritual gifts and charity Psal 87. 2. how loud nay how lovely is the noyse of many golden Trumpets what an eccho do they make How pleasant is it when the holy Convocation meet for holy worship like the pleasant flocks upon the mountain of holiness Many Quia potentiam illam quam infans in stabulo occultat eodem tempore in agro et in oriente immò in coelo exerit hoc testimentum est non aliquà indigentiâ sed voluntariâ humiliatione exinanitionem illam factam esse Lyser skilfull musicians playing together elevate and sweeten the harmony The Congregation meeting together do much resemble the Coelestial Quire above and seem to imitate that Troop and Host of Angels which proclaimed Christs Nativity to the world Luke 2. 13. In publick God receives the highest praises and there he bestows the greatest blessings Psal 65. 4. The promise runs God will create upon her Assemblies a cloud Isa 4. 5. which Cloud was the assured testimony of the Divine presence which presence includes and involves all varieties of good Wine flows more plentifully from a Vintage then a Vessel in publick Ordinances God gives us the plenty of a Vintage In Gods Courts we shall tast of his goodness not onely of his good will and favour Psal 65. 4. Psal 27. 4. Psal 50. 2. Cant. 4. 6. Cant 5. 5. Acts 3. 1. Acts 13. 23. but of his good things we shall be refreshed with pardoning grace the joyes of peace the smiles of love and be captivated with the beauty of holiness Psal 96. 6. If you will know where believers see their best sights where ●hey hear the most ravishing sounds where they make the most delightfull meals they will tell you in the Assemblies of Gods people Psal 68. 24. There they have been satisfied with marrow and fatness Indeed when God denies publick Ordinances he himself will be a little sanctuary to his Chosen Mat 12. 9. Ezek. 11. 16. But where he affords them he expects they Mat 13. 54. should be attended on Christ himself went into the places Mark 3. 1. of publick resort It is signally to be observed that in every Festival of the Jewes there was to be an holy Convocation a joynt meeting of Gods people to evidence how pleasing Isa 60. 8. it is to God for his Doves to flock to the windows the Per fenestras intelligamus columbaria Haec enim plena sunt fenestris instar oculorum per quas prospicere gaudent Columbae in eoque delectantur Hieron companies of his dear ones being the work-houses of his grace the store-houses of his blessings and the true Goshens where light and plenty dwells So in the Feast of the Passover Exod. 12. 16. a Convocation was to begin and shut up that feast it was both to open and to end it to be the Alpha and the Omega of that solemnity So in the feast of the Sabbath Lev. 23. 3. it was to be a day of rest but this rest was given for holy meetings for holy addresses for holy worship the Tabernacle and the Temple in the times of the Law and the Synagogues in latter times were open and frequented on the Sabbath Mat. 1. 21. Mark 6. 2. when private affairs were laid aside and publick worship was to be in ure And so in the feast of Pentecost or first fruits Lev. 23. 21. The Israelites were not to offer up these first fruits the tribute their praise and thanksgiving without burnt offerings Lev. 23. 18. without sin offerings and peace offerings vers 19. nor without holy worship vers 20. nor yet without a holy meeting and convocation vers 21. Every solemn feast must be accompanied with a solemn meeting the worship it self not being gratefull without the worshipers And thus it was in the feast of Trumpets Lev. 23. 24. In the day of Attonement Lev. 23. 27. And so in the feast of Tabernacles Levit. 23 37. Levit. 23 40. Numb 28. 26. Numb 29. 1 7. 12 or Booths Lev. 23. 34 35 36. There was a holy convocation at the beginning and close of that solemnity And it is remarkable that what is called a holy convocation Lev. 23. 35. 36. is called a Sabbath Lev. 23. 39. to intimate to us that a Sabbath is not a Sabbath without the Assemblies of Gods people Thus pleasing are congregated Saints in holy worship where God makes all his festivals of grace and love Now for our gratefull and acceptable deportment in publick Observatio subbati est caput veligionis et totum dei cultunt continet Willet Ordinances we must study 1. To be strict in our behaviours 2. Spiritual in our duties 3. Active in our graces We will take them and canvas them all in their order for indeed the duties of this holy day require extraordinary diligence they have a double die of holiness upon them they are double gilt Gods eye is Non putes te in domo dei malè posse conversari et occultari Oleast 1 Kings 9. 3. very much upon our behaviour in his house Therefore in the Tabernacle the place of publick worship it was commanded Exod. 25. 37. Thou shalt make seven Lamps and they shall light the Lamps that they may give light to teach us that nothing there escapes his fight for in his house it is alwayes light In the Sanctuary thou canst not sin in secret there are seven Lamps to discover thy miscarriages We must study a beseeming behaviour in the publick Ordinances and this is two-fold Corpus est hostia vivens quiase vivum per viva opera novae vitae spiritualis deo offert 2. Et hostia est per actus mortificationis Alap 1. External of the body We must compose our outward man to a suitable behaviour when we approach to God in publick Ordinances Considering 1. God is the Lord of our bodies as well as our souls and therefore the deportment of the body must be as criticall 2. The Apostle adviseth us Rom. 12. 1. To offer up 1 Cor. 3. 16. 1 Cor. 6. 13. our bodies a reasonable sacrifice holy and acceptable to God Especially this oblation must be made in publick worship the Temple we know was the usual place for sacrifice Let Josh 5. 14. Exod. 4. 32. John 17. 1. it be added 3. The body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 6. 19. as well as the heart is the lodging of Christ Eph. 3. 17. David speaks much of the comportment of the body in holy services The eye must look up Psal 123. 4. The hands must be lift
up Psal 63. 4. The mouth must be filled with praises Psal 63. 5. The ear must bow and the knee Luke 21. 2. must bend Psal 95. 6. The body is one of the two mites we indigent worshipers can offer to God But for the better unfolding of this particular viz. How we must comport our bodies in publick worship there is something to be acted and something to be avoided First Something the outward man must Act. 1. We must lift up our hands in prayer this the Psalmist enjoyn us a a duty Psal 134. 2. and proposes his own example Psal 119. 48. What speaks more humility in prayer then to lift up the hands to receive the Almes Nor doth it shew less then our dependance upon God when by the lifting up of our hands we seem to point at our benefactor The Prophet Jeremiah 2 Lam. 19. joynes the pouring out of the heart and the lifting up of the hands together Moreover it pretends to a holy violence when we lift up our hands to wrestle with God and to storm heaven Christ Luke 24. 50. lifted up his hands in benediction and we must do the same Numb 16. 22. in supplication Secondly We must compose our countenances to holy Reverence Dicit Maria respexit humilitatem ancillae suae non virginitatem Bern. The Pharisees indeed disfigured their faces Mat. 6. 16. But their hypocrisie must not discourage our piety nothing doth more beautifie a serious worshipper then a becoming gravity Did we consider the infiniteness of that Majesty we are to deal withal the brightness of his eye the purity of his nature the strength of his hand the severity of his judgements and likewise weigh the account we must give for Gospel opportunities this would put a holy astonishment upon our faces and cover them with a reverential dread Lev. 10. 3. we know the offering up of strange fire but once cost two Priests their lives God loves a trembling at his word Isa 66. 2. Isa 66. 2. Slight carriages in worship more become a wanton Jupiter then an awfull Jehovah who is a consuming fire Heb. 12. 29. Thirdly We must bend the ear to the severest attention How often doth our Saviour call for a hearing ear this was Mat. 13. 43. the Epiphonema and conclusion of every Sermon to his Auditours Mat. 11. 15. Mark 4. 9. Luke 8. 8. Luke 14. 35. And Mark 7. 16. this was the winding up of every Epistle to the Churches Rev. 2. 7 11 17 29. Rev. 3. 6. 13 22. It is said of Christs Auditors 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that they did hang upon his mouth in hearing him Luke 19. 48. They did sit upon his lips that no word might escape them but they might arrest it for soul advantage The ear is the proper door to the heart this is the postern to let in truth study then to make it a door to salvation by a serious and diligent attention Divine truths like those Angels who Gen. 19. 3. came to Lot must not be shut out but entertained and the ear is the portal by which they must enter Attention Fides est donum dei Eph. 2. 8. sed non omnium 2 Thes 3. 2. electis solum datur Tit. 1. 11. sed hoc donum deus non instillat cordibus immediatè sed per auditum verbi sui auditum sc externum operante intus sp sancto Praecones verbi sonant auribus aures ad mentem deserunt though it be not an onely yet it is a necessary duty the ear lies in the way to the soul as the light shines not into the house but by the window Faith saith the Apostle Rom. 10. 17. comes by hearing and justification cometh by faith Rom. 5. 1. So that attention in holy Ordinances layes the first stone in the structure of glory He who is an attentive and serious hearer layes a good foundation a foundation of Jasper to found the New Jerusalem upon The ear is the fort which the Minister is to assault but the heart is the strong hold which the spirit is to take but if we are not attentive and resist the first on-set that of the Minister we shall lay discouragements before the second that of the spirit we shall grieve the spirit of the Lord Eph. 4. 30. But let not our careless attention obstruct and hinder the spirits saving operation And let us not loose those blessed truths by neglectfull hearing which Christ hath bought by his painfull bleeding Are the glad tidings of the Gospel so Adest sp dei per doctrinam auribus haustam mentem illuminans c. slight a message Are divine truths so mean a Doctrine Are Sermons of faith and godliness such low discourses that we will not be attentive in the hearing of them Surely Luke 19. 47. this is below the Religion of the Jews who diligently heard Luke 20. 1. Christ in the Temple though afterwards they brought him to the Cross It was the great complaint of God that the John 8. 20. people would not hear him Isa 28. 12. L●● us then be exact and very diligent in our outward attention when we come to the publick Ordinances alwayes remembring that the outward Court brings to the inner Court and that leads to the Holy of Holies But as we must watch our outward behaviour in publick worship to know what we are to act so likewise to understand what we are to avoid CHAP. XXVIII Sleeping in Ordinances is a great and daring provocation IN publick Ordinances we must avoid all sleep and slothfulness this surely is a great and general distemper broken in upon us much to be lamented and now more fully to be discovered This was the brand of the foolish Virgins they were asleep as the Bride-groom came and so their happiness Mat. 25. 5. was a dream We dare not sleep when a King speaks to us and yet we will adventure it when a God speaks to us It is very uncouth and inconsistent that we should be shutting our eyes when we should be opening our hearts Josh 24. 27. that our bodies should sleep when our souls should awake Jer. 7. 13. that the street door should be shut when the closet door should be open viz. in publick Ordinances and in the Acts 1. 16. holy worship of the Almighty Surely those who commit this sin did never really examine it they adventure upon 2 Pet. 1. 21. the practice of it because they never dived into the bottom of it But let such know that sleeping in Ordinances is every way offensive It is offensive to the eye of God When we are in Ordinances we are more especially under the eye of God though Psal 63. 2. he is excluded no where yet his presence is more peculiarly Mat. 18. 20. in the assemblies of his Saints He more particularly walks Isa 4. 5. in the midst of his Candlesticks Now there are
Now then a sacred work is no sleepy work Our enjoyment of God in Ordinances is a day of salvation 2 Cor. 6. 2. It is no night to sleep in It is against reason to 2 Cor. 6. 2. sleep with the Sun shining in our faces In Gospel Ordinances the Sun of righteousness shines in the face of the soul it doth shed its warming and its winning beams upon us The Gospel is called bright John 3. 19. which is to rouse us not to rock us asleep It was once a sharp expostulation of our Saviour What could ye not watch with me Mat. 26. 40. one hour The same query may be put to every sleepy hearer 2. In Ordinances the work we are employed in is opus animae the souls work Will the prisoner fall asleep when he is begging his pardon What are we doing in prayer but suing out our pardons and making up our peace with our offended God The Heir will not fall asleep while he is Evangelium est sublustre quidcam et praegustus clarae lucis sive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. gloriae divinae Quae revelabitur in coelis Chrys hearing the Will read in which he is highly concerned the discoveries of the Gospel are the Fathers will concerning his Children and when we meet in Ordinances we are hearing this will and is that a time of sleep and drowsiness In Ordinances the case of our souls is agitated heaven and eternity are proposed life and death are set before us the silver trumpet of the Gospel sounds and is that a time of sloth and oscitancy Ordinances are the way to life the means of grace not onely the radicall moisture to preserve spiritual life but the very first means to beget it and shall we sleep in Ordinances When the wind blows right shall the mariner betake himself to his bed or to his tackle to drown himself in sloath or to hoise sail and trace the floating Idem sermo aliis est propi●iatio ad vitam aliis condemnatio ad mortem quae diversitas non verbo sed nostrae incredulitati debetur fic admonitiones exhortationes doctrinae castigationes quib●● delinquentes ad recipiscentiam vocantur contemptores et impaenitentes judicantur in die ultimo Muse waves Every opportunity of grace is a good wind for heaven and shall we sleep away that seasonable and precious gale How then shall we finish our voyage to eternity We hear Proclamations with great attention Every Sermon is Christs Proclamation to proclaim pardon to all penitent sinners who will come in and lay down the weapons of sin and lust and submit themselves to the Scepter and Obedience of Jesus Christ and shall we sleep in hearing this royal Proclamation It is very observable what awakening and heart-penetrating expressions the Prisoner uses at the bar and there is nothing unobserved by him but with much greediness and attention he hearkens to the Evidence of the Witnesses to the Verdict of the Jury to the Sentence of the Judge and no wonder it is for his life Now the word we hear it is that which shall judge us at the great day John 12. 48. By it our eternal estate shall be disposed either to life or death that blessed word shall cast or crown us and shall we sleep away this word Shall it not then condemn us for mutes and so to be pressed to eternal death Our life our peace our souls are all concerned in the entertainment of this word and we sleep and dream it away surely greater frenzy cannot befall the Children of men Sleeping in Ordinances is a great affront to the richest priviledge we enjoy on this side heaven The time of worship is the souls Term time a few choyce minutes to gain glory in and shall we sleep away these golden filings of time these sweet Veniente Christo mors vigebat et regr●bat sed Christus ejus vigorem et regn●m sustulit et destruxit Alap opportunities of the soul when Christ is wooing us to court us to a Crown Did we ever understand the true value of Ordinances 1. Ordinances they are the purchases and price of Christs blood that we have a Gospel to hear divine truth to entertain this is the Revenue of Christs death The Apostle tells us Christ brought life and immortality to light through the Gospel 2 Tim. 1. 10. Christ by dying brought this life Christ by descending into the dark grave brought this immortality to light And the Gospel is the full declaration of these glorious atchievements And Christ by his Heb. 10. 20. blood hath opened a new and living way for prayer to the throne of grace Heb. 10. 20. And shall a priviledge purchased with blood be slept away We will not throw away Diamonds fetcht from far with care and hazzard nor cast away Rings left us as tokens of love by endeared friends why should we sleep away opportunities not purchased with treasure but tears not with wealth but blood nay the best blood which ever ran in the veins of humane nature 2. Ordinances are the Benjamins mess which are given to few in the world some corners onely of the earth are guilded and guided by this light Hath God indulged us with these distinguishing opportunities and must they pass away from us in a dream This very ingratitude is not so much a trespass as a prodigy Shall Christ select us out to feast with Cant. 2. 4. Esth 7. 1. him in his hanqueting house as once the King selected Haman to feast with him with the Queen and shall we sleep at the table when we should feast upon Gospel dainties shall we drowsily throw away those seasons of love nay the best love which few in the world are honoured with 3. In Ordinances we have the offers of the sweetest grace Quia filius dei est vivus cum Patre et sp sancto deus et quia secundum humanam naturam ad patrem abiit et ad dextram patris est evectus et omnem in coelo et in terrâ potestatem accepit indeut verus deus verus homo preces credentium exaudit ac 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 orationem ex fide in Christum prosectam non exaudiri Ger. Prayer hath the key of the treasury door John 14. 14. where our comforts are banked up In hearing we have the gracious offers of Christ and in him of life and happiness and shall all these offers these paramount tenders of love be slept away Shall we shut our eyes shut our hands shut our souls against all these rich revenues freely proffered in Gospel dispensations Beasts by natures instinct will not sleep at the provender nor at their manger 4. Ordinances they are precious but transcient priviledges As we sometimes pass upon the water and view a stately structure but we quickly lose the sight of it our prospect is upon the speed so yet a little while and we shall pray no more hear no more enjoy
communion with God no more and shall we sleep away these golden yet gliding seasons Shall we drousilie pass away those streams of Gospel love which are alwayes running and being passed return no more Shall we be as rocks before the musick of the word when the instruments will soon be laid aside Shall we be as persons in a swoun before the calls of the word when those invitations will not last but our refusall proves our ruine Luke 19. 41 42. The sleepy hearer might have heard that Sermon which happily might have brought him home to the armes of Christ but now happily the offers of peace and reconciliation may be hid from his eyes Before his eyes were shut he was asleep But now the day is shut in and he may as our Saviour speaks Mark 14. 41. sleep on now the day will shine no Mat. 22 13. more but he shall be involved in utter darkness There are three things very much provoke the Lord 1. When we do not bring faith to an Ordinance Faith is Gen. 43. 5. the Benjamin which we must bring with us or never expect to see the face of God in Ordinances Isa 29. 13. 2. When we bring not the heart to an Ordinance but our thoughts are wandering and eccentrical 3. When we bring not our senses to an Ordinance but sleep hath chained them up and restrained them from their use and exercise Surely God will be much inflamed he cannot have the outward man at an Ordinance a supple knee a weeping eye an attentive ear now as unbelief seizeth upon the faculties of the soul and pinnions them up that they will not embrace the word so sleep surprizes the senses and fetters them that they have no liberty to entertain the offers of the word And it is an equal provocation to shut the eye at or turn the back upon the blessed Gospel Sleeping in Ordinances is not onely the imprisoning of the senses but the present suspension of our graces Sleep shackles body and soul too The drowsie hearer doth not onely stop his ear but stifle his grace too We are to bring divers graces to the Ordinances with us S●cut olla quae fervet non quiescit sed semper bullit in altum se erigit atque ignitas bullas et vapores sursum ejaculatur ita charitas continuò ad majora semper proficit et exilit atque persinceram institutionem orationem desideria et gemitas quasi vapores ad deum ascendit 1. Faith The word is to be mixed with faith Heb. 4. 2. Prayer must be the prayer of faith Jam. 5. 15. The Sacrament is only the pageant of an Ordinance if faith be absent 2. We must come with knowledge These blessed institutions they are the way to salvation but we must have an eye to see the way 3. We must come with self-denyal we must deny sinfull self and moral self to hear what God speaks in an Ordinance we must take down self to entertain Jesus Christ 4. We must come with zeal Every sacrifice in the Law was offered up with fire The Sun hath its heat as well as its light We must be fervent in spirit serving the Lord Rom. 12. 11. As the boyling pot is alwayes sending up its bubles and its fumes as the learned man most elegantly There must be an activity and liveliness in all holy worship we must be spiritual and spirited when we serve that God John 4. 24. who is a spirit Now sleep and drowsiness puts out the fire of our graces and suspends their actings so that there is neither Verbum dei mater nutrix fidei gratiarum smoak heat or glowing Sleeping in Ordinances it is a multiplyed sin it robs God of his time it keeps grace from the breast it is the Pent-house that keeps the showre from the heart that Doctrine cannot distill as the dew nor Mors brevis est somnus speech drop as the rain Deut. 32. 2. It shuts the eye of the understanding that for the present it cannot discern the glorious things of God Sleeping in Ordinances it pours contempt on the holy name of God We do not use to sleep if we are upon our own work if it be but the hearing of a tale or the giving of a visit or the getting of a penny In our sales bargains merchandizings we are wakefull and vigilant enough then the eye is open the mind is intent and the tongue talkative all the faculties of the soul are summoned to attendance we will not sleep in the Change if it be onely to hear a piece of news in our fruitless discoursing worldly bargaining courtly visiting luxurious banqueting though we sit on the softest Couch and talk of nothing but novelties and vanities pride and fashions and our language is nothing Imperuestigabiles divitiae Christi sunt copia gratiarum et bonorum quae Christus nobis attulit Alap but a vain parenthesis yet all this while no sleep seizeth upon our employed senses but when we come to transact our soul affairs when the unsearchable riches of Christ Eph. 3. 8. are telling out those Summs which will enrich the soul to eternity when we have opportunities for spiritual gain to advantage our inward man to grow Incomprehensibiles divitiae sunt Christi divitiae Ambr. rich in the jewels of grace and holiness then Nature lets down her Port-cullis as if it was a midnight vacation and we fall asleep as if we were wholly unconcerned in those spiritual transactions What a dunghill of vanity is the corrupt Divitiae Christi speciales sunt remissio peccatorum justificatio regeneratio resurrectio et vita aeterna Zanch. nature of man The Husbandman will not sleep with the plow in his hand nor the Pilot in the steerage of his ship the Shop-keeper falls not asleep in the vending of his wares nay the Guest will not sleep in the eating of his Viands but the careless Christian will sleep when Christ comes to give him a visit in holy Ordinances and he is in the divine presence hearing something which concerns his eternity But as the Apostle angrily expostulates with the Corinthians Have ye not houses to drink in 1 Cor. 11. 22. So may I say 1 Cor. 11. ●2 have ye not houses to sleep in and beds to rest on Must Gods Ordinances be undervalued and disesteemed by your shamefull sloth and drowsiness And when the Minister is opening the transcripts of Gods heart in Gospel dispensations must all be buried in silence and rejected by a dronish and sloathfull contempt Ah! how prodigal is stupified man of his soul which shall live as long as God himself Sleeping in Ordinances is a most dangerous and desperate adventure Whilst thou sleepest away a Sermon happily that very truth was delivered which might have converted thy soul thou knowest not when that plaister will be spread which shall cure the wound of sin The means of Grace are called a
day of Salvation and there is a particular hour in that day for thy Conversion it may be thou sleepest away Luke 19. 42. that very hour Amber-greece is not cast on the shore every day though sometimes that precious thing is cast on the land Mariners have a wind which if they neglect they may hazard if not lose their Voyage Indeed conversion is a kind of wonder as blazing stars which are seen once in an age and wilt thou sleep in Ordinances when happily this wonder is to be wrought Wilt thou for the sloth of an hour venture the pains of eternity If Zacheus had not Luke 19. 5. climbed up into the Sicamore-tree in that very season to see Res mira legimus sanè in Evangelio dominum fuisse invitatum ad eos accessisse sed quod ultrò ad convivium se ingesserit nunquam legimus solummodò ad hunc principem Publicanorum Ger. Christ possibly salvation had never come to his house If thou belongest to the election of Grace thou hast thy hour thy Sermon this opportunity for thy turning to God The Man-child lies long in the womb but it is brought forth in a moment How should we take heed that we do not sleep away that moment when our salvation should be brought to the birth Happily there is some way of wickedness thou walkest securely in some necessary duty thou livest in the neglect of some sore temptation thou groanest under and grapplest with Now if thou art asleep when these things are pathetically and powerfully spoken to thou maist live and dye in the practise of that sin thou maist fall and sink under the power of that temptation and so eternity may be spent in bewailing one hours folly Now for the avoidance of this God-provoking sin 1. The most plausible excuse which gives the fairest colour to it to varnish it over shall be examined 2. Some ponderous considerations shall be laid down to be weighed in the ballance 3. Some seasonable Directions shall be suggested to be followed and pursued The great excuse which seems to cloak and disguise this sin is this some guilty of this sin usually plead It is true we sometimes forget our selves or an Ordinance and fall asleep but this is our natural weakness not our moral wickedness our grief it is but not our guilt we combat with it but we cannot conquer it it is our infelicity and our bemoaned misery our piece of clay is heavy and will be seeking rest and sometimes in Ordinances and we must cast our selves upon our Saviours indulgent Interpretation The spirit indeed is willing but the flesh is weak Matth. 26. 41. To this specious pretence and usual plea it is answered Possibly natural weakness may be the true cause of sloth and Haec infirmitas carnis in renatis adhuc reliqua perpetuò ob oculos nobis versatur ne fiduciâ propriarum virium inflati animo efferamur Corpus est ergastulum animae Plato sleepiness in Ordinances not so much the remissnesse of our minds as the indisposition of our bodies the pile of dust our souls are cloystred in drops into our eyes and we are rockt asleep And it may likewise be remembred that the senses are attendants on the body and Lacquies to the commands of it and no wonder if the eyes be locked up when the body will be indulged or the indisposition of it demands a truce or cessation But yet there are many things which conscience can only answer in this Case Is our drowsiness in Ordinances customary or casual accidental or habitual It is very true the Saints themselves are obnoxious to accidental falls and follies the Sun is subject to ecclipses but very rarely the best and most stately Ship may run a ground and in this particular a Believer may fail he may shut his eyes when he should act his grace at an Ordinance The Disciples slept when Christ was praying at a little distance The wise Virgins slept as well Luke 22. 46. as the foolish Math. 25. 5. A real Saint may drop asleep Matth. 25. 5. in a Pew or in a Seat as well as Jonah in the Ship or Christ John 1. 5. in a Bark A believers eyes may be arrested with sloth Matth. 8. 24. when his ear should be attending its office But this is casual Is this unseasonable drowsiness an inevitable pressure or is it caused by our own miscarriage by indulging our sensual appetite by overmuch vigilancy in worldly affairs or by the intemperate use of Creature-comforts If so never impute it to natural weakness This is all one as if by intemperance Qui spiritum habet promptam carnem mortificat qui segnis est eandem saginat Origen Luke 21. 36. one should contract the Palsie and say the Disease is the consequence of his Constitution As Grace is the Mother so abstinence is the Nurse of watchfulnesse but if we drown our sense in an undue over-plus it is no wonder if we be in a dead sleep at Ordinances Let us impartially examine the cause of our drowsiness Have we used all proper remedies against this sinful and unseasonable drowsiness Have we prayed wept mourned and struggled against it Have we kneeled in the Closet Non nobis blandiamur sed caro serviat spiritui infirmior fortiori ut ab eo etiam fortitudinem ipsa assumat Tertul cryed in the Chamber beforehand that this destructive sloth might not seize upon us No wonder if Sampson sleep if he lie in a Dalilahs lap It is a good saying of Tertullian Let us not flatter our selves saith he but let the flesh serve the spirit the weaker serve the stronger the more contemptible obey the more honourable that the weaker may receive strength from the stronger The wound is not cured without a Plaister Have we used methods of Grace for the cure of this sleepy Lethargy If not our sleep in Ordinances is our sin our provocation and no way our infirmity and let us not charge constitution but conscience No wonder if the Disease grow upon us if we neither use Physick nor Physician Do they suppose who practice this they call the infirmity of the flesh that they could sleep in the midst of their secular affairs and shall we be more vigilant for earth than Heaven for a poor piece of clay than for a piece of eternity our immortal our never dying souls Shall the meanest parenthesis of our lives keep us waking and not the great importances of our better part This in the close will be Heb. 2. 3. found to be our folly and no way our excuse Did we ever weigh the value and worth of an Ordinance Is it not a golden opportunity a fresh tide of mercy and shall we lose our tide for a little unseasonable sloth In Ordinances Christ treats with us about our everlasting concernments and is that a time for the folding of our hands to sleep Must we be consulting our ease
in the soul he will then either suggest unto us vain impertinencies which may be as Sodoms pleasures to Lots wife to cause us to look back or so many golden balls to stop us in our journey towards the Heavenly Canaan or else this evil one will assail to rock us asleep and so sit heavy upon our eye lids he will bring doune and pillow for us to lean upon This is the stratagem of Satan if he cannot steal us from the Word to keep us back from Ordinances he will steal the Word from us to make Ordinances useless and unprofitable Mat. 13. 19. The souls term time is Satans tempting time When we are most busie about our souls he is most active against them he will make any musick to rock us asleep when we are discoursing with Jesus Christ The Syren sings sweetest when we are upon the waters sailing to our Port and Satan never sweetens his temptations more then when we are sailing heaven-wards and therefore when we sleep in Ordinances let us remember the Charmer hath swayed with us more then the Preacher A sleepy eye in holy Ordinances is a sad sign of a sleepy conscience if the eye be drowsie without it is much to be feared the heart is dead within It is very observable A fat Eph. 5. 14. heart a deaf ear and a closed eye are all coupled together Isa 6. 10. Grace is an awakening principle the power of grace will fix the eye in heavenly contemplation will bend the knee in humble supplication will lift up the hand in holy devotion will wind up the tongue in savoury communication Col. 4. 6. and will bow the ear in holy and carefull attention A gracious heart will even Quick-silver the body in Josh 9 21. holy duties and make the flesh serve the spirit and the Didicisse fidelitèr artes emollit mores nec sinit esse feros senses be as Gibeonites to the soul As the Arts soften us to ingenuity and will not suffer us to be brutish so a conscience awakened by a work of grace will keep the eye awake in Ordinances seriously considering 1. That every Ordinance concerns the soul 2. That every Ordinance may be the last 3. That every Ordinance is the purchase of Christ 4. That every Ordinance is a good wind for Heaven In a word The work of grace may very well be suspected where the means of grace are so much slighted as to be passed away in a sleep and a dream Let us consider there will be no sleeping in hell Here we sleep when we might awake there we shall awake when Si magnificum quid vides cogito regnum dei si terribil● cogita gehennam Chryst we cannot sleep we shall take no naps upon our bed of flames Scorching wrath screetching cries gnawing conscience will keep the reprobate waking Here we sleep unseasonably and let us take heed least we awake eternally and carefully beware least for want of watching one hour we lose our rest for ever There is no sleeping in heaven Rev. 4. 8. Now Ordinances they are the glimpses of heaven And it should be our endeavour to serve God here as the Saints and Angels do in glory there is no weariness no drowsiness no deadness there hallelujahs are pleasant and perpetual When we come to the Sanctuary we are about heavenly employment and let us study a heavenly deportment and let us ask our souls the question Would an Angel was he capable of it fall asleep when he converses with God And further to discourage us from the practice of this customary and crimson abomination let us observe a few quickning and awakening prescriptions Let us be instant with God beforehand for a suitable frame of spirit Was the heart tuned by preparatory prayer Preces preparatoriae sunt administratoriae the strings would not so soon crack in sleep and drowsiness a warm heart would cause a wakefull eye Neglect of preparation exposes us to wanton glances wandring thoughts and a sleepy eye in holy administrations Gardens if not digged and dressed bring forth weeds not flowers Let us converse with God in Ordinances as either employed in our Bibles or our Note Books we shall hardly sleep with a Book or a Pen in our hands If our eye was employed in Scripture search it would not suffer the eye lids those curtains to be drawn for sleep and sluggishness But oftentimes the shutting of the Book brings the shutting of the eye and if we stand idle in the market of Ordinances who will Mat. 20. 3. 6. hire us but Satan Let us fix a steady eye of faith upon God and the glorious Angels when we come to Ordinances We will not sleep in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sic exemplaria graeca 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sic Arias Mont. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sic. Vet. Lotin presence-chamber especially if the Prince and Nobles be there The blessed Ordinances are Christs Presence-Chamber his Court his Garden his Banqueting-House and shall we sleep in the presence of the King of Saints Nay the King of Nations as the Prophet calls him Jer. 10. 7. Nay the King of Ages as the vulgar Latine terms him this is not onely incivility but impiety Let us take heed of pampering Nature An over-free use of the Creatures on Gods holy day will lay us open to sinful drowsiness when we make Kitchins of our bellies the smoak will soon fly in our eyes and encline us to wretched and careless sleepiness When Lot was overcharged with Wine he soon sleeps himself into incest and wantonness Gen. 19. 34. Let us come to Ordinances expecting great things from God They are vigilant who are in a waiting posture Beggars Psal 123. 7. are not dormant if they are so in the Barn they are Psal 4. 7. not so at the door Let us come to Ordinances as to a Golden Mine the Miners do not sleep with the iron instruments in their hands Let us approach to the Sanctuary looking for grace loves smiles the kisses of Christs lips the light of Gods countenance and this will keep us wakefull Cold desires and mean expectations make us careless and oscitant in Ordinances We sleep not telling Pearls or picking Diamonds there are better riches to be found in Psal 63. ● Communion with God CHAP. XXIX Other Evils to be avoided in our outward behaviour when we come to the Publick Assembly WE must not rove in Ordinances As the eye must not sleep so it must not wander when the eternal Gospel is preaching or we are pouring out our souls in holy prayer to an infinite God It is recorded of Christs Auditors that they did fasten their eyes upon him Luke 4. 20. Luke 4. 20. We must bring a double eye to every Sermon Triplex est aspectus Christi 1. Vnus corporalis qui sit oculis carnis et hic per se non bea● 2. Spiritualis qui sit oculis fidei
His dread is of God Psal 119. 122. His love is to God Psal 18. 1. in every Ordinance he approacheth to God is the only object of his prayers Psal 5. 3. If he come to Sermons it is to Paulo quinto Vice-deo hear something of God and Christ John 10. 3. In Ordinances we must not worship men as the Samaritans worshipped Antiochus Epiphanes stiling him the mighty God or as the Venetians petitioned Paul the fifth Pope of Rome giving him the title of Vice-god nor must we worship the host of heaven as the Ammonites nor the Devill as the Indians nor Ezr. 9. 1. Zeph. 1. 5. Phil. 3. 19. Col. 3. 5. Jer. 50 2. Judg 2. 13. Acts 19. 28. 2 Kings 5. 18. Jer. 51. 44. Chemosh non potest defendere Moabitas à Babyloniis Nec aurei vituli Israelitas ab Assyriis Alap the belly as the Glutton nor interest as the Covetous nor the Cross as the Papists nor must we worship false gods not Belas as the Assyrians nor Baal as the Tyrians nor Diana as the Ephesians nor Juno as the Samians nor Rimmon as the Syrians but we must worship the great God the incomprehensible Jehovah God in Christ and him only must we serve In a word we must be cautionated against a threefold worship First We must not worship deos mortuos dead Gods images and reliques c. Nec deos mortales nor dying gods Men or Princes Nec deos mortificos deadly goods our swaying lusts and corruptions How necessary is it then for us to come with knowledge to holy worship that we may seririously apprehend that infinite Majesty that most glorious Being Psal 82. 7. Nahum 1. 5. at whose presence the mountains quake and the hills melt and this is the God the Jehovah Elohim with whom we converse in holy Ordinances We must act sincerely in holy Ordinances VVe must be hearty in our hearing we must not only bring the ear but Col. 3. 16. the heart to the truth of the word Truth must dwell in us Col. 3. 16. and must be not only our information but Luke 2. 19. our inhabitant it must be treasured up as well as attended to The truths of the Gospel are as so many Jewels and rare Pearls which must be lockt up The ear is only as the Verbum dei intromittatur in domicilium cordis nostri ac versetur assid●è in animis nostris Daven Psal 17. 1. Heb. 10. 22. Lam. 3. 41. Notandum est quod quae offeruntur in holocaustum interiora sunt quod exterius est non deo offertur ut pell● Orig. stall the heart is the Cabinet And indeed Satan can quickly pick truth out of the ear he can easily open that window but he cannot penetrate the heart that lock is only broke open by Omnipotency Truth is under lock and key safely secured when laid up in the heart and indeed it is never well housed till it is folded up in the soul And so we must be sincere and hearty in our prayers Tongue and heart must keep time and tune The Jews have this sentence written in their Synagogues where they meet for holy Ordinances A prayer without the heart is like a body without the soul God looks not so much to the Elegancy of our prayers how neat they are nor to the Geometry of our prayers how long they are but to the sincerity of our prayers how cordiall they are Thy prayers without thy heart will be a sacriledge not a sacrifice When the heart is Rector chori the chief leader of the quire then the voice is pleasant in Gods ear The heart though it be one of the least parts of man yet it is the best And as we must be sincere in our management of holy duties so in the ends we propose Acts 17 18. Some go to Ordinances as Athenians to understand some Mat. 22. 15. new thing some as Herodians to carp and to catch some to be gratified with ingenuity and wit as those who go to hear a noise of Musicians All these are as Children who Ezek. 33. 32. go to Fairs to buy toys and trifles But let us go to Ordinances to gather those flowers which grow in Eden to advantage our better part and to lay up treasure for our immortal souls We must act faith in holy Ordinances The Apostle avers it positively That without faith it is impossible to please God This grace is the incense in our sacrifices the rising Heb. 11. 6. perfume in all our offerings The hand of faith sprinkles the bloud of sprinkling upon all our oblations Faith is the Heb. 12. 24. eye of the soul to see the light of the Gospel faith is the hand of the soul to receive Christ offered in the Gospel Though faith be not the One thing necessary yet it is the chief thing necessary in all our duties and services This Si non unicum necessarium tamen primò necessarium est fides sacro sole●ni cultu efficox grace doth not only justifie our persons Rom. 5. 1. Purge our hearts Acts 15. 9. Nay espouse us to Jesus Christ Eph. 3. 17. But it doth sanctifie our duties and make them authentical and effectuall It is the believing soul alone enjoys an Ordinance profitably and performs a service acceptably he only feeds upon the tree of life in the Paradise of Ordinances We must act holy and ardent desire in holy Ordinances We must come to the Ordinances as the Hart to the brooks Luke 17. 37. Psal 42. 1. Fides quâ solâ apprehenditur Christus cujus justitiâ induimur verbi praedicatione procreatur conservatur Cartw. or as the Eagle which flyeth upon the prey or as the poor stooping Israelites who lapt at the water Judg. 7. 6. Indeed there are many desirable things in ordinances there is a desirable Christ desirable Grace desirable Life a desirable Soul to save a desirable heaven to ensure It may be added the Scriptures resemble this blessed work to whatever may inflame desire It is light for its pleasantness John 3. 19. It is honey for its sweetness Psal 19. 10. It is food for its necessity Job 23. 12. It is gold for its value Psal 19. 10. We live by it Mat. 4. 4. And we perish without it Prov. 29. 18. And let our desires answer all these allurements Indeed we should come to Christ in ordinances as the Bride to the bridegroom with joy and delight as the Husband-man to the Vine for a Vintage of satisfaction David rejoyced and triumphed in his own soul when the multitude called him to go to the house of God and indeed the Sanctuary is the Saints Bride-chamber on this side heaven And thus we see how we may every way deport our selves in publick ordinances and opportunities CHAP. XXXIII How we must improve the interval between the Morning and the Evening worship in the publick Assembly THE publick worship being over and the assembly
Isa 59. 2. Gods service and to waste any part of it upon our gains ease or pleasure is to rob God of his offerings which is Macrob. Saturn l. 1 c. 16. matter of complaint and condemnation Mat. 3. 8 9. While we make bold with Gods day we do but mangle it and every Illorum dierum quibusdam horis fas est jus dicere quibusdam fas non est jus dicere Macrob. waste is a wound in it Indeed Macrobius tells us That the heathens had their dies intercisos bipartite dayes which were divided between their God and themselves Semisolemnities And the Papists have their half holy dayes as St. Blacies day and others c. But we have not so learned Christ It was an excellent constitution of King Pepin of Abstinere in eo di● primò mandamus ab omni peccato et ab omni opere carn●li ●t ab omni opere terreno et ad nihil aliud vacare n●si ad orationem et ad ecclesi●s concurrere cum summâ mentis devotione Concil Forojul cap. 13. France We command saith he That all abstain from every sin and from every carnall work and from every earthly work and to be at leisure for nothing but prayer and Church assemblies with the greatest and highest devotion and with charity to bless God who upon this day rained down Manna in the desart and fed so many thousands with bread Morsels nay grains of time are savoury upon a Sabbath The soul can feed upon the crums of such a day Sabbath wastes are the throwing away pearls the casting over-board the best goods which might enrich us to all everlasting That time thou mispendest on a Sabbath might be Gods time for the calling thee home to himself CHAP. XXXVII Some further Directions conducing to the same End Dir. 6 LEt the whole man be employed on the Sabbath 1. All the parts of the body The tongue in prayer the ear in attending the knee in submission the eye in contemplation the hand in charitable contribution This Rom. 12. 1. would be a sacred symphony and make the body not only a a reasonable but an acceptable sacrifice 2. All the faculties of the soul must understand their several offices and tasks 1. The understanding must drink in truth as the tender Deut. 32. 2. herb the small rain and the new mown grass the seasonable Nondum in observatione externorum exercitiorum Sabbati plena est sanctificatio nisi eo fine quó institutum est ut piè sanctè et interiùs haec gerantur Qui est sabbatismus internus Leid Prof. Cant. 5. 16. showers Then the understanding must be as the lights of the Sanctuary of very great use 2. The will must embrace the Doctrines of the Gospel The understanding sees the commodity the will buys it The understanding fastens the eye upon the treasures of the Gospel but the will fastens the hand the understanding is the purveyor of truth but the will brings it home 3. The affections must be employed in pursuing Christ and in holy meltings in sacred duties the soul must be all afloat in loves and delights on Gods blessed day then our affections must follow the prey our dear Jesus our Beloved who is altogether lovely 4. The Memory must be the Scribe to set down every heavenly counsel every thing which drops from the heart of God As that King of Syria whose Ambassadours catched at every word 1 Kings 20. 33. The Memory must record every soul-concernment it must be the Exchequer where the riches of Ordinances are reposited and laid up And after all we must with the Virgin Mary ponder all those things in our hearts Luke 2. 51. Thus both soul and body must be Luke 2. 45. espoused in Sabbath service they must as Joseph and Mary go both together to seek Christ as the two Disciples which went to Emmaus both must joyn in conversing with Christ Luke 24. 15. Though the body act the part of Martha in Luk. 10. 29 41. the week and is cumbred with many things yet it must act Maries part on the Sabbath and mind onely the one thing necessary and lie at Gods feet in holy dispensations Body and soul on the Sabbath are as those two Disciples that went to Christs Sepulchre John 20. 4. but the soul is that Disciple which out-runs the other and comes soonest to the end of their Enquiry the soul comes quickest in and closest up to Christ Mariners observe that the two stars Castor and Pollux when they are asunder they prognosticate Intus est in corde est sabbathum nostrum August foul weather but when together they portend a fair and calm season so when we bring onely the body to the Ordinances of a Sabbath it portends nothing but sorrow and disappointment but when soul and body both meet in sacred duties upon this holy day it is a good prognostication Mat. 6. 24. of fair weather to the Christian smiles from above Luke 16. 13. and peace from within In the duties of a Sabbath we must study devotion but not division we must not think to please the flesh and to please the Lord too on his own day Direct 7 Works of mercy do very well become the Sabbath This is a day of love and mercy If in the times of the Law the Law of Circumcision a painful Ordinance was not to be omitted Opera misericordiae nemo illo die facere prohibet ut sub v●n●re egeno curare aegrotum Opem consilium afflicto laboranti afferre Cujus cura illo die nobis maxime commendatur Rivet in Decal John 7. 22. Much more in the times of the Gospel a law of Love must bind us and oblige us on a Sabbath Love is under a Command as well as Circumcision John 13. 35. Rom. 13. 10. Mercy it is the very musique of Gods Attributes Psalm 108. 4. it is the Almoner to provide for mans wants it is the service of Angels Luke 22. 43. And it is the comely dress which sets off the beauty of a Sabbath That we have a Sabbath is an Act of divine mercy and we cannot duly keep a Sabbath without employing our selves in the works of mercy Tertullian in one of his Apologies joyns Prayer reading of the Scriptures and giving Almes together as being all equally the duties of a Sabbath With him joynes issue Learned and profound Huc referenda sunt reliqua misericordiae opera quibus sabbatum minime profanatur Just Mart. Chemnitius who speaking of the Church of Brunswick saith That upon the Lords day a great multitude of people are gathered together to praise God to hear his Word to receive the Sacrament to holy Prayer to give Almes and other exercises of godliness Thus Charity is mingled with other holy duties Gualter cryes out Let us admire the goodness of God in giving us a day of Rest and shall not our bowels Dei bonitatem exoscul●mur
19 20. But to reconcile man to man is the duty of every real Christian and a work most agreeing to the sweetness of a Sabbath a duty crowned with the promise of the greatest royalty Mat. 5. 9. The day of Christs Resurrection our blessed Sabbath was a reconciling day It reconciled truth to the Promises Mat. 20. 19. Mat. 27. 63. Mark 8. 31. Mark 10. 34. Luke 24. 7. John 20. 9. it was the accomplishment of the reconciling work of mans Redemption And on this day the soul of Christ was re-united to his body which was at a distance before No work then more befits the Lords day then the healing of divisions and the praying down animosities between Christians On this blessed day we must endeavour to resolve doubtfull Christians Doubts are the wedges in the soul which both wound and pain to pluck out these wedges by Scripture Qui disceptat dubitat s●n● licitum necne si manducat peccati damnationis incurrit rectum force is a duty becoming the best of days A doubting Christian is upon a rack he is as a ship upon the Sea in the night he fears he shall either dash upon the rock of errour or sink in the quick-sands of mistake he wants the Pilotism of a knowing and faithful Christian he tosses to and fro and knows not how to come to harbour Now it is spiritual love and charity to relieve this naval pilgrim Oecumen Doubts are not only painfull and vexatious but harmful and noxious 1. They are the enemies of faith Mat. 21. 21. 2. They are the evidences of frailty Mat. 28. 17. 3. They are the hazard of the soul Rom. 14. 23. 4. They are the disobedience of a positive and peremptory command Luke 12. 29. And 5. They cat out all the profit of prayer 1 Tim. 2. 8. Haesitantiae opponitur fidu●ia quae necessaria est omni oranti Doubts like cares they are the thorns of the soul which rend and tear the minde with convulsions and distractions And therefore the Apostle is so urgent in his command Rom. 14. 1. That new and crude Professors be not admitted to doubtfull disputations that was the way to unhinge Mark 11. 24. them from the faith and to take them off from the profession of Christianity which would seem nothing to them but a labyrinth and a maze wherein men may lose but not save themselves This is charity then becoming a Sabbath to satisfie the doubts of poor trembling Christians and to become as a harbor to a tattered bark Thus ye have seen the severals of that spiritual charity which the meanest Christian may give and the humble if wanting Christian will receive Another direction for the better observation of the Lords day may be Let us seek God in Ordinances Ordinances Direct 8. are only an empty cloud unless the presence of God melt them into a fruitful shower David saw the power and glory of God in the Sanctuary Psal 63. 2. Ordinances are breathless institutions unless God breathe the breath of life Gen. 2. 7. into them The spirit must stretch himself over them as the Prophet did over the child before any life will come 2 Kings 4. 35. In hearing God must open Lydia's heart Acts 16. 14. In praying God must open our mouths that Psalm 51. 15. we may shew forth his praise The Sacrament is a gaudy Psalm 119. 18. pageant if God be not present what do we drink if not John 6. 55. Christs bloud what do we eat if not Christs body It is the presence of God makes an Ordinance the living child 1 Kings 3. 22. otherwise it is no more then the dead child or a spirituall abortion The divine appearance sweetens fills sanctifies and makes effectual every Ordinance David loved the habitation of Gods house but it was because that was the place where Gods honour dwelt Psal 27. 4. When men go to a certain place to meet a friend and they miss him they return sorrowful and discontented Christ is thy friend Cùm dei gloria in Christo in Evangelio quasi in speculo intuemur per hoc quasi in eandem dei gloriam trans●●rmamur speculantes i. e. per speculum videntes non de speculâ prospicientes Aug de Trin. who is to meet thee at Ordinances if thou miss him go home sorrowful Ordinances without God they are a table without meat and so a living soul may depart hungry and thirsty Sometimes Ordinances are compared to a glass 2 Cor. 3. 18. Because therein the Christian beholds the glory of the Lord. Let us hear the language of the Psalmist Psal 84. 2. My soul longeth yea even fainteth for the Courts of the Lord my heart and my flesh cryeth out for the living Lord. Therefore David longed for Gods Courts because the Lord was in those Courts Sometimes the sweet Singer of Israel compares his desire to thirst of which creatures are more impatient then hunger Psalm 63. 1. Sometimes to the thirst of a Hart which creature being naturally hot and dry in a very great degree is exceeding thirsty but still the object of his thirst is God Psal 42. 1 2. It was communion with God in his life love and graces nay in his comforts which the Psalmist breathed after the sweet smiles of Gods face the honey dews of his Spirit this was Davids Paradise of pleasute and his heaven below When we go to Ordinances let us with Moses go up into the Mount to converse with God there It is God in the Word causeth efficacy It is God in Prayer causeth prevalency It is God in Meditation which causeth suavity It Psalm 104. 34. is God in a Sabbath causeth complacency When we go to the waters of the Sanctuary let us say as Elisha to the waters of Jordan where is the Lord God of Elijah 2 Kings 2. 14. So where is the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Where is thy Chariot O Sun of Righteousness why is it so long Judges 5. 28. a coming why tarries it what clogs the wheels O when wilt thou come to me Let us look on all holy duties and performances as boats to ferry our souls over to God Saul himself was sad and sorrowfull when he enquired of the Lord and the Lord answered him 1 Sam. 28. 15. Indeed God is not onely the Master but the Marrow of a Sabbath and no Lords day can satisfie without the Lord of the day Antiquus dierum Christus est Ille enim corporaliter visibiliter judicabit vivos et mortuos Christus ideò vocatur Antiqus dierum ut ejus describatur Majestas et aeternitas Hieron what is the best time without the Rock of eternity What is the best day without the Ancient of dayes What are Sermons Sacraments seasons of grace without our Beloved They are nothing but broken Cisterns glorious dreams gilded nothings embalmed hearses and as a perfumed corpse Ah
men defile not enjoy an Ordinance John 17. 21. They are spots not guests in that holy Feast It is onely the spiritual man is fit for converse with God Princes converse not with Beggars nor God with sinners Christ in his incarnation tabernacled with the Sons of men John 1. 14. But in his communion he converses with the Sons of God he gives his people the meeting Mat. 18. 20. The Sun shines upon the stars and they reflect its light with a glittering rebound Christ when he arose again gave not the meeting to the world but to his Disciples Luke 24. 36. And so in his blessed fellowship he visits not the formalist but the Saint Christ in his ordinances influences his living Eph. 1. 22 2● members not glass eyes the speculative Atheist not painted faces the varnished hypocrite not ' wooden legs with the silken stocking upon them the spruce and self-deceiving moralist who with Agag are ready to depose the bitterness 1 Sam. 15 32. of death is over We must be on the Lords day in grace actual On the Sabbath the soul is to be set on work in acting several graces and some seem to be of a different nature As faith and fear heavenliness of mind and humbleness of heart repentings for sin and relyings on God tremblings of the soul and restings on Christ a real longing for promised mercies and yet a quiet staying for those mercies promise by hope expecting good things to come and yet by faith possessing those things at present This embroydery of grace must be on the heart of Lam. 3. 26 a Saint upon the Sabbath One of the Ancients compares Greg. Mor. l. 19. sect 30. holy men upon Earth unto those holy Angels of Heaven Rev. 4. 8. that are said to be full of eyes within and without In the week the Saints must use their eyes without Psal 77. 6. looking after their necessary callings and their occasions in Hos 6. 3. the world but upon the Sabbath they more solemnly set Ex cognitione dei omnia utriusque tabulae officia tanquam ex fonte promanant et eatenus placent quatenus illam praelucentem habent Riv. on work their eyes within looking inward upon the estate of their souls knowledge must open its eyes and repentance must drop its tears every grace must be in ure and exercise Indeed the Sabbath is the proper season for the acting of our several graces working as Bees in a Hive making honey of every ordinance Sorrow and confession must begin faith and prayer must carry on and holy thanksgiving must conclude the duties of a Sabbath Our hearing the Word must be introduced by holy appetite and desire we must long to be in the Courts of God It must be entertained Psal 84. 2. Luke 8. 1. Heb. 4. 2. Mat. 13. 19. by faith and affection it must be improved by zeal and an holy conversation our lives must be comments on Gods sacred truths and so all other ordinances of the Sabbath must be the sphears for our graces to move in as stars in their Phil. 1. 27. Orbs and this is to be in the spirit on the Lords day Let us study to be in the comforts of the spirit upon the Lords day The joyes of the Holy Ghost are the musick of heaven below the hearts rapture paradise in the bosome the sweet earnest of future blessedness they are the ecchoes of assurance and the reverberations of a good God and a good Conscience Spiritual comforts hath many springs but all most pleasing and complacential They are the comforts of God 2 Cor. 1. 3. who is a fountain above us The Father of mercies leaves a seed of joy in the soul They are the comforts of the Holy Ghost Acts 9. 31. who is a blessed spring within us John 7. 37. shedding those grateful streams of peace and joy which drench the soul with unspeakable delight They are the comforts of the Scriptures Rom. 15. 4. which are as sweet Gardens without us every promise being Consolatio omnis nititur promissionibus gratuit● Dav. as a sweet rose every truth being as a flower of the Sun and every threatning being as wholesome worm-wood in this salvifical garden They are the comforts of the Saints Col. 4. 11. which are as lights about us for our more comfortable passages to Sancti nos solantur invisendo condolendo necessitatibus nostris administrando et miserrimas nostras conditiones sublevando Dav. our rest and happiness Communion of Saints being not only an article of our Creed but an helper of our joy in our travels to Canaan But to return to the comforts of the spirit Gods people may find soul-refreshing comforts in Christ the Lord upon his own day and the measure of their comforts may mount their souls so high as to make them like Moses upon Mount Pisgah viewing Canaan the heavenly Canaan flowing with that which is better then milk and honey the soul of a sincere Isa 51. 12. 2 Cor. 1. 4. Luke 2. 29. Isa 56. 7. Christian may swim in a sea of sweet delight he whose heart hath been as a boat which could not be got up all the week because of low water yet may be brought up in an high spring tide of spiritual comfort upon the Lords day being ready to say with Old Simeon Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace Luke 2. 29. the soul may be so Psal 94. 19. Isa 57. 18. filled with joy upon Gods holy day in his house of prayer that he may be ambitious of his eternal Requiem in the bosome of Christ Nay upon the Lords day a believer being in the spirit the worst evils may amplifie his best comforts to think of sin remitted hell removed death vanquished devil Gen. 42. 38. conquered all these make for him that he may go down with Jud. 14. 14. joy and triumph to the grave Out of every eater comes meat the upper and the neither springs run all into the Josh 15. 19. same stream of comfort to the Saints Every thing on a Sabbath is an occasion of spiritual joy to them If they look up Isa 29. 19. to God they will joy in the Lord Rom. 5. 11. If they consider Isa 35. 2. the season of a Sabbath that is the time nay the term Isa 52. 9. time for the soul which is matter of joy nay as the joy of harvest Isa 9. 3. If they glance at the word they receive the word with joy Luke 8. 13. If they act their graces this is with joy unspeakable and full of glory 1 Pet. 1. 8. It was a brave speech of a Martyr to his cruel tormentors Work your will upon my weak body as for my soul it is in heaven already and over that Caesar hath no power So it may be the case of a Christian upon a Sabbath he may be as in heaven beginning his triumphal hallelujahs It is no
seasons of Per spiritum sanctum clamamus non voce sed filiali et fiduciali affectu Abba Pater prae dulcedine teneritudine amoris quasi teneri insantes qui charissimum parentem c. Alap our spiritual communion In Prayer we cry as Children to the Father In hearing we receive messages from our Father which relate to our inward man In our Prayer God opens his hand in our hearing God opens his heart Acts 20. 27. In Prayer we enjoy his bounty God gives us even to his own spirit Luke 11. 13. In Hearing we are admitted even to the Counsels of God in that forementioned text Acts 20. 27. In a Sacrament our dainties are the body and blood of Christ and he refresheth us not from his Cellars but from his Wounds Cast thy eye upon the effects of Ordinances what wonders hath that one duty of Prayer wrought 1. It is able to overthow enemies Isa 37. 36. Vtpote pueri balbutiantes blandulâ iteratâ voculâ compellare solent Pater Pater sic credentes c. 2. It is able to divert Judgements Plagues Pestilence Famine Sword 1 Kings 8. 57. 3. It is able to bring down mercies It is the key of Heaven Jam. 5. 15. It is the most efficacious engine in the world it can open the doors of the prison nay it can open the door of the womb Acts 12. 7. 1 Sam. 1. 10 20. 4. It is the sum of all wisdom strength and policy 5. It prevails against God himself Gen. 32. 26. Hos 12. 4. Exod. 32. 11. Isa 45. 11. 6. It can work Miracles so Joshua by Prayer caused the Sun to stand still in Gibeon Josh 10. 12. What amazing productions hath this one Ordinance caused May we not then say of those who undervalue Ordinances O foolish pieces of frenzy and ignorance who hath bewitched you Gal. 3. 1. that you should trample upon Pearls walk upon Amber and neglect so great salvation Heb. 2. 3. Cast thy eye again upon the tendency of Ordinances these stars lead us to Christ They are the womb of grace Rom. 10. 17. And grace is the heir of Glory Eph. 1. 14. When we Mat. 2. 9. converse with God in Ordinances we turn our faces Sionward Isa 51. 11. and we are travelling home The blessed Ordinances Isa 35. 10. are our fresh gales to carry us to our harbour of Rest they are the birth places of the Saints the ready way to the new Jerusalem therefore whoever thou art who callest prayer a vain breath hearing a dry attendance Sacraments empty meals retrench thy errour and let the love of Christ constrain thee to better thoughts of these blessed Seasons And let not a word be unseasonable to shew thee the cause and cure of this jejune apprehension of divine Ordinances These modern Ehionites who have so low thoughts of Christs institutions they are henighted with ignorance they Ebion sumpsit nomen suum ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pauper indigus quia misellam de Christo habuit opinionem do not know there is a God in Ordinances that they are animated by a divine spirit Who opened Lydia's heart in hearing Who pricked the heart of the Jewes Act. 2. 37. in the same Ordinance Who showred down the Spirit when the Assembly met for Gospel dispensations Acts 10. 44. when God rained heaven out of heaven Indeed Ordinances are the sphear where the Sun of Righteousnesse Mal. 4. 2. turns the waters where the Angel moves John 5. 4. And if the Angel move the waters heal but these inapprehensive sinners like Balaam see not the Angel Numb 22. 23. They are prejudiced by inexperience they cannot say with David Psalm 66. 16. Come and I will tell you what God hath done for my soul Pauls Companions did not see Jesus Christ they onely heard a confused noise Acts 9. 7. These unhappy sinners never tasted how good and gracious the Mat. 11. 23. Lord is in a sweet Ordinance they never felt the power of a truth they were never enriched with the flush returns of Psalm 34. 8. Prayer A Promise well pressed home and applyed never reverberated Acts 2. 37. upon their souls with influential joy they never Psalm 85. 8. had their hearts raised to Heaven in Gospel Revelation and 2 Pet. 1. 4. in the glorious discoveries of divine Love Blind men admire Nos transeramus affectus ad coelestem illam vitam oremus dominum ut panem qui d●●cae lo descendit l●rgia●● not the Sun The Indians more prize a log a gewgaw or a piece of brasse then Gold Gemms or Spices To them who have tasted Christ he is precious The converted soul saith of Ordinances Lord evermore give us this bread Such cry out O sweet Sacraments those divine festivals O fructiferous Prayer But now to cure this sinful and destructive mistake and to raise the price and esteem of Ordinances John 6. 34. Look on them as the means of Grace The Sun shines through the ayr and Christ works by Ordinances Preaching is not the breath of man but the power of God to salvation Rom. 1. 16. The Word is that immortal seed which is able to save our souls 1 Pet. 1. 23. These Oracles delivered in Rom. 3 2. Preaching are able to make us wise to eternal salvation It is the power of Ordinances raises us from the grave of sin 2 Tim. 3. 15. plants in us the flowers of grace causeth the day to dawn in 2 Pet. 1. 19. our souls If ever thou comest to heaven the wind of the Spirit John 3. 8. filling the sails of Ordinances will carry thee thither Look on them as the resemblances of glory Sitting at a Sacrament resembles our eating and drinking with Christ at his table in his Kingdome Luke 22. 30. the Communion Cant. 1. 12. resembles the fruition Let us then prize Ordinances which Matth. 11. 23. are the twilight and dawning of Glory CHAP. XXXIX The Lords day is a day of Rest but not of Idlenesse Caut. 5 LEt us take heed least we interpret the day which God calls a day of Rest to be a day of Idlenesse God gives us relaxation Exod. 31. 15. on his own day but it is not either for sport or sleep but for duties not for pastime but for prayer Our ground Quies non fuit ignavum otium ut Christiani nihil agerent sed ut divina curarent non sua Riv. lies fallow sometimes that we may plow it and sow it to the better advantage Rest is given us because the body and the soul cannot both well be employed together earth and heaven cannot both be minded together Now this divine indulgence must be a spur to holy duties and not our leave to play with lying vanities The Sabbath is a holy leisure our spiritual vacation to attend on the affairs of our precious souls Sabbatum est sabbatum cessationis
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
pandorize the Sabbath to our lusts and vanities what is it but to make God serve with our sins Or as our Saviour phraseth it To turn the house of prayer into a den of thieves Mat. 21. 13. Is it fit for the witch of Endor to put the Devil into Samuels mantle 1 Sam. 28. 12. And for wicked Ahaz to put the Idols Altar into Gods temple 2 Kings 16. 14 15. Indeed the same wickedness they act who make the Lords day vile and cheap by sinfull abominations which should be honourable Isa 58. 13. in holy worship and service and those adorations which become the Lord of the Mark 2. 28. Sabbath To vitiate the Sabbath by visible prophaneness opens a way to all licentiousness and will be bitterness in the latter end Sabbath-breaking is usually the preface to other sins The 2 Sam. 2. 26. breaking of the two tables commonly begins at the fourth Commandment we first make bold with Gods day and then with Gods name and so break the third Commandment and then we can trinkle in his worship and so violate the second and by degrees we can slide into thefts adulteries Deut. 5. 21. and murders and so dash all the Commandments in Isa 28. 8. pieces he will easily covet his neighbours Wife for wantonness Claudius Tiberius Nero vocatus fuit Claudius Biberius Mero propter ebrietatem intemperantiam Sueton. who will sacrilegiously arrest Gods holy day for his excess and drunkenness It is the observation of an ingenuous person That he hath heard many malefactors at their execution bitterly bewail their prophanation of the Lords day and humbly acknowledge that sin was the leading cause of all ensuing mischiefs and miseries At the Gallows their Conscience hath pointed at the very sin which had been the chief actor in their wofull tragedy When Satan hath prevailed with us to violate Gods holy day he hath got his head in and he will easily draw in his whole body Prophanation Gulones nihil faciunt nisi ingerere digerere et egerere Bern. of the Sabbath is the gates of Hell the foundation upon which all other sins are erected Indeed the carefull observation of this day is a chain upon the soul and ties it up from sinfull vagaries it casts an awe upon the heart that it cannot presently startle but when the chain is filed off there is no end of licentious ranges as Cattle when they are got out of the pound they run into every ones field This sin of Sabbath-breaking it is like a Serpent whose sting is in its tail Indeed sanctified afflictions turn a Serpent into a rod but Sabbath-prophanation turns a rod into a Serpent and brings the most prosperous sinner into unexpected calamity It is observable of the people of Israel that sighs and groans Exod. 3. 7. brought them out of Egypt and Songs and Vanities on Gods day brought them into Babylon The Hebrew phrase Ezek. 23. 38. in Ezek. 20. 13. is very expressive the same word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chalal which is rendred to pollute and prophane viz. the Ezek. 20. 13. Sabbath signifies likewise to tripudiate and dance as the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Daughters of Shiloh did Judges 21. 21. where the same word is used to denote unto us one method of the Jews in prophaning the Sabbath viz. They passed it away jocularly Psal 87. 7. in sinful frolicks and immodest vanities and this was one of the chief sins they might sit down by the waters of Babylon Psal 137. 1. Cyril and weep over It is undeniable that the prostituting of the Sabbath by prophane practices both hath and will ruine Gaud●ntius c. Judaei non deo sed sibi die Sabbati ociantur Muscul Nations Families Persons and dig the grave to bury all comforts in It was generally complained of by holy and devout men in the primitive times that the Jews neglecting spiritual duties which God commanded abused the Sabbath The Jews which were killed at Hierusalem by the command of Florus were 630. By the Inhabitants of Caesarea were 20000. at Scithopolis 30000. at Ptolemais 2000. at Alexandria 50000. at Joppa 8400. at Askelon 1000. at A●haca 15000. at Gariz●m 11600. at Jotopata 30000. at Gamala 9000. at the si●ge of Hierusalem 1100000 c. 1 Cor. 10. 11. to case and luxury and wasted that holy day in gluttony and idleness and idle delicacies and this accusation in the first times of the Gospel became proverbial so that to keep the Sabbath loosly was to keep it after the manner of the fews And what judgments God brought upon them in those dayes how he did scatter them unchurch them unpeople them and leave them to be a vagabond Generation to all successive ages who knows not is a great stranger to Antiquity It would fill a Volume to relate the several slaughters of them and their exiles from Nations France Spain England and other places so that even at this day their mask is their best security and their veil is their only safety The Quotations in the margin give in some evidence of the infinite slaughters which were made of them they were a prey even to all Nations as if they were only fit to glut the Sword of an enraged enemy Let us therefore observe the Apostolicall advice and take these perishing Jews for an ensample of Gods heavy displeasure against debauched practices on Gods holy day To serve our lusts upon a Sabbath is to throw off Jehovah and to serve other Gods The person who is intemperate on a Sabbath doth he not serve Bacchus The effeminate person doth he not serve the Goddesse Venus And Phil. 3. 19. the luxurious person he makes his belly his god He that In nostris ecclesiis diebus dominicis carnis voluptatibus profusissime absque ullâ dissimulatione servitur quemadmodum Judaei qui die Sabbati ociantur et libidinantur acta verò et studia carnis Baccho et Veneri luxui et sastui omninò deputan●ur Muscul prates away a Sabbath doth his devotion to Mercurius he that plays at Cudgels and wrestles in a seeming valour acts his service to Mars he that sports away the Sabbath in Courtships and caresses offers his sacrifice to Jupiter that wanton God whose effeminacies are the best part of the Legend we have repored by Pagan Historians Strict and holy communion only becomes a holy God on a holy day Musculus very piously and gravely cryes out Let us throw off all cloaks of dissimulation and if we spend our Sabbaths in the pleasures of the flesh let us never say we keep a day to the Lord Jesus but let us say we will worship Bacchus and Venus or some Idol God who is the Patron of such wickedness And indeed a Tavern or Alehouse on the Lords day is a fit temple for Bacchus a Stews or Whore-house is a fit Sanctuary for Priapus a Table full of vain chat is a fit
2. 10. 3. It was pressed with the same if not greater severity with the rest 4. It was laid up in the same Ark with the other Nine Quod pronunciatum Apostolus Christianis ad quod scribit applicat cujus veritas constare nequit nisi illud sub N. T. de quorti Praecepti transgressione locum habet alioquin en●m si in hoc praecepto nihil morale sit qui illud non servarit is non esset reus violatae ligis sed potius legis ejus rectus observator et Christianae libertatis rectus assertor Wal. and therefore we may fairly conclude that the same casualty which befalls the fourth most inevitably overtake the other nine Commandments This likewise is demonstrated by our Saviours assertion Mat. 22. 37. in his pressing love to God and our Neighbour as the sum and scope of the law which sum is moral and perpetual and includes the fourth as well as the other Commandments for how can we love God and not keep his day And we may likewise take notice that the total sum alwayes takes in every particular figure The learned Walaeus very well observes from that text of the Apostle James Jam. 2. 10. For whosoever shall keep the whole Law and yet offend in one point is guilty of all I say this learned man observes this injunction of the Apostle James could carry no weight with it and bear no stress if the keeping of the Sabbath by force of the fourth Commandment as well as the observing of the other nine Commandments was not necessary for then Christians might break this Commandment and be innocent nay rather be observers of Gods will and faithfull assertors of Christian liberty for that Commandment which now is not moral the breach of it is no violation of any Law and so no offence but who can see how the fourth Commandment slips out of the rest of the Law how comes this Pearl to drop from the Chain that this Precept should not require our conformity as well as the other Commands of the immutable Decalogue And how can the whole Law 2 Sam. 10. be observed if so important a Command as the fourth is be left to our liberty to break and violate And I may here reassume the forementioned Text Jam. 2. 10. how solicitous and carefull should we be to keep the fourth Commandment which is so considerable apart of the whole Law for offending in this one point we shall wrap up our selves in the guilt of the whole Decalogue and sin against the dignity and authority of the whole Law we shall be lyable to the same punishment as if we had scratched every Commandement This solemn text of Scripture might over-awe our hearts to a holy Violet homo totam legem et si non totum legis Accipienda sunt decem praecepta non disjunctim sed conjunctim et completivè tanquam una lex absoluta Justitiae et sanctitatis regula Dr. M. obedience to the Commandment of the Sabbath It is a notable observation of a learned Man The precepts of God are not to be taken disjoyntly but conjoyntly not severally but altogether as they make one entire Law and rule of Righteousness the contempt reflecting upon the whole law when it is wilfully violated in any part A grave and worthy speech The Decalogue is a body he who injurieth any one member wrongeth the whole body he who slights any one Commandment suppose the fourth sheds a dishonour upon the two Tables Besides there are many things in the fourth Commanment which loudly proclaim its continuance and standing morality The working six dayes which is the indulgence of the command speaketh it m●st just and equitable that we Justissimum est et aequissimun ei cujus toti sumus unum diem è septem co●secrare sex alios nostris laboribus concessit ●ùm tamen po●uisset jure suo c. Riv. should consecrate one viz. that day which remains to the service of God and there is nothing more agreeable to natural reason and justice as Rivet speaks and therefore to lay all dayes open to follow the byass and sway of our wills is most fantastick and irreligious and speaks the Assertours of such an opinion an irregular Sect and salt which hath lost its savour as a holy man calls them And that rule of Zanchy is most observable and authentical It is a most wretched and wicked thing to assert there are no dayes set apart for the more special worship of God and to despise those Imptum est et iniquum aut nullos esse dies divino cultui dedicatos asserere aut eos qui sunt contemnere Zanch. which are set apart to the same intent Nor can the sanctification of the Sabbath be ceremonial or vanishing for Prayer is as needfull for us as the Jews and so hearing of the Word receiving of the Sacrament and those Ordinances which fill up the Sabbath Moreover rest and refreshing for our selves and families for our Servants and Cattle is as well accommodated to the weakness of the flesh in the times of the Gospel as in the times of the Law To all which may be added that the great end of the fourth Opus creationis e●t opus stupendum immò 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Commandement viz. the serious consideration of the great and stupendous works of the Creation and so to be led to admire the Creatour the great Workmaster of this admirable structure of the World is no way unbecoming Christians Ratio praecepti quarti est quia sex diebus deus fecit caelum et terram die septimo requievit jam regula est ratio immutabilis facit praeceptum immutabile ratio hujus praecepti nunquam transitura est praeceptum ergo in perpetuum durabit Dr. Andr. Epis Winton nor heterogeneous to their vivid and holy speculations which are onely heightned to us by an additional argument of the mellifluous work of mans Redemption But to draw out the Answer no further It is most remarkable and to be noted with an Higgaion Selah that in the 31 of Exod. 14. God presently after the exhibition of the Decalogue the whole body of the ten Commandements singles out the fourth Commandement alone and tells the Jewes Ye shall keep the Sabbath therefore for it is holy unto you every one who defiles it shall surely be put to death for whosoever doth any work therein that soul shall be cut off from amongst his people It is a Sabbath of Rest holy to the Lord v. 15. The Children of Israel shall keep the Sabbath they shall observe the Sabbath throughout their Generations for a perpetual Covenant v. 16. How doth the Lord again again press the keeping of the Sabbath two or three times in one Verse and one Verse after another as if this was his darling Commandement and he took the greatest care of it and did give it the primacy over all the other Precepts And indeed
Great thus Carol. Mag. leg Ecclesiast lib. 6. cap 202. begins his solemn Edict to this purpose It is our pleasure that all the faithfull do reverently observe the Lords day in which the Lord rose again And his Son Ludovicus Pius in his Additionals repeating the self same constitution of his Ludovic Piu● ibid. Addition cap. 9. Father word by word doth onely add these words Therefore it is necessary that first Priests Kings and Princes and all the faithfull do most devoutly give all due observance and reverence to this day These Princes not more happy in the Kingdomes they governed then unhappy in the times they lived in yet had such an impression upon their souls as to see to the holy observation of the Lords day a day not dayes one day not every day This levelling principle never yet got into the Courts of Princes into the Sessions of Councils nay not into the writings of any famous Patriot of Religion no not into the worst of times when the Church wore her blackest veil In the reforming times of the Church when the Sun of truth brake the cloud of popish ignorance and idolatry then Calvin in Deut. conc 34. our great reformers who reformed by their Pens as well as by their Preaching all unanimously utter their complaints against the prophanation of the Sabbath day and press the Bulling in Apocal. Concion 4. observance of it but still it is one day not every day The Sabbath day which is more honourable and not week dayes Muscul Comment in Mat. 12. which are more inconsiderable And here I might cite Calvin Bullinger Musculus Aretius Walaeus Bucer Gualter c. Nay the Waldenses and the Albigenses those zealous assertours Aretius Prob. Theolog. Loc. 123. of divine truth in the midst of Popish rage and fury I might here mention the Parliament of Prague held 1524. Wal. Epist and the Synod of Dort in the fourth Session who petitioned Dedic ante librum de Sabbato the States that they would emit severe Edicts against sports and servile works upon the Sabbath day Thus every age of the Church commands the solemn sanctification Bucer de regno Christi lib. 1. of one day not every day of Gods day and not ours This fancy hath been an unheard of dream in every Gualt in 162. Homil. in Mat. century of Christianity The Scripture Church and State that three-fold binding Authority doth wholly disclaime it Histor Wald. et Albigens Part. 3. lib. 1. cap. 9. But to wind up all 1. There is Sabbatum internum an internall Sabbath which is a rest from sin for the more holy walking before God 2. There is Sabbatum externum an external Sabbath Quies dei fuit septimanâ Quies Judaeorum in Palestinâ Quies sanctorum in puritate quies glorificatorum in aeternitate Alap which is a rest from labour for the more solemn worship of God The first indeed ought to be perpetual but the second is temporary and continues only for the space of twenty four hours every week Now these two do not abolish but establish one another A resting from sin continually doth more fit us for a weekly Sabbath and the keeping of a weekly Sabbath doth more fit us for the resting from sin continually The Jews were to keep the internal Sabbath they were alwayes to rest from sin though they were commanded a seventh day Sabbath And so Christians must keep an internal Sabbath they must alwayes rest from sin though they are enjoyned the first day Sabbath the blessed Lords day Eph. 5. 11. These two are subordinate not contrary one to another and 2 Cor. 7. 1. to make them inconsistent that the internal Sabbath should God will have the external Sabbath for the beginning perfecting of the spirituall Sabbath V●s chase away the external is not onely gross weakness and mistake but it is Satans mine to blow up the Lords day which being lost Religion presently faints away and dies as take away the breast from the infant and it quickly dwindles away into the grave CHAP. XLIII There was a time when the Jews were exemplarily strict in Sabbath-Observation THis Treatise now spending it self and so drawing nearer to a conclusion the remaining task of it will mainly consist in pressing conscience upon the due and holy observation of the Lords day our Christian Sabbath Now to make way for the better accomplishment of this design I shall give the Reader as in a Landskip the Jewish practice on Exod. 20. 2. the Sabbath which indeed was sometimes very commendable when they did remember the Lord their God who brought them out of the Land of Aegypt and out of the house of bondage Exod. 20. 2. And we may well take our rise to this duty of keeping Gods blessed Sabbath from the advantage they give us It is true there were some seasons when Judaei spiritualia officia negligentes quae deus praecepit in diem Sabbati peragenda nefariè omiserunt otio et luxuriae in eundem diem se dederunt Gauden they were very remiss in the observation of Gods holy Sabbath especially not long before the Babylonish Captivity and in the Primitive times of the Christian Church then by their bruitish sensuality on the Sabbath they drew out the Pens of Christians and opened the mouths of Heathens but there were other times when their care of Gods day was written in a fair character and might inflame a Christians heart who hath any love to the Lord of the Sabbath Mark 2. 28. to a serious and a holy deportment on this sacred day Now to enucleate and set before you their practice on the Judaei Sabbata insumunt in crapulâ et ebrietate et infructuosis delitiis et voluptatibus Cyril Sabbath we should begin with their preparation to it for they were so exact that the best and wealthiest of them even those who kept many servants did with their owne hands further the preparation insomuch that sometimes the Masters themselves would chop herbs sweep the house cleave wood kindle the fire and such like as Buxtorf observes and which is very observable all the four Evangelists Buxtorf Synagog Judaic cap. 10. ex Talmud take notice of the Jews preparation day to their Sabbath But of this I have spoken largely already and so I shall pass it over for ingenuity forbids coincidencies and vain repetitions But to come to the Jews observation of the Sabbath a Mat. 27. 62. Mark 15. 42. Luke 23. 54. John 19. 42. learned man observes They dress no meat this day and therefore the Heathens heretofore thought they had fasted on that day And indeed a serious practice it was to keep down the body and prepare it for spiritual duties When the senses Aug. cap. 76. de jejun Sab. are cloyed the soul is much interrupted in heavenly converses Pampered bodies usually accompany pining souls The Sueton. Martial lib. 4.
Epigr. over-laying the fire with wood puts it out The Disciples plucked a few ears of Corn on the Sabbath Mat. 12. 1. to be patterns of modesty and temperance But I shall not insist on this practice of theirs it being rather their custome then their obedience however if from their dressing no me●t we would learn a spare diet on Gods holy day much sin would be prevented which is the blemish and shame of Christians But their carriage on the Sabbath was very remarkable which may be descried In the nature of their services Their services on a Sabbath are not only carnal to offer up sacrifices two Lambs of the first year two tenth deals of floure mingled with oyle the one for a burnt offering and the other for a meat offering to which was added a drink offering Numb 28. 9 10. But their services likewise were of a more spiritual nature 1. They had their thanksgivings to God that heavenly service Psal 26. 12. Psal 35. 18. They sung Psalms 2 Chron. 29. 30. which are the joyfull harmony of a devout soul nay the ninety second Psalm was composed on purpose 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the Sabbath as the inscription of it doth clearly inform us And it was the joy of the holy among the Jewes to be thus spiritually and seraphically employed Psal 84. 10. Ordinaria lectio illius Sabbati fuit locus ille Isaiae scil 53. et in eo fuit singulare consilium dei Chemnit 2. On their Sabbath the Scriptures were read Acts 15. 21. as was hinted before A New Testament quotation to assert it which is not omitted in the Old Deut. 31. 11 12 13. And our dear Saviour in the dayes of his flesh took advantage of this service for soul edification Luke 4. 17 18 19 20. and so did the Apostles Acts 13. 14 15 16. This service made way for glorious expositions and for new revelation 2 Chron. 30. 22. velation of the Divine Will and for apt and seasonable applications 2 Chron. 35. 2. 3. Besides the reading of the word the Jews used the Preaching of it on the Sabbath For the Priests office was to teach Mat. 2. 7. Deut. 33. 10. And they looked on it as a great misery when they wanted a teaching Priest 2 Chron. 15. 2. Or if they were unhappy in ignorant and unskilful Priests whose lips did not preserve knowledge Jer. 2. 8. Or such Priests whose lives contradicted their Doctrine Mat. 23. 1 2. And this preaching was either in the exposition of the words as they read them Nehem. 8. 3 8. Or else in an exhortation or as we call it in making a Sermon upon the words Luke 4. 17 18 19 c. Acts Luke 4. 31. 15. 21. Mark 6. 2. 4. They had their devout prayers on the Sabbath reverently Luke 13. 10. kneeling in an humble and submissive behaviour 1 King 8. 54. Psal 95. 6. 2 Chron. 6. 13. They did not only offer the Ezr. 6. 10. sacrifice of their lambs but the calves of their lips Hos 14. Acts 16. 12. 2. They did not only pour out their oil into their deals of floure Numb 8. 9 10. But they poured out their souls into the bosom of God Isa 56. 7. Their prayers usher'd in their services and most profitably wound up their duties A●urata sit exquisitarum sententiarum enarratio quae non summis incidit auribus sed per auditum penetrat in animum ibique firmitèr inhaereat Phil. Jud. And in the Conclusion of their holy exercices upon the Sabbath there was a blessing pronounced on the people 2 Chron. 30. 27. Levit. 9. 22 23. as the Lord commanded Numb 6. 23 27. And then the Congregation brake up Acts 13. 43. And the people departed Thus the services of the Jews on their Sabbath were not only ceremonial but spiritual Their ear was attentive in hearing their knee was bowed in praying their tongue was employed in singing and their heart was taken up in complying with every service of the day The Jews carriages were remarkable on the Sabbath in the design of their services which was to converse with God To Sabbatum datur ad consideranda dei opera Aben Ezra consider his works saith Rabbi Aben Ezra to be conversant in his service and worship saith Rabbi Kimchi to consult with his word and to pry into the more arduous and deep passages of it saith Manasseh Conciliator Nay the Hierusalem Talmud which I may call the Jews sacred Code a In Sabbato homo conversus à negotiis hujus mundi anima illius pura est ab occupationibus corporis et sese exercet in servitio dei Rab. Kimch system of their Doctrines Rites and Laws alloweth nothing to be the end of the Sabbath but divine meditation in the Law of God thus from the most approved of their own Authors we have what they aimed at in their Sabbath viz. To walk above the world in holy contemplation to go into the treasury of Gods word by serious inquisition and to wait upon the Lord of glory in humble adoration Their design was not the ease of the flesh Manasseh Conciliator calls it a notable errour to think so for idleness saith he is Notabilis error est otii ergo Sabbatum esse institutum Otium enim mater est omnium vitiorum Et sic plus sanè mali quàm boni ex Sabbato proveniret Sed Sabbatum est institutum ut homo expeditus et sepositis ●um animi tum corporis curis semet totum legis studio applicet et gravibus locis sacrae Scripturae de arduis quaestionibus interrogare Man Concil the Mother of all vices and this Learned Jew adds should we indulge our selves in ease and delight the Sabbath would have more evil then good in it Their design was not pleasing of sense the same Learned Manasseh tells us We must strip our selves of all incumbrances both of body and mind that with more freedom and activity we may apply our selves to Gods Law Isa 2. 3. Nehem. 8. 13. Now sense-pleasing is the rust of the mind the shackle upon the soul and the Canker of holy worship And it is the zealous expression of the forementioned Author That the whole man must be given up to God on his own holy Sabbath What more savoury could drop from a Christians Pen and what more serious could be breathed from a Christian heart And in writing after this Copy we may easily mend our hand The Jews carriage on the Sabbath was most remarkable in the exactness of their services 1. In the morning of a Sabbath John 8. 2. They began with private preparation as they were commanded Eccles 5. 1 2. 2. And they durst not adventure upon holy worship till they had reconciled themselves one to another Mat. 5. 23 24. Malice and Enmity were not to tread in Gods Courts Sabbata Israelitis non nisi ad meditandum in lege
would intervene And this day of Gods resting was not only exemplary to Adam but to all his seed and so to Christians as well as Jews the seventh in number though not in order And it is further observable that Adam had on him and so should all men have a double calling the one for his body for which he was allowed six dayes and the other for his soul for which the seventh day was ordained So then this observation of the Sabbath was no way disagreeing to the state of innocency Man in that blessed condition could not conveniently attend upon two things at the same time viz. the dressing of the Garden and the solemn worship of God And as one well observes If heaven it self be a perpetual Sabbath why should it be thought incongruous for man to keep a Sabbath in Paradise And indeed it cannot be incongruous that the Sabbath should be kept in Paradise when the Sabbath it self is a kind of Paradise there is something to resemble a tree of life here the soul tasteth of Sabbath Ordinances and life nay eternal life flows from them and the pleasures of a Sabbath not a little resemble the delights of Paradise The Rev. 1. 10. soul being in the spirit upon the Lords day much resembles Adams rejoycing in Paradise and no doubt but the sweetness of Paradise did most principally consist in the intimate communion Psal 63. 2. Adam had with God and the same communion sheds the delight and prerogative upon the Sabbath or else wherein doth the Sabbath out-vy and excell other dayes And that the Sabbath was instituted from the beginning is not only most clear from Scripture but most consonant to reason The Patriarchs of old had their solemn worship Cain and Abel offered sacrifices they called upon the name of the Sanctificavit deus diem septimum i. e. sanctum celebrem haberi voluit à caeteris diebus segregavit Catharin Lord in a solemn way Gen. 4. 26. And no doubt this they learned from Adam and he from God they had their Altars Gen. 12. 8. yea their set Altars Gen. 13. 4. for ordinary worship And if they had set worship they must have stinted time for how shall we meet together to perform ordinary worship without set times And then no doubt but the seventh day was that time for we have not the least shadow of any other ordinary time And it is very unlikely Gibbons Quaest disput in Genes Quaest tertiâ that if there had been any that no mention should be made thereof in Scripture therefore seeing mention is made of this day Gen. 2. 3. before mention is made of any publick worship and no other day is noted in all story till the 16th Willet on Exod. 16. Quaest 34. Voluit deus diem septimum sibi tribui et d●cari ut caelestibus et divinis rebus intenti deo gratias agamus pro acceptis beneficiis Cathar Chapter of Exodus where again mention is made of the Sabbath Exod. 16. 25 26 30. And the fourth Commandment ratifies the same day upon the reason assigned in Gen. 2. 3. It surely must be sufficient and satisfactory to all reason that the seventh day was the ordinary day appointed for those times to perform solemn and publick worship to God And as when man hath run his race and finished his course and passed through the larger circle of his life he then returns to his eternal rest so it is contrived and ordered by divine wisdom that he shall in a special manner return unto his rest once at least within the lesser and smaller Rom. 11. 33. circle of every week and so his perfect blessedness to come might be fore-tasted every Sabbath day and so be begun here And look as man standing in his innocency hath cause thus to return from the pleasant labours of his weekly Paradise employments so man fallen from his more toilsome labours to his rest again And therefore as because all creatures were made for man and man therefore was made in the last place after them so man being made for God and his worship thence it is that the Sabbath wherein man was to draw nearer to God was appointed immediately after the Creation as learned men observe For though man is not made for the Sabbath meerly in respect of the outward rest of it yet he is made for the Sabbath in respect of God in it and the holiness of it to both which then the soul is to Dr. Field have its weekly revolution back again as unto that rest which is the end of all our lives and labours and in special of all our weekly labour and work Dr. Field professeth That to one who knows the story of the Creation it is evident by the light of Nature that one day in seven is to be consecrated to Gods service and worship There must be a time allowed to every purpose which is Inest homini naturalis inclinatio ad hoc quod cuilibet rei necessariae deputetur aliquid tempus sicut corpori somnus et refectio c. quae requirunt tempus sic animae tempus requiritur ad ejus refectionem qua mens hominis in deo reficitur Sayrus necessary and indispensable so for our bodies there must be a time to eat to drink to sleep c. For civil affairs there must be a time for work and labour trade and merchandise to promote and sustain our civil interest and shall not there be a set time for soul-refreshments when the precious soul may be recruited Shall our Estates have their seasons for their increase and our Bodies for their support and not our Souls for their delight and edification What is this but to debase the soul and degrade it from its due honour and dignity The Image of God is most lively impressed upon the soul Eternity is riveted into the very nature of the soul Jesus Christ died for the Redemption of the soul and shall only the soul want its term its appointed season for its spiritual converse Shall there be a Change time and not a Church time shall there be a time to Work and not a Naturae instinctus est ut aliquid temporis cultui divino impendatur et animus in hoc se recreat Azor. time to Pray This is a principle of Nature and therefore draws its original from the worlds beginning Nor can it be conceived but the soul stood in as much need of communion with God in divine worship in the infancy as in the old age of the world and therefore the Sabbath was as necessary to Adam and his immediate heirs as to his more remote posterity That the Sabbath was from the beginning and so belongs Sabbatum Moyses Exod. 16. 23. scriptâ lege restituit cum ejus diei cultus abi●rat Azor. properly to the Sons of Adam and not particularly to the Sons of Abraham is more evident and clear if we
naturalis aeterna immutabilis Alap But the Sabbath went over Christs grave for Mat. 24. 20. Christ commands his Disciples to play that their visitation be not on the Sabbath day which visitation was many years after Christs Ascention to the Father So then the Sabbath survives after the decease and Funeral of all legal Ceremonies By the coming of Christ the Sabbath suffered a change but not a loss the circumstance of time was altered but the substance of the command was no way impaired the Sabbath did only slide down upon a new and most glorious occasion from the seventh day to the first The Commandment for the Sabbath hath not so much as any character of a Ceremony in it It was not typical it did not praenote any thing to be accomplished under the Gospel If that fancy of the Jewish Cabala be true that the world shall continue but 6000 Quartum praeceptum est morale quatenus praecipit ut e septem diebus unum consecremus cultui divino et quotenus tale nunquam abrogari potest Zanch. years and then the day of Judgment shall follow it might prefigure that and yet no Ceremony proved for the type must continue till the thing typified be fulfilled so this rather evinceth the duration then the abrogation of the Sabbath The Sabbath hath no particular relation to the Land of Canaan the proper place of Ceremonies nor yet to the Jews the proper subjects of Ceremonies and this hath been proved before But now if it be objected that the Sabbath was a sign between God and the Jews Exod. 31. 13 17. Ezek. 20. 12 20. It is answered the Sabbath was at that time a mark of difference and separation betwixt the Jews and the Gentiles But was it so as a seventh day No Eos à quibus deus non celebatur merito ipse neglexit Aug. de Civit. dei l. 2. c. 14. that which caused the distinction was the sanctification of them upon that day not any thing in the number seven Gods seposing of a time for them and only for their sanctification was an argument he had a more special care of them then of other Nations and they were his only people It was not imposed upon the Jews as any burden or yoak The Sabbath is a day of joy not toil our blessing not our I● praefatione quarti praecepti ita deus alloquitur Israelitas speciatim ut in eo tamen omnes gentes comprehendat Beza burden In the explanation of the fourth Commandment it is rather recited as an Ordinance of comfort and refreshing of mercy and favour and not of rigour and severity of depression and servitude The Sabbath in its own nature is a day of relaxation to the body and of reviving to the soul a day of unbending the bow to the outward man and of heavenly visits to the inward man there is no knot in the cord to hold out any sharpness in this blessed Ordinance the Sabbath is our term not our task-master On a Sabbath we are not sent out to make brick without straw we are not to perform duties without promises of assistance Rom. 8. Exod. 16. 29. 26 27. without promises of acceptance John 14. 15. If we put our selves upon meeting Christ that day he hath engaged himself Mat. 18. 20. to give us the meeting The Sabbath is not a task but a gift Ezek. 20. 12. not a symptom of servitude but a sign of love Ezek. 20. 12. The golden knot between God and a people and not the iron chain The Sabbath was not commanded in recognition of any special favour shewed to the Jews it was a memorial of Gods creating the world in six dayes and his own resting on the Gen. 2. 3. seventh But this being a benefit wherein all mankind are Per Sabbata quasi per elementa omnes discerent deum creatorem et gubernatorem omnium Alap equally concerned and enter common the Jews can claim no property therein peculiar to themselves and so yet there is no tidings of a Ceremony and so no cause of abolition One very well observes that seeing the same Authority is for the Sabbath as is for marriage one may as well conclude the Law for marriage is Ceremonial as well as the Law for the Sabbath nay we may seriously consider that whereas Mat. 19. 6. marriage is but once termed the Covenant of God Prov. 2. 17. Levit. 23. 3. because instituted by God in the beginning the Sabbath Deut. 5. 14. is every where called the Sabbath of the Lord thy God because Exod. 20. 10. ordained by God in the same beginning both of Exod. 16. 29. Time State and Perpetuity and therefore no way Ceremonial It is a truth as unmoveable as the pillars of Heaven that God hath given to all men universally a rule of life to conduct them to their end now if the whole Decalogue be Gal. 2. 20. not it what shall be The Gospel is a rule of our faith John 5. 24. but not of our spiritual life which flows from faith the Law therefore is the rule of life now if nine of these be a compleat rule without a tenth exclude that one and then who sees not an open gap made for all the rest to go out also For where will men stop if once this principle be laid that the whole Law is not our guide and conduct May not men justly say the Decalogue is not a rule of life and so a way laid open for all looseness and enormity and if the Sabbath be a Ceremony we have but nine Commandments left Nor would the Scriptures make so much ado about a Ceremony there is no part of Scripture wherein their is not something remarkable about the Sabbath The institution of it we find in Genesis where the Sabbath Gen. 2. 3. is one of the best flowers in the Garden of Eden The solemn promulgation of it we meet with in Exodus Exod. 20. 8. when the mountain smoaks fire flames trumpet sounds at Exod. 19. 17. 13. the second Edition of this perpetual statute The manner of the sanctification of it we may take notice Levit. 16. 3● of in the Book of Levitious God there turns paraphrast for Levit. 23. 3. the further dilucidation of this law The prophanation of it is vindicated in the Book of Numbers Numb 15. 3● where God builds a wall about it with the stones which stoned the man who gathered sticks upon that blessed day The pressing arguments for the sanctification of it we may Deut. 5. 14. observe at large in the Book of Deuteronomy God knowing the advantage of Sabbath-holiness presses man urgently to pursue his own interest 2 Kings 4 23. 2 Kings 11. 5 7 9. 2 Chron. 36. 21. 1 Chron. 9. 32. The historical part of the Bible hath some remembrance of it either as observed or prophaned There is in the Book of Psalms a Psalm
hath gone before us to open a way to us Certainly when God hath once determined the proportion of time it is so far to be accounted moral and perpetual that it is to hold till God himself shall alter it and as for the particularity of the day according to the forementioned proportion therein we should be far more to seek were we left to our selves therefore this also is ordered by God himself and that in great congruity as appears Exod. 20. 11. to as many as are acquainted with the story of the Creation for the Lord having dispatcht all his works in six dayes and resting on the seventh commanded men to imitate him This being thus ordered by the Lord of the Sabbath Mark 2. 28. it must be in force of perpetual observation as a requisite determination of the morality of this Law and it cannot be of an alterable nature unless it be by the same Authority by which it was ordained Now by the fourth Commandment it is clear 1. That God commanded some time to be set apart and Hoc quartum praeceptum est magis morale qu●m ceremoniale et ideò in Decalogo ad qu●m omnes tenemur semper praecipiendum erat Gerson sanctified to his service 2. The proportion of this time to be one day in seven 3. That the particular day under this proportion be the seventh and that unto the Jews in correspondency to the seventh day from the Creation wherein God commanded them to rest from all their works but then when God manifests his pleasure for the alteration of this day from the seventh to the first we are to be an obedient people thus far the worthy Twisse And that this change was made will be further seen in the next Chapter to all which may be added such Laws as necessarily flow from natural relation both between God and man as well as between man and man these are good in themselves because suitable and comly even to humane nature for there is a comliness and decency Mat. 1. 6. which attend those rules to which our relation binds us there are scarce any question the duties of the second Eph. 5 28 29. table because they are so evidently comly suitable and agreeing to humane nature as to honour Parents to secure our neighbour not to destroy him c. And shall not the morality of the rules of the first table be as evident and fully manifest For if there be a God and this God our God according Quoad observationem unius diei in singulis hebdomadis sabbatum non est legis caremonialis sed moralis quae immota est perpetua Ravanel to the first Commandment then it is most comly most meet most suitable to love him to fear him to trust on him to delight in him and if this God must be worshipped by man in respect of the mutual relation between them then it is comly and meet to worship him with his owne worship according to the second Commandment to worship him with all holy reverence according to the third and if he must be thus worshipped and yet at all times he cannot be solemnly honoured and worshipped in respect of our necessary and worldly employments then it is very fit and comly for all men to have some set and stated time of worship according to some proportion which the Lord of time can only best make and therefore a seventh part of time which he doth make according to the fourth Commandment is most suitable to man and most comly for him to obey God in and nothing more decent then for man to serve God in his own proportionated time Now let the case be reasoned with any religious Soul yea with any rational man Is it not a point of moral equity to pay tribute out of all our times to the Lord of time who holds our Souls in life and in whose hands our time and breath is Do we not owe him a piece of every day and shall we think it too much to give him a day in every week Shall he give us six and shall we deny him one And is it just and meet that since mans life upon earth is but a pilgrimage and he hath no abiding City here but looks for one above that Heb. 13. 14. Ne pigeat nos murdo valedicere ut ad Christum veniamus fluxitatem vitae praesentis ob oculos ponentes Neque enim indigenae sed hospites sumus in hoc mundo non habentes civitatem sed domicilium Par. he shall spend all his time and thoughts upon the trifles of the world but rather as some time every day so also some one day in every week to retire himself from the world and to draw near to God and to enjoy communion with him with whom he looks to live for ever Again in respect of Servants and Cattle is it not grand equity and reason that one day in the week they should enjoy some relaxation and not always toyl in their servitude and bondage that poor drudging Servants who bear Gods Image as well as our selves should have a breathing-time one day in a week a day of weekly Rest for their wearied bodies and one holy day in a week for their precious Souls Can we in equity afford them less and what meeter proportion for the solemn service of God than one day in seven when Natura non habitandi sed commorandi diversorium hic nobis dedit Sen. Experience tells us that the necessities both of civil and soul affairs require a mutual interchange of speedy dispatches and quick returns which cannot be less then one day in seven and not well more and therefore Gods proportionating this time in the fourth Commandement is most suitable to the infinite wisdom of the Divine Legislator as once Ptolomaeus Philadelphus said of all Gods Laws And this one day in seven was the tribute which was paid to God in the times of the old Testament and much more is it due in the times of the new This proportion of time is moral and perpetual being of Gods assignation of the Churches constant observation and of it self a most exact proportion and this fourth Commandement is holy just and good to use the Apostles Language and so never was subject to Rom. 7. 12. the decays and instability of a withering Ceremony Let us look upon the fourth Commandement in the spirituality of it The corruption of our nature found in the manifest Nitimur in vet●●um Elementa sunt ceremoniae l●q●● et sunt infi●ma ●●essecta mutili imp●●entia 〈…〉 〈…〉 opposition of wicked men and in the secret unwillingness of good men to sanctifie sincerely the Sabbath-day sufficiently demonstrates that this Commandement is holy spiritual and heavenly Rites and Ceremonies are but the trappings of Religion at the best the splendid O●●aments which set off Divine Worship in the Jewish Pedagogie Paraeus well observes That the ceremonies of the Law
conformity to the fourth as to any other Commandement And thus this Commandement partakes of the same Honours and Prerogatives with the three before it and the six after it And how comes it then that it should be worse metal than the rest and be embased with a notion of a Law and elementary Ceremony Chrysostom and Theophylact observe that in the time of Moses onely the Tables of stone were in the Ark and that afterwards in the time of the Prophet Jeremy Aarons Rod and the Pot of Manna were put in And Catharinus saith That in the time of Moses all the forementioned Particulars were in the Ark but in the time of Solomon there were onely found the two Tables of stone upon which were written the ten Commandements However it is still the Tables of stone were in the Ark to shew that in all times God was tender of his Decalogue where the fourth Commandement was placed Surely such providential care would never have attended the wing of a flying Ceremony This fourth Commandement will further commence moral if we take notice of the motives by which it was enjoyned The first Commandement hath but one reason annexed to it the third Commandement hath but one reason appendant Filius qui honorat p●ren●es licet cite moriatur tamen diu vixit N●m tempus est mensura non otii sed operis et actienum non malarum s●d bonarum to it the fifth Commandement but one reason to reinforce it Nay the second Commandement hath onely two reasons to engage obedience to it But now in the sourth Commandement the Lord goes beyond all this and binds with a threefold Cord which cannot easily be broken for God setteth down three reasons as so many forcible and pregnant motives to induce or rather to inforce obedience not onely to command the excellency but to shew the necessity of keeping this Commandement Abulens 1. God shews us the equity of the Command If man may have six days surely God may have one 2. God shews us the Presidency of himself he goes before Vatab. in Gen. 2. 3. us in Sabbath-rest and this blessed Pattern is a strong Argument for imitation Jun. in Gen. 2. 3. 3. God intimates to us it is a blessed day besides the blessings of other days by the Law of Nature this day hath Peter Martyr in Gen. 2. 3. a peculiar blessing of holiness it is a day of divine munisicence wherein God featrers his Diamonds his choicest blessings Bulling in Roman among his obedient Worshippers And was not the fourth Commandement a standing Rule of conformity Hospin de Origin what need the twisting of so many Arguments and why doth God more consult mans practice in the pressing of this Templ lib. 2. cap. 14. than any other Commandement Surely Gods jealously least it should be violated shews not onely the eminency of this Precept but its abiding morality Divines generally conclude That the substance of the fourth Commandement lies in this Clause viz. Remember the Sabbath-day to keep it holy and this is the preceptive part Quod naturale est putà diem septimum quemlibet deo sacrum esse illud quidem permanet Jun. For the other three parts of the Commandement viz. The Directive six days shalt thou labour but the seventh is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God Nay the argumentative part For in six days the Lord made Heaven and Earth and rested the seventh day And the benedictive part Therefore the Lord blessed the seventh day and hallowed it all these onely inforce the Command but the summe and substance of the Command lies in the first clause Remember the Sabbath-day to keep it holy And shall not the keeping of a Sabbath to God be moral and perpetual The spending of a seventh part of every week in holy service and spiritual worship shall not that be standing and permanent Doth not the necessity of our Bodies require a seventh days rest and the Exigence of our Souls a holy rest Surely we will not sink below the dregs of Paganism who Recordare diei sabbati ut sanctifices illum Haec verba sunt ipsa praecepti quarti moralis sub stantia Zanch. had their set times of sacred solemnity to their Idol Gods And the Church of Christ in all Ages had its Sabbath when it was most clouded with Superstition and Idolatry the Sabbath was never suspended by any Emperors Edict nor Excommunicated by any Popes Bull Sion never wanted her Sabbaths when she lay in her lowest ashes Surely then to keep a Sabbath to God is most fully and entirely moral and this is as Zanchy saith The substance of the fourth Commandement the other part of it being taken up either in explication how we must observe it or in reason and argumentation why we must observe it Or in motive and insinuation that we must observe it It is a blessed day and blessings are the greatest courtship to the Soul And in one of the Homilies of the Church of England we meet with Homil. of time and prayer these words By the fourth Commandement we ought to have a time as one day in a week and this appertaineth to the Law of Nature as a thing most godly most just most needful for the setting forth of the glory of God and therefore ought to be retained and kept of all Christians Thus the Church of England layes down this as a fundamental that every seventh day not in order but in number be consecrated to God The fourth Commandment hath all the Characters of a moral law 1. It is not reversed or repealed in the Gospel for though the old Sabbath be reversed yet the Commandment for 〈◊〉 day in seven is not and indeed why should it 〈…〉 the whole Decalogue is Gods royal law Jam●● 〈…〉 the golden rule of our obedience 2. It is ratified in the Gospel and that many 〈…〉 1. In general together with the Decalogue 〈…〉 〈…〉 Whosoever shall break one of the least of these Command●●nt and teach men so shall be called the least in the King 〈◊〉 Heaven Now the fourth Commandment is one of the●● commands which it is so dangerous to break and 〈◊〉 late 2. By the designation of the Lords day of the same number 〈…〉 c. 11. of the same use and profit which is a real ratification of this law 3. This law of the Sabbath is neither weak nor unprofitable but exceeding useful for the ends for which it was first intended which was the glory of God the good of souls and the preservation of Religion It was the speech of a Learned man Let any man shew me in this law either weakness 〈…〉 or unprofitableness I yield and bid it vanish but it hath and will have as much strength and force as any Law can have from the Author Consent Multitude Custom and express approbation of all Ages Profit it hath too and hath been preserved without any mans
absenting themselves from prayers and preaching and give themselves the leave of doing or neglecting any thing was there not something found in Scripture which more than any humane institution can bind the Conscience Mans institutions may over-awe the outward-man they will little influence the inward men may be shackled with something from the sacred Scriptures but if they are loose from those Bonds they will easily please themselves in their fancied liberty It is the rule of the word not humane dictates will bind men and stake them down to Obedience and it is no wonder if our Christian Sabbath be thrown upon the Dunghil of prophaneness if it hath nothing but Ecclesiastical Authority to shew for its institution if our Sabbath come among other holy days and acknowledge no other founder we cannot marvel if sports and walks and visits be the usual celebrations of it The result then of the whole is The Church in the earliest days observed but not instituted our Christian Sabbath and the Lords day is so called not onely from Christs resurrection but his institution The Lords day then is not of Ecclesiastical institution no Synod no Council no Convention of men subject to errour could give it its being or adopt it into its honour that John 1. 12. that it should have power to be called the Day of God Something more than humane power must authorize this blessed day and make it a weekly and standing Festival to the Christian Church Indeed some refer the institution of it to Christ himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so run up the chrystal stream to the fountain head Athanasius who was the sword and the buckler of truth and both received and repelled the darts of the Arrian World He positively affirms Christ to be the institutor of our Christian Sabbath Of old saith he The Sabbath was in great esteem among the Ancients but the Lord hath changed the Sabbath day into the Lords day Now what can be more plain Chrysostome in his tenth Homily upon Genesis calls God the Athanas homil de Semente Author of this institution And Eusebius in one of his Orations in the praise of the Emperour Constantine flies into a seraphick admiration of Jesus Christ and deriding the vanity of the Gentile Gods and Potentates Who saith he among the Heathen Gods hath appointed a solemn day weekly to all the inhabitants of the world whether they dwell on the Land or travel on the Seas to celebrate the Lords festival and hath taken care not only for the refreshing of bodies with the provisions of the creature but for the feeding and supplies of the Soul with discipline and divine repasts Thus this worthy man speaking of the glory of his Master Jesus Christ produces this eminent argument for it viz. He appoints a weekly Sabbath for all the world to observe and celebrate Nor was this doctrine only authentical and approved in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Euseb de laudibus Const Causa mutationis est resurrectio Christi cujus beneficii commemoratio successit mem●riae creati●nis non traditione humanâ sed Christi ipsius observatione et instituto Jun. in Genes primitive times of the Church but in the latter dayes of Reformation some of our choisest Divines have with much delight and resolution embraced and published this truth Learned Junius one of that couple who made the Old Testament speak Latine and so brought the Scriptures something nearer to the worlds understanding he solemnly professeth That the old Sabbath is changed into the Lords day in the Christian Church upon the account of Christs resurrection and that the Author of this change is not humane tradition but Christs own observation and appointment And Piscator a man eminent in the Church of Christ roundly asserts That though there be no express command for the Lords day in the Scriptures yet the facts of Christ and his Apostles on that day do undoubtedly declare its Divine Original and institution But not to surfet the Reader with too great a concourse of testimonies concurrent in this opinion there are not deficient many considerable and undeniable reasons asserting and affirming the Lord Jesus Christ to be the Author and Institutor of his own blessed day Reas 1 Whatsoever in holy Writ is said to be the Lords denominatively that he is the Author and Institutor of As for instance The Lords Supper because he ordained it 1 Cor. 11. 20 23. The Sabbath of the Lord Deut. 5. 12. Because he commanded it The Temple of the Lord Jer. 7. 4. because he appointed it the people of the Lord because he chose them the Messengers of the Lord because he sent Exod. 3. 7. 1. Cor. 4 9. them the Apostles of Christ because he put them into that office And no instance can be shewed to the contrary but the Christian Sabbath is called the Lords day Rev. 1. 10. Nay and Beza notes that he hath seen an old copy that which is called the first day of the week 1 Cor. 16. 2. stiled the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lords day not by Creation for so every day is his from the beginning not by destination for so properly the day of judgement is called the day of the Lord But our Christian Sabbath is called the Lords day by Divine Institution as other things are said to be the Lords and so Christ is the Author and appointer of it and therefore Bishop Andrews that library of learning in one of his Sermons upon Dies dominicus non ab alio sed ab ips● Christo est institutus ●ilen Synt. loc 44. p. 2●6 the Resurrection puts the query How can it be called the Lords day but that the Lord made it And Bishop Lake in his Sermon on the Eucharist saith positively That Christ did substitute the Lords day in the place of the Jewish Sabbath Doctor Fulk fears not to affirm That the Lords day is a necessary prescription of Christ himself And Doctor Lin●●●● Bishop of Brechen in his Preface to the Assembly at Per●● and many other Divines heartily concur in this judgement If God by resting from his work of Creation and his blessing ●eas 2. of that seventh day made it a holy day for his set and solemn worship and service then Jesus Christ resting from Gen. 2. 3. the work of Redemption and his blessing of that day makes it a holy day for his solemn and set worship and service for there is the like or greater excellency in the resting of God the Son and the blessing of his day as there was in the resting of God the Father and his blessing of the seventh day Christ's work of the worlds redemption and the renovation 2 Cor. 5. 13. Fact● s●nt 〈◊〉 nova ut novum cast●llum 〈…〉 Bern. thereof the making of all things New a new Heaven and a new Earth is equall with if not ●u●passing of the Fathers work of Creati●n The S●ns blessing
Sabbath Caelum est illa requies ubi fugit dolor tristitia gemitus omnes solicitudines Ibi nec invidia nec zelus nec morbus nec nox nec mors nec tenebrae sed omnia pax gaudium jucunditas voluptas bonitas c. Chrysost which signifies a holy Rest to shew us that the due and holy observation of our Rest here is the ready way to our perfect rest hereafter It is a sad contemplation to take a view of prophane persons how they impose upon themselves in a dream of glory Can they possibly conjecture that they can sing their songs here on a Sabbath take their cariere in sensual delights play away walk away prate away their precious Sabbaths and at last sing Hallelujahs in the Sabbath above Is not this to conceive a Mountane to be Chrystalline because it is covered with snow which bears some resemblance to the colour of it Well then prophanation of Gods day is a complicated evil a chain of darkness with many links in it a body of sin made up of the four Elements of Contempt Infidelity Ingratitude and Soul-prodigality it is an heretical vice which practically denies the resurrection of Christ Arg. 2 There is much in the day to solicite our holy observation It is a Sabbath of spiritual delights it is the souls festival day a day of fat things and wine upon the lees Isa 25. 6. The Cant. 2. 4. Sabbath is the season in which Christ brings his beloved into Psal 118. 24. to his banqueting house Christians on this day are to rejoyce in the Lord as the memorial of the greatest benefit which Dies dominicus domini resurrectione declaratus est inde caepit habere festivitatem suam ever accrewed unto them Their life rose this day a conquerour and in him they are more then conquerours as the Apostle speaks most triumphantly Rom. 8. 37. And therefore holy men in all ages have waited with impatience for the coming of this day and have rejoyced with unspeakable joy at its approach This day is the darling is the delight Aug. Serm. de temp of dayes and all other dayes are to be obsequious unto it It is recorded of holy Mr. Dod and heavenly Mr. Bruen that Deut. 32. 49. they were even in heaven upon a Lords day This day is Heb. 2. 10. the day of Christs visits the souls spiritual market and fair in it we have our prospect of Canaan upon Mount Nebo the Hujus diei laetemur● festivitate Hil●r day it is of holy Discipline to train us up in the School of Christ Hilary cries out Let Christians be exceeding glad on this day of their festivals This day is the souls seeds time Officia hodiè praestanda spiritualia mirificam in se complectuatur jucunditatem O quàm suave est communione cum Christo frui in via Ordinationum per quam Christus transire solet ipsi occurrere and glory shall be its harvest this is the most special time for the recruiting of the inward man and strengthning it with all might The duties of this day are not only the plowing but the reaping of the soul they are in themselves not only work but wages for in acting of spiritual duties there is great reward As one saith Sabbath-service implies a wonderfull sweetness as the musick of the sphears which is included in its own circumference How delitious is it to enjoy communion with Christ on his own day and to embrace him in the way of his Ordinances as Zaccheus to meet him in the way as he passeth by Luke 19. 5. Christ indeed is sweet to our enquires much sweeter to our acquests when we have found our beloved Cant. 3. 4. Now then the Sabbath being a day of joy and jubilee to the soul how spiritual exact and heavenly should we be The Sabbath is joyous in its constitution let it be so in our disposition let not this joy be damped by our sin or neglect let us not jar the musick of it by our sloath or sensuality our carnal ease or fleshly delights for so we may at night go down with sorrow to our bed Gen. 42. 38. Arg. 3 Not only the pleasure of this day might allure but the profit of this day might enforce our greatest care and devotion On this day the soul makes its greatest merchandise and drives Deus in suo opere conquiescens benedixiti huic diei eum sanctificavit in ecclesiâ suâ ut sanctus haberetur in eâ benedixit illi et benedicetur its most gainful bargains on this day the poor believer follows the chase of a Christ of an heaven of an eternity this day is a day of ble●sings how many have met with their beloved recruited their faith amplified their joy and gained a better insight into their spiritual condition on this holy day Their souls as Hannah have begun the Sabbath with sighs and sobs but in the close thereof have gone away and have been no more sad 1 Sam. 1. 18. It is usually on the Sabbath Jun. in Gen. that the believer makes his greatest journies towards his home God saith of this day as once Isaac said concerning Die dominico videre est animae mercaturam quaestuo●issiman et opulentiorem omnibus mundi opibus maj●r certè est utilitas frui praesentiâ de quum Margaritas ac fodinas aureas acquirere Jacob I have blessed it yea and it shall be blessed Gen. 27. 33. On this day the gracious soul enjoys Christs presence communion with the blessed Trinity and the happiness of those spiritual Ordinances which are the Mines and the means of grace On this day he drinks more deeply of the waters of life and participates more freely of the good things of the graces of the spirit and tasts more sensibly of the prelibations of future and eternal joy Rev. 1. 10. Indeed on the Lords day the believer makes up himself for the decays and losses of the week and drives the spiritual trade to the best advantage Now profit should engage us to care and sedulity and add a wing to our zealous and holy industry when we are sloathful or sensual upon the Sabbath we do not only sin away our tim● ●ut our treasure and lose our season for advantage Limn●rs will be very exact in drawing that picture for which they are well rewarded a high price will procure the most curious works and why should not a gainful Sabbath which will pay for all our pains engage us in the greatest strictness of observation Profit is the great engine which prevails with worldly men Some Nations will sell Swords Diei dominicae lu●rum non crumenam sed animam spectat and warlike furniture to their open and proclaimed enemies for profit and unusual gain and surely the riches of Ordinances are finer gold then the treasures of the Mine though they be digged in Ophir Arg. 4 The honour
they gathered it six dayes together and ceased the seventh day being the Sabbath day without controversie it began to fall on the first day which is the Lords day and still upon our Lords day the Lord rains Manna upon his people the true Manna did not cease in the wilderness but is still showred down upon the due observers of Gods holy day Divine blessings more sweet more pleasant then Israels Manna or bread resembling wafers or Corianders seed shall enrich and refresh the devout soul on Gods holy day Exod. 16. 31. Arg. 10 No command is punished with more severity then that of the Sabbath when it is broken and disobeyed Sabbath prophanation is a sin which will be beaten with many stripes For the better discovery of this great truth we shall follow it by degrees God eyes Sabbath-prophaneness most exactly If it be but the carrying of a burden Jer. 17. 27. God takes notice of it and it sets all in a flame There are two things God is most Sabbata Dei sunt ejus delitiae sunt ejus faelicitas et illa in dei contemplatione consistunt quibus à seculi curis et laboribus vacantes divina opera et judicia contemplemur Alap jealous of 1. Of his truth 2. Of his day God will see little spots on his own day Little flaws are seen in a jewel every one takes notice of spots in the Moon which is a bright and glorious luminary the finer the cloth is the more damageable the rent is which is in it Gods Sabbath is one of his most precious things it is not said Jer. 17. 27. If any commit a gross sin upon my Sabbath But if any bear a burden Secular works are sinful works on Gods holy day every toil is a trespass and to bear a burden upon the back is to draw guilt upon the soul God threatens Sabbath-prophanness most sharply The threats of God are the drawing of his bow they are the sharpning of his sword and the fitting it for execution they Ter poenam capitalem infligendum deus exprimit vilatoribus Sabbati quam poenam certum est immò de temporali morte et supplicio infligendum transgredienti esse intelligendum quod etiam ex praxi constat 15. Num. 32. Et haec quidam 〈◊〉 infligebatur ad exemplum Obstinatis etiam aeternam mortein fuisse denunciatam non inficias imus Rivet are his warning-pieces which he shoots off to affright secure sinners they are his frowns which are the evidences of his wrath and indignation Now God surely threatens the violations of his Sabbath he threatens them not with a light affliction but with death it self Exod. 31. 14 15. The soul which shall prophane the Sabbath shall die the death nay this sin shall not only destroy the Citizen but the City too Jer. 17. 27. set the gates on fire where the safety of the City lay No Portcullis can secure that City where the Sabbath is prophaned nay God threatens Sabbath-prophanation with his consuming fury Ezek. 20. 13 21. which can lay waste all which lies before it every thing is stubble to Gods wrath no gate so strong to resist it no Person so potent to withstand it Divine fury can as easily rase as Divine Power can create a world And this fury God will poure out on those who prophane his day God complains of Sabbath-prophanation most bitterly When God was drawing up his Endictments against the people of Israel now going into captivity one of his chiof charges was Sabbath-pollution they defiled his day which he would have kept spotless and this did accent his complaints and put an Emphasis upon his grievous expostulations Sabbata domini profanant homines tùm eorum prophanationem vident non corripiunt sed o●ulos suos avertunt et conniventes dissimulant item cùm ea non piè observant They despise my statutes saith God Ezek. 20. 24. How doth this appear Why saith God They pollute my Sabbaths as if the contempt of Religion was wrapt up in Sabbath-prophanation And in another place Ezek. 22. 8. They despise my holy things saith God but what is the evidence of it why saith the Lord they prophane my Sabbaths this goes to the heart of God and nothing more provokes his spirit Nay which is observable God calls the prophaning of his Sabbath the prophaning of himself Ezek. 22. 26. so the text They have hid their eyes from my Sabbaths I am prophaned among them To pollute Gods day is to cast Coinquinabar Ezek. 22. 26. i. e. profanè tractabar ab●ii● dirt in the very face of God himself and when men make light of the Sabbath they lose the reverence they should bear to the sacred Majesty of God Sabbath-prophanation huddles all in confusion as God complains Ezek. 22. 26. and makes men Atheists so as to have no regard of the incomprehensible and tremendous Jehovah who as the Apostle saith Heb. 12. 29. is a consuming fire And so God bitterly complains Polluitur Sabbatum cùm cujus gratiâ instituitur à plerisque non curatur Muscul Ezek. 23. 38. Moreover this they have done unto me they have defiled my sanctuary in the same day and have prophaned my Sabbaths What is done to Gods day he takes it as done to himselfe When his day is polluted and when his Saints are persecuted this is drawing against God himself Acts 9. 4 5. In a word the prophaning of Gods Sabbath makes him first poure out his complaint and then poure out his fury the smothering of his complaint quickly breaks out into the flame of his indignation God punisheth Sabbath-prophanation most severely We have already discovered the sharpness of Gods eye in the discerning the frowns of Gods brow in the threatning the totus dies dominicus ex toto animo quantum ferat humana necessi●as et imbe●illitas ritè et piè servandus est etenim ejus prophanationi et pollutioni maledictionem comminatur Deus Exod. 31. 14. Lev. 26. 2 14. Jer. 17. 27. et poenis gravissimis morte ulciscitur utpote cujus contemptus est totius legis dei et divini cultus repudiatio Leid Prof. complaints of Gods mouth in his complaining against and now we come to take notice of the strokes of Gods hand in the revenging of the violations of his blessed Sabbath The Histories of all ages do afford many dreadfull examples of Vengeance executed upon those who have prophaned this day The Reverend Mr. Walker tells us That he could relate more then thirty examples of Gods heavy vengeance upon Sabbath-breakers within the space of two years some of which were struck with suddain death by Gods immediate hand others devoured in the waters some cut off by surfets which they got by dancing and drinking on the Lords day some fired out of their houses in the midst of their quaffing and jollity and all their goods and substance consumed And these Judgements have befallen them in the
loose to carnal liberty on the Lords day the more loose his heart will be in all good duties the whole week following Let men neglect meditation repetition of Sermons holy conference and other private duties betakeing themselves after the publick worship is over to vain and worldly discourse or vainer pleasures they shall quickly find that the publick service is utterly lost and become unprofitable And on the contrary as Moses continued forty dayes with God on the Mount had his face shining with splendor and glory Exod. 34. 30. So he who shall this day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Septuag of God wholly converse with God not only in publick Ordinances as Moses in the tabernacle but likewise in private duties as Moses on the Mount shall find a sensible spiritual vigour and an unexpected strength to carry him through all the occasions of the whole week following and a kind of glorious lustre arising from the increase of holiness put upon him and this shall be visible to the eye and hearts of others Eccles 3. 1. He who keeps the Lords day with the most strict and and accurate observation shall find 1. Most blessing upon his labours 2. Most holiness in heart and life 3. Most comfort and joy in his own soul 4. Most sweetness in death 5. Most glory and rest in Heaven when there remains that Populo dei superest Sabbatismus i. e. requies d●i ad quam quotidiè sanctus vocatur Par. everlasting Sabbatism for all the people of God It is a good observation of a learned man That when the spirit cometh effectually to convince of sin usually one of the first sins which the eye of the enlightned conscience fixes upon is the neglect of the Lords day and conviction usually ending in conversion one of the first duties which the soul comes seriously to close withall is the strict observation of the Lords day and grace usually works this way and doth exceedingly dispose to this duty Young Converts will be full of meltings on Gods holy day And truly the holy observation of the Sabbath much speaks the temper of a Christian However the week fares as Judg. 12. 6. the Sabbath doth Good Sabbaths usher in good weeks and are the morning stars of an approaching day when we hear truth on the Sabbath digesting it by prayer and meditation when we put up strong cries to God with fervour and devotion when we enjoy Ordinances our spiritual meals on a Sabbath with appetite and satisfaction this will cast a chain upon our corrupt hearts and will be bellows to our future zeal wil supply us with holy meditations which will be as so many bright gleams and will put a heat upon our affections and make us every way act the Saint all the ensuing week As Queen Mary said when she lost Callais When I am dead open me and you shall find Callais written upon my heart So the Christian who hath been very serious on Gods day you shall find Sabbath written upon his heart all the following week The seent of a conscientious Sabbath is not easily lost nor is the warmth of it so speedily chilled souls drenched in Sabbath Ordinances like vessels seasoned with excellent liquors Quo semel est imbuta recens servabit odorem Testa diu they long retain the taste The believer is disciplined upon a Sabbath and we do not easily forget our Education A Sermon kindly entertained on the Lords day will be faithfully improved on the week day Our best Christians were ever strictest on the Sabbath Those tasts of love we then sense and gust will abide and not lightly wear off these will lie upon the heart when the Sabbath is over Let us keep Sabbaths well we shall be better in our shops better in our worldly affairs better in our families better in our discourses better in our converses more righteous in our dealings more exemplary in our walkings more vigorous in our duties all the week following After a well passed Sabbath we shall more watch our hearts more keep our ground and withstand temptations and the deceipts of our Calling which happily Quaestus magnus est pietas quia opes supernaturales secum affert et amicitiam dei obtinet qui suis opes coelestes promittit praeparat are quilted into the very nature of it shall not so much tempt as exasperate and provoke us The whole week must be spent holy to prepare us the better for the Sabbath and the Sabbath must be spent h●ly the better to influence the week as the beginning with God on the morning of a Sabbath may influence the whole Sabbath so the beginning with God in the morning of the week viz. The Lords day may exceedingly influence and prosper the whole week He 2 Thes 2. 10. who on the Sabbath hath been much in the work of heaven cannot easily be much in the dross of earth or the dregs of sin on the time of the week Ordinances like clocks when they have struck leave a sound and a noise for a considerable time nor can a Sermon carefully heard be presently shaken out of the heart The word when received in the love thereof is fire in the bones Jer. 20. 9. and not heat in the face an inward warmth which is permanent and not only a colour which is transient The tasts the impressions the power and spirituality of a well-observed Sabbath cannot without much difficulty strong assaults of Satan powerful workings of a corrupt heart be disanulled and eradicated Hearts steeped in holy Ordinances will not soon lose their perfume It is very true our slight deportment in Ordinances makes them superficial and so soon slide off and they who pass over the Sabbath loosly will spend the week profligately they who spend it formally will spend the week vainly But a serious composure of spirit on Gods holy day will blow off the froth of the ensuing week Ignatius as hath been suggested calls the Lords day the Queen of dayes Regis ad exemplum totus componitur O●bis and according to the example of the Queen inferiour and subordinate days will be composed The endeavour of every Christian should be that his practices in secret in his calling in his company on the week day should be answerable to the great priviledges he enjoyed and to the rich grace he received on the Lords day One well observes That Religion is just as the Sabbath and it decays or groweth as the Sabbath is esteemed it flourishes in a due Veneration of the Sabbath and it pines and consumes when the Sabbath is under neglect or contempt And Dr. Twisse takes notice That the conscionable observation of the Sabbath ever was is a principal means to draw us to spiritual rest from sin and to fit us for an eternal rest in glory In a word the Sabbath and the week are both embarqued in the same ship they both are safe or sink together if our souls
thrive upon a Sabbath by our holy deportments upon it and our careful improvements of it it will be seen in the week but if by our careless behaviour we grow lean upon the Sabbath like Pharaoh his lean Kine Gen. 41 20. in his Dream it prognosticates nothing less than a Famine of grace and happiness Arg. 3 We put on our best Attire upon a S●●b●th and why sh●uld we not be in our best spiritual Dress Shall we deck our Bodies and neglect our Souls Shall we stand before God on his own day with Bodies dressed with all art and curiosity Ille Judaeus vere est qui tal●● est in absc●dito Q●i fidem ●bed●entiam prae●at Christo ● h●bet cir●●●cisionem c●rdis conv●rs●●ne cordis ad Deum Par. but with Souls undressed and unprepared ruffled with worldly thoughts unwashed by repentance all things h●nging careless and loose by formality only painted over and dawbed with pretence and hypocrisie The f●rma●ist on a Sabbath might correct himself by his Ga●● and the exactness of his Attire Surely it is an high blemish to Religion to be curious in our fashion and to be careless in our devotion and to spend more time on a Sabbath to set the D●●ss ●● curl the Hair and to fit the Garment than to inflame Devotion to compose the Heart and to trim the Lamp to meet with the Bridegroom of our Souls Shall not a piece of Eternity be as richly attired on the Lords day as a piece of dust and clay Why should not the Soul wear the Ornaments of Grace put on the Jewels of Faith and Zeal be 1 Pet. 3. 3 4. dressed up with holy thoughts with heavenly desires with spiritual aims with steddy resolutions for further increases of grace and sanctity as well as the sinking dying body a crumbling lump of earth be adorned with all the garish modes of art and bravery Nothing more uncouth that when the body is only the plain case of a pretious Soul that it should be decked on a Sabbath with all the setting forth of costly and lovely Ornament but the immortal Soul should want its trimming to make it look comely in the eyes of its Beloved when the Body is the fine cover of a deformed Soul what is this but to shovel dung into a rich Coffer or to put Pebbles into an Ebony Casket A serious Christian would more mind the trimming of the Lamp than Mat. 25. 7. the setting of the Dress or else the setting of the Dress should more mind him of the trimming of the Lamp Arg. 4 Let us consider what a rare priviledge it is to enjoy the Sabbath of the Lord To keep a Sabbath is not our work but our rest not our service but our liberty not our task Psal 42. 4. but our triumph The Sanctuary is the Souls Paradise and Psal 24. 4. Ordinances are the Tree of life in this Garden of Eden O Psal 84. 10. then let us not turn this grace into wantonness Kings do not spurn their Crowns nor use their Scepters to turn up Turffs in the field The Mariner makes not use of the Deck of his Ship to be a Stage to act on Thus Antipodes to reason and religion do prophane persons act when they slight over the momentous Sabbath of God shall God honour us with a Sabbath and shall we provoke him on a Sabbath Great Estates amplifie the prodigality of the Heir and make his sin more odious and shameful Our Sabbaths are our seasons of grace our spiritual Mart our Pisgah sight of Canaan our Term-time to follow our Suit for glory and eternity and to prophane and formalize away these acceptable days of life and salvation what is it but to throw Jewels upon Cùm omnibus diebus h●mo sese occupet in negotiis suis ne●essariis die sabbati consentaneum est ut se segreget et quiescat propter Dei gloriam Aben Ezra the Dunghil and to disinherit the Soul of its primogeniture as if its concerns were not considerable and of little importance How can we do the work of Earth or Hell upon this heavenly day If we will be working Let us work out our salvation with fear and trembling Phil. 2. 12. Our Sabbaths are mercy rich mercy costly mercy soul mercy the finest of the Wheat Let us then solemnly observe them and dextrously improve them remembring that he who had five talents gained five more Mat. 25. 20. The Viceroy whose trust is great and charge more honourable he is more active Quamquam fidelis servus minimè gloriatur tamen fidelitatem et diligentiam debitam Deo humilitèr commendat Par. Exod. 20. 7 8. and vigilant then every petty Officer whose Precincts are narrow and inconsiderable O that Christians would keep holy Gods blessed day What is it O devout Souls but a day-break of eternal brightness And let us not forget that as God will not hold him guiltless who takes his Name in vain so neither him who spends his day in vain Those surely are foolish Children who play by their Candle and those frantick Christians who frivolously pass over that holy day wherein they enter into the suburbs of the holy City and begin that work of praising pleasing and enjoying God which shall be the Employment of Eternity Arg. 5 In the holy keeping of the Sabbath there is praemium in opere a reward in the work What would the Lord have thee to do on a Sabbath but onely enjoy himself Our sweat on a Sabbath is spent only in hearing from God in the preaching of the word in flying to God in holy prayer and supplication or contemplating on God in devout meditation or feasting with God at his own Table so that in the whole management of a Sabbath there is more honour than burden more Opera sabbati sunt opera coeli profit than pain more delight than disgust The works of a Sabbath are the works of Heaven and the Angels are not weary nor the glorified Saints tired with singing Hall●lujahs On a Sabbath we feed on Manna and the fat things In nostrà enim Do●ini●● die semper pl●it domin●● Ma●na de coelo Coelestia namque sunt eloquia illa verbum lectum et populo praedic●tum Orig. of the Sanctuary we drink of the Brook in the way and of Wine on the Lees well refined Isa 25. 6. we carry Benjamins Sack with the Cup in the mouth of it Gen. 44. 2. we are spiritual Publicans and take custom of Heaven All which aggravates Sabbath-prophanation it would be strange to see a Lutanist who hath a rare Lute and who is dextrous in playing on the Instrument to spend his time in breaking the strings of his Lute What less doth the formal or prophane person do who enjoys the heavenly opportunity of a Sabbath and loses his good wind by sloth or neglect and slights over those rare duties which like Sampsons Lion Judg. 14. 18. are sweet in
Indeed it is the property of a natural Son not only to mind the word but to imitate the example of his good Father Slaves must have commands but Sons study Patterns as the ingenuous Scholar minds the Copy more then the passionate word or the Ferula of his Master One of Gods rich promises carries this treasure in it I will guide thee by mine eye Psal 32. 8. Thou shalt look on me and so walk ho●ily before me Not only Gods will but his eye shall be our conduct So then Gods example re-inforces our obligation for Sabbath-holiness Cumque deus ita quiescat die septimo ut tamen non cesset ob omni opere sed rerum universitatem conservet et gubernet Ita quoque Sabbati sanctificatio non consistit in ignavo otio s●d ut ea operemur quae ad dei gloriam faciant Ger. In this affair we have all ties of obedience not only the force of a righteous command but we may see our selves in the Chrystal glass of divine example And it is well observed by Gerard God saith he did not so rest on the Sabbath from all work but still on that day he preserved and governed all things So our sanctification of the Sabbath doth not consist in a slothful idleness but in working th●se things which make to the glory of God So let us thus imitate God on his own day Indeed Gods patte●n is the Archetype of all our actions the surest glass for us to dress our selves by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He hath said it is the rule of all truth and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath done it is the rule of all practice wherein the blessed Jehovah is imitable It was the Apostles glory that he followed Christ and so far he would have all Christians Omnis actio Dei nobis pietatis virtutis est regula Basil follow him 1 Cor. 11. 1. It is an excellent saying of Basil Every action of God is to us a Rule of all vertue and piety And if in all other things so in keeping the Sabbath in holy Rest Philo the Jew could say Follow 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Phil. Jud. God in resting on the Sabbath you have his Example you have his Prescript and therefore spend that day in holy contemplations God in this momentous concernment of the Sabbath seems to speak as in the Prophet Malachi Mal. 1. 6. A son honcureth his father and a servant his master If I be a father where is my honour if I be a master where is my fear And if I have rested upon the Sabbath why do you disturb it by secular works hy sensual delights by prophane actions or by unseemly carriages so unbecoming a holy Sabbath In prophaning Gods day we break through a double bar of precept and presidency and so dye our sin in a double dye Arg. 4 The light of Nature leads us to a Sabbath let the light of Scripture lead us to a holy observation of it The Law of Habet venerationem justam quicquid excellit Cicer. de Nat. Deorum Nature instilleth this notion into us That God paramount who is Superlative in all Excellencies and Perfections is to be worshipped That to the performance of this worship certain times are to be deputed that none is so fit to depute that time as that Deity whose worship it is And therefore to keep this day which God hath appointed holy to the same Lord to sanctifie it in holy Rest and spiritual worship which Brerewood saith Is the Body and the Soul of the Sabbath All this is nothing but an obsequious following of the guidance and conduct of Nature Aquinas here gives us a good Rule Seeing saith he that the moral Precepts Aquin 2da 2dae quaest 122. Artic. 4. are of those things which agree to humane reason as they appertain to good manners the judgment whereof is derived some way from natural Reason it must needs Breerw part 2. pag. 67. be that those things pertain to the Law of Nature And is there any thing more accommodate to right reason more conducing to good manners then to dedicate some time to the honour of God especially that time which is of his own appointment If we have Souls to look after must there not be seasons for that purpose And who shall better Mark 2. 28. Aquin. 1mae adae quaest 10. Artic. 1. 3. appoint that season than the Saviour of the Soul Again the Sabbath was made for man Mark 2. 27. was it not for the better part of man that piece of Eternity which he carries in his bosom And how can we better consult our Souls good than in duties of Divine worship Thus the very dictates of natural reason command the holy observation of the Sabbath And therefore the observation of the seventh day which was the Sabbath till the coming of Christ was no strange thing among those who know nothing above the light of Nature Homer an Heathen Poet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Alex. tells us That the seventh day is holy Callimachus an Heathen Author informs us That the seventh day is the Birth-day chief and perfect And Eusebius affirms That almost all as well Philosophers as Poets know the seventh day to be most sacred And shall these Pagans who had onely glimpses of natural light smatch and rellish Quis Diem illum sanctissimum non honorat unaquaquehebdomadâ recurrentem Phil. honour and venerate the day of the Sabbath and shall we turn Heathens on that day or fall some degrees below them I shall say with the Apostle Rom. 6. 2. God forbid The learned Andrews observes That sufficient is found in the heart of the Gentiles to their condemnation who shall dare to break the Law of the fourth Commandement The very light of Nature shall rise up in judgment Rom. 6. 2. against Sabbath-breakers and it shall be more tollerable for Hesiod a Heathen Poet who pronounced the seventh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hesiod day holy and Alexander Severus a heathen Prince who on that day frequented the Temple as formerly hath been hinted then for this Generation It was a rare saying of Seneca a sage Heathen who reckoning the Sabbath a Festival for Religion condemned the then manner of observing of it and saith he Let us forbid the lighting of a Candle upon a Sabbath for neither do the Gods want light and men themselves are not delighted with smoke he worshippeth God who knows him This golden Quoniam rerum humanarum varii● malti● occupationibus curis distracti praepedimur ita ut non facilè officia pietatis praestemus saying how will it condemn many drossie Christians who set fire on their lusts on Gods holy Sabbath It is a good Notion of Azorius Man saith he is so hurried and distracted with the affairs of the world that he is impeded in and unfit for the worship of God But God therefore hath appointed
support of Religion and keeps it from flights or falls Every devout worshipper on the Lords day is but a lessar pillar to shoar up godliness and piety in the world While publick worship is seriously frequented and private duties are frequently performed while the sacred word of God is diligently attended the blessed Sacrament devoutly received while holy prayers with moystened eyes and melting hearts are affectionately poured forth and sent up to God on his own holy day while these things are in ure in a Nation piety and Religion are above the fears of decay Religion sails or sinks with the Sabbath when both are embarqued in the same Vessel and where this Sancta diei dominicae exercitia labascentem pietatem religionem sustinent holy day is constuprated by vanity and prophaneness profession is laid waste and desolate the sanctification of Gods day keeps up Gods fear in the Church but that being suspended the gap is made and the Church lies open to all kinds of sinful incursions A learned man tells us that Guntheram a pious King of France fighting against the Goths with unhappy success did sedulously enquire into the cause Guntheramus Francorum Rex pientissimus contra Gothos infaelici successu se pugnasse observaverat tanti mali fonte paulò altius investigato cui malo ut obviam iretur statutum est diem dominicum religiosè custodiendum per universum c. of it and taking notice of the neglect of the Bishops instructing the people as likewise observing the prophaneness of the people in dishonouring the Lord he presently concluded this was the proper source and cause of his late discomfiture and calamity and therefore he immediately commanded That the Lords day should be carefully and solemnly observed throughout his whole Dominions as being the most proper remedy and most likely Cure for those distempers which had shaken the happiness both of Church and State God usually calculating his providence according to the observation of his day smiling upon those places where it is religiously observed and evidencing his displeasure where it is slighted or contemned Arg. 9 The sanctification of the Sabbath is the discharge in a great measure of that duty pressed by the Apostle Phil. 3. 20. Let your conversation be in heaven All the duties of the Sabbath Nonne pudet te corpore coelum suspicere mentem in terrâ repere caput sursum cor deorsum habere Bern. are but transactions with Heaven Our prayers are our approach and appeal to Heaven and therefore we are said to lift up a prayer Jer. 7. 16. Our hearing the word is only hearing News from Heaven Acts 20. 27. And our Sacramental receipts are only the tasting of the fruit of the Vine which we shall drink new with Christ in his Fathers Kingdom Mat. 26. 29. The Ordinances of a Sabbath are heavenly Ordinances the end of a Sabbath is to bring us nearer to heaven and the Communion of Saints wh●ch we enjoy upon a Sabbath is a sweet resemblance of that Society the Saints shall enjoy in heaven And though we cannot pretend to 2 Cor. 12. 2. Pauls rapture into the third heaven or to Johns extasies upon this holy day yet in a conscientious use of divine administrations Rev. 1. 10. we travel fairly on towards heaven and happiness Secular works which savour of earth are to be banished this day Exod. 20. 10. Carnal hearts which rellish earth are unsutable to this day Rev. 1. 10. And pleasurous delights which are the liquorish froth of earth are to be avoided on the Sabbath day Isa 58. 13. Our Sabbath is the day-break and twilight of heaven and glory which if we improve to work our spiritual works in a little time will bring us to a perfect noon Arg. 10 Let us be exact on the Lords day in honour to Christ it is his Resurrection day On this day the Sun rose which lightens Dies dominicus Christi resurrectione declaratus est et ex illo cae●it habere festivitatem suam aeternam non solùm spiritus sed et corporis requiem praefigurat Aug de Civ dei every one which comes into a better world on this day the Conqueror shewed himself when he had laid all his enemies in the grave from whence he sprang This was the day of Mankinds restauration of the worlds wonder and of the Believers joy This day was the fresh spring of our happiness the initials of a Christians boast On this day Mosaical rites and legal Ceremonies were fully and totally routed and so put to flight and then dyed together the Synagogue and the Sanedrim Christ is the true Joseph who on this day left his prison and was promoted to honour Christ is the real Moses who breaking through death and dangers Acts 13. 31 32 saw Pharaoh and his host Satan Death and Hell and Heb. 1. 5. all spiritual wickednesses drowned in the Sea Christ is the Resurrexisti domine quàm ●●●ulatè celeritèr O fortunati lab●res O gloriosa certamina quae talem finem sortiuntur P●ssionem excepit Resurrectio mortem immortalitas ignonimiam gloria infirmitatem virtus Tempestatem serenitas Bellar. 2 Cor. 5. 1. true Mordecai who foiling Haman and all his enemies delivered the true Israel from tyranny and oppression and on this day kept his Purim Christ is the true Jonas who being cast into the Sea in a tempest of frenzy and cruelty on the third day was cast on the shore and survived to more gracious purposes In a word glorious were the conflicts happy the labours blessed the rest and most triumphant the Resurrection of our dear Redeemer Now as it is reported of Caesar when he would cry Quirites that word put new life into his Souldiers in the sorest battels So when we think our Sabbath is Christs Resurrection day this should put new life into all our duties and devotions This was the day of wonders when our blessed Samson carryed away the gates of Hell to lay our way open to the City of the New Jerusalem the City not made with hands eternal in the heavens CHAP. LIII The Resurrection of Christ is not only a real ground for the institution but a cogent Argument for the holy observation of the Lords day WHen our hearts are dead and curdled into formality upon the Lords day then every one of us should thus bespeak his soul O my soul this day is the triumph of thy Redeemer when he trod upon the Serpents head when Gen. 3. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basil in Hexam he took from death its sting from hell its standard suppose my soul thou hadst stood by the Sepulcher and seen the Sun of Righteousness covered with a cloud before now shining forth most gloriously on the morning of the Resurrection day how would this have raised and ravished thy heart How glad were the Disciples when they saw the Lord they believed not for joy John 20.
Gospel So the Apostle most expresly 1 Cor. 15. 14. If Christ be not risen then is our preaching in vain and your saith is also vain Christs death had been wholly ineffectual for the remission of sins if Christ had not conquered death but still had been Peccatum plenè aboletur quia ejus effectus i. e. mors aboletur Chrysost detained in his dust But Christ hath abolished sin because he hath conquered death the effect of sin by his glorious resurrection as Chrysostom well notes and observes All the sufferings of Christ were animated by his resurrection that glorious Act put worth and value upon them Had he not risen all our hopes had been buried in the same Grave with him but he is truly risen and this is the comfort of our Souls and the riches of his sufferings Christs resurrection makes faith a saving grace and therefore the rather is put upon Christs rising not upon his death Rom. 8. 34. His Resurrection makes the Gospel a lively and glorious Gospel 2 Cor. 4. 4. Totum Evangelium esset vanum et mera fabula si Christus non resurrexisset Par. and Christ an all-sufficient Redeemer When Christ rose the Jews blasphemy was execrated Scripture-prophesies and types verified the hearts of believers revived and the Gospel was made a Doctrine full of grace and truth fit to be preached for life and salvation The Prophet Hosea tells us Hos 6. 2. After two dayes he will revive us and the third day he will raise us up and we shall live in his sight which text Hos 6. 2. of Scripture Tertullian rightly accommodates to the Resurrection Quem locum Tertullianus lib. adv Judeos cap. 13. ad Christi resurrectionem rectè accomodat Ger. of Christ which was on the third day then did our life spring with his and the Sun rising caused our light The Resurrection of Christ is that pleasant spring which the Law foresaw the Gospel discovers and the Christian rejoyces in Had Christ been shut up in the Grave and there kept as Natures Prisoner all the truths of the Word had been as fading leaves and the believers faith an empty notion the Preachers pains unprofitable sweat and the sinners soul irrecoverably lost and the professors of Christianity truly of all men most miserable as 1 Cor. 15. 19. And that cursed Quantas divitias comparavit nobis ista fabula Christi Leo. 10. Pap. Rom. speech of Pope Leo the tenth viz. How much wealth hath this Fable of Christ brought to our Coffers might have escaped a reproof And now shall the Resurrection of Christ put life into the Gospel and none into us upon our Sabbath the commemoration of that glorious Act Shall every truth of the Gospel be confirmed by it and shall not we be established in our duties on this holy day Christ rose and our hopes sprang and budded with his rising and shall not this animate our services on the Lords day Either let us lay aside Faith in the Act or be more conscientious in keeping the day of Christs blessed Resurrection The Resurrection of Christ was not only the breaking of his own chains but the breaking out and harbinger of our joyes For Christ as a common person is become the first fruits of 1 Cor. 15. 20. them that sleep 1 Cor. 15. 20. which is an allusion to a rite and ceremony in the Law All the sheaves in a field being unholy in themselves there was some one sheaf in the name and room of all the rest which was called the first fruit lifted up and waved before the Lord and so all the sheaves abroad in the field by that act done to this one sheaf were Christus opp●nitur omnibus terroribus in die judicii quidem quadruplici ratione 1. Christi morte qua peccata expiavit 2. Resurrectione quâ j●stitiam peperit 3. Evectione ad dextr●m dei quâ sp sanctum effudit 4. ●ntercessione quâ meritum effi●acitèr applicat Qu●tu●r ●is●e gradibus totum Redemptionis opus à Christo peractum est Par. consecrated unto God by vertue of that Law Lev. 23. 10. Rom. 11. 16. And thus when we were all dead Christ as the first fruits riseth and this in our name and stead and so we all rise with him and in him we are all vertually risen in him and this in as true a sence as if we were personally risen As on the contrary hand we being personally alive yet are reckoned dead in Adam because he was a common person and had the sentence of death pronounced upon him by vertue of which we must die and this by the force of the same law 1 Cor. 15. 21 22. Adam was the first fruits of them who died and Christ of them that rise Hence we are said to be risen with Christ Eph. 2. 5. and which is yet more to sit together with him in heaven Eph. 2. 6. Because Christ is a common person representing us and he sits there in our name and in our stead Now let us a little canvass the equity of this law If sentence of condemnation was first passed upon Adam alone yet considered as a common person for us we were condemned in him therefore also this acquitting and justification which was passed upon Christ at his Resurrection for then he had fully suffered whatever divine justice could demand for our sin was passed upon him as a common and publick person for us yea in this his being justified Christ must much rather be considered as a common person representing us then Adam was in his condemnation V●va ego quamvis mortem feram resurgam et vos quoque vivetis i. e. quia videbitis me laetabimini et quasi o●cisi revi●is●e●●● in meâ manifestatione Theoph. For Christ in his own person had no sin so he had no need of justification from sin nor should ever have been condemned and therefore this must be only in respect to our sinnes imputed to him and if so then in our stead and so herein he was more purely to be considered as a common person for us then ever Adam was in his being condemned for Adam besides his standing as a common person for us was furthermore condemned in his own person but Christ being justified from sin could only be considered as standing for others Thus Christ rose as a common person in our stead and for our good to be the object of our faith the incentive of our hope and the forerunner of our glorious resurrection By Christs rising to life we receive A life of joy His springing from the grave was the blossoming of our joy The retirement of our beloved into his tomb was but transient the delay of three dayes and then In diem solis laetitiae indulgemus Tert. he came from behind the hangings and in this our joy is full This dried up Mary Magdalens tears and swallowed up the Disciples griefs and this inflames the Christians triumphs And
healing in his wings Mal. 4. 2. The Apostle saith 1 Cor. 15. 17. If Christ had not risen we had been still in our sin which fully implies he rising again our sins are taken away and blotted out as a thick cloud and nothing remains to break the peace between God and believers That conscience may be serene and fully satisfied For nothing stung conscience and wounded that tender part nothing Christus resurrexit ideò pacatam tranquillam consciemtiam habere possumus scimus enim pro peccatis quae deum et nos dividebant per Christum fit satisfactio nosque ideò deo reconciliatos esse kept it raw full of pain and anguish but only sin which being fully satisfied for by Christs death and so clearly declared by his blessed Resurrection the burden removed gives ease to conscience and so the poor believer being sensible his peace is made and he is reconciled to his angry Father he hath Halcyon dayes in his bosom and he lies down with comfort and saith his lot is fallen in a pleasant place and God hath given him a goodly heritage Psal 18. 6. And this the Apostle Peter compriseth in fewer words 1 Pet. 3. 21. But the answer of a good conscience towards God by the Resurrection of Jesus Christ That our Redemption will certainly follow So saith our blessed Saviour expresly John 20. 17. I ascend unto my Per Christum quasi antesignanum et mortis dominatorem in Orbem illata est Resurrectio mortuorum Alap Rom. 8. 11. Christus solis bonis est causa meritoria resurrectionis sed efficiens omnibus Reprobi verò resurgunt non ad vitam sed ad damnationem mortem potiùs quàm vitam Thom. Father and to your Father and unto my God and your God And if Christ ascend unto our Father shall not we likewise come to his house John 14. 2. Shall not we see his face shall not we rise again to enjoy his glory Yes verily God is a God of the living and not of the dead of triumphant Saints and not of putrid carkases Mat. 22. 32. Let us further argue if Christ be our Head and we his Members then it is expedient for the glory of the Head that the Members be glorious And it may be further considered that as the first Adam received blessings for himself and his posterity and lost the same for all So Christ the second Adam received life and all other gifts for himself and others and he rising gloriously his Saints likewise shall be charioted to glory by a glorious Resurrection And so moreover Christ being our Elder Brother in his tenderness and affection will not leave us in the grave there always to sleep the sleep of death and so much the rather because he can raise us with a Call with the sould of a Trumpet by the message of an Archangel 1 Thes 4. 16. For he being dead raised himself much more being alive shall he be able to raise us up And withall we should consider our Vnion with Christ by the Spirit whose heavenly influence and divine vertue in raising of our souls to spiritual life is most eminent and admirable how much more clearly may we conclude the necessity of our being raised from death to fellowship with him in glory And Virtutem resurrectionis Christi non tantùm cognoscimus per fidem sed et per experientiam ut Christi resurgentis potentiam sentiamus shall not we know the power of Christs Resurrection to use the Apostles words Phil. 3. 10. in raising us on his own blessed day to heavenly-mindedness to get above the world and to have our hearts taken up in the divine services of it We should remember when Christ rose it was the seal of our Resurrection and can we think of a Resurrection and sleep away Sermons trifle away Sabbaths and formalize away Ordinances which then must come unto a severe account shall we who hope to rise to a Crown be entombed in sloth and idleness upon a Resurrection day The very thoughts of our Resurrection should strike an awe upon us and bridle us from vanity and lightness of spirit knowing 2 Cor. 5. 10. that our Sabbaths are not over when we have spent them but they will meet us at Gods tribunal and at his tremendous Rev. 20 12. Bar. Nothing can more acutely check the prophane person who pollutes Gods day and unravels that golden season in froth and formality then the serious thoughts of a certain Resurrection whereof Christs rising was an undoubted pledge The Resurrection of Christ was an evidence of infinite power And therefore Dr. Twisse rightly fastens the Lords day on Christs Resurrection day because as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 1. 4. Christ was declared mightily to be the Son of God by the spirit of sanctification in his Resurrection from the dead Hereby Christ was manifested to be the Son of God the very Lord of glory Christs Resurrection was the manifestation of most glorious power that the tomb should not confine him nor the dust hold him nor the grave stone stop him but throwing off these clogs as Samson did his wit hs he shews himself a while to his beloved Ones and so takes his joyous ascent to the right hand of his Father Love laid Christ in the grave and Power raised him from the grave love rocked him asleep and power awakened him again love made him die as a Malefactor Luke 23. 33. and power raised him as a Saviour to give full assurance that all was done which was required to procure life and salvation Indeed this did manifest wonderful power when after three dayes being dead the Sepulcher sealed the stone rolled to the mouth of the grave a strong watch placed that Christ should break through all bars beat down all opposition and 1 Cor. 15. 55. spring forth out of his yielding dust as a triumphing Conqueror Heb. 2. 14. over Death and Devils The Jews cryed out Let him Plus erat de sepulchro surgere quàm de cruce descendere et plus mortem resurgendo destruere quam vitam descendendo servare Greg. come down from the Cross and we will believe on him Mat. 27. 42. But it is more saith Gregory to rise from the grave then to descend from the Crosse to destroy death by rising then to preserve life by descending Reas 5 And shall Christs Resurrection be an evidence of his power and not an argument for our piety upon his own blessed day which is the Commemoration of this glorious act Surely he who could pierce the grave and shake off the chains of death for the good of believers can exert as great power for the destruction of sinners especially those who prophane his day Christs love in dying should allure and his power in rising should enforce Sabbath-holiness it is not safe nor providential to provoke the Lion of the tribe of Judah who trampled upon death and the grave especially on the day