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The Change Of
Sabbath Thesis 1. The
change of this day from the last to the first day of the week,
although it be confirmed by an ancient custom, yet the true
reason and grounds of so great a change are not so fully known,
sacred writings not so expressly setting down (as it does in
some things of less concernment) the causes hereof. And many of
the arguments heaped up and multiplied by some for the change of
it, which may seem of very great weight, while they want an
adversary at the other end of the scale to balance them; yet
upon sad examination and search into them, they prove too light,
and consequently occasion the temptation of scrupling the truth
and validity of others more clear. We are therefore with more
wariness and humility of mind to search into this controversy,
and with much thankfulness and modesty to accept that little
light which God gives us in greater, as well as of much light
which he is pleased to lend us in smaller matters. "Pascimur
opertis, exercemur obscuris, was his speech long since
concerning the Scriptures. There is no truth so clear but man's
loose wit can invent and mint many pernicious cavils against it;
and therefore in those things which shine forth with less
evidence, it is no wonder if it casts such blots and stains upon
them as that they can scarcely be discerned. Nil magis
inimicum veritati, acumine nimio. We should therefore be
wise with sobriety, and remember that in this and such like
controversies, the Scriptures were not written to answer all the
scruples and objections of cavillers, but to satisfy and
establish the consciences of poor believers. And verily, when I
meet with such like speeches and objections as these, viz.,
Where is it expressly said that the old Sabbath is abrogated?
and what one scripture is there in the New Testament declaring
expressly that the Lord's day is substituted and put in its
room? I can not from such expressions but think and fear that
the ignorance of this change in some does not spring so much
from deficiency and want of light on God's part, but rather from
perverseness on man's part, which will not see nor own the
truth, because it is not revealed and dispensed after that
manner and fashion of expression as man's wit and fantasy would
have it. Like Naaman, who, because the prophet went not about
the cure of his leprosy in that way and fashion which he would
have him, did not therefore (for a time) see that way of cure
which God had revealed to him. For the Holy Ghost is not bound
to write all the principles of religion under commonplace heads,
nor to say expressly, In this place of Scripture you may see the
old Sabbath abrogated, and the new instituted; for we find no
such kind of expressions concerning Paul's epistles, and many
books of Scripture, that this or that epistle or book is
canonical, which yet we know to be so by other evidences. We
know, also, that the Holy Ghost, by brief hints of truth, gives
occasion of large comments, and by writing about other matters tanquam
aliud agens, it brings forth to light, by the by,
revelations of great concernment, which it saw meet purposely in
that manner to make known. And as in many other things it has
thus done, so especially in this of the Sabbath. So that if our
hearts, like locks, were fitted to God's key, they would be soon
opened to see thoroughly the difficulties of this point; which I
confess, of all practical points, has been most full of knots
and difficulties to my own weakness. Thesis 2. To make
apostolic unwritten inspirations, notified and made known in
their days to the churches, to be the cause of the change of the
day, is to plough with a Popish heifer, and to cast that anchor
on which deceivers use to rely, and by which they hope to save
themselves when they know not how otherwise to defend their
falsehoods. Thesis 3. To make
ecclesiastical custom, established first by the imperial law of
Constantine, to be the foundation of the change, is to make a
prop for prelacy, and a step to Popery, and to open a gap to all
human inventions. For if it be in the church's power to appoint
the greatest holy day, why may not any other rite and ceremony
be imposed also? And if it be free to observe this day or not,
in respect of itself, because it wants a divine institution, and
yet necessary to observe it, in respect of the church's custom
and constitution, (as some pretend,) why may not the church's
commandment be a rule of obedience in a thousand things else as
well as in this? and so introduce will worship, and to serve God
after the tradition of men, which God abhors? Thesis 4. The
observation of the first day of the week for the Christian
Sabbath arises from the force of the fourth commandment, as
strongly as the observation of the media cultus, or means
of worship, now under the New Testament, does from the force of
the second commandment; only let this be supposed, that the day
is now changed, (as we shall hereafter prove,) as also that the
worship itself is changed by divine institution; for gospel
institutions, when they be appointed by divine sovereign
authority, yet they may then be observed and practised by virtue
of some moral law. The gospel appointed new sacraments, but we
are to use them by virtue of the second commandment; so here the
gospel appoints a new seventh day for the Sabbath, but it stands
by virtue of the fourth commandment, and therefore the
observation of it is not an act of Christian liberty, but of
Christian duty, imposed by divine authority, and by virtue of
the moral law. Thesis 5. For,
the morality of the fourth commandment (as has been proved)
being preserved in observing not that Sabbath only, nor yet a
Sabbath merely when man sees meet, but in observing the Sabbath,
i.e., such a Sabbath as is determined and appointed of God,
(which may therefore be either the first or last of the seven
days,) hence it is, that the first of the seven, if it be
determined and instituted of God under the New Testament, arises
equally from the fourth commandment, as the last seventh day did
under the Old Testament; and therefore it is no such piaculum,
nor delusion of the common people, as Mr Brabourn would make it,
to put the title of the Lord's Sabbath upon the Lord's day, and
to call it the Sabbath day; for if it be born out of the same
womb the first seventh was, if it arise (I mean) from the same
commandment, "Remember to keep holy the Sabbath day,"
why may it not bear the name of the Sabbath now, as the first
born did in former times? Thesis 6. If the
Lord would have men to work six days together, according to his
own example, and the morality of the fourth commandment, that so
a seventh day determined by himself might be observed, hence it
is that neither two Sabbaths in a week can stand with the
morality of the fourth commandment, nor yet could the former
Sabbath be justly changed into any other day than into the first
day of the week; the first day could not belong to the week
before, for then there should be eight days in a week, and if it
did belong to the week following, then (if we suppose that the
second had been the Sabbath) there must be one working day,
viz., the first day to go before it, and five working days after
it, and so there should not nor could not be six working days
continued together, that the seventh might be the Lord's,
according to the morality of the fourth commandment. And hence
it is, that no human or ecclesiastical power can change the
Sabbath to what day of the week they please, from the first,
which now is. Thesis 7. It
should not seem an uncouth phrase, or a hard saying, to call the
first day of the week a seventh, or the seventh day; for though
it be the first absolutely in order of existence from the
creation, yet relatively in way of relation, and in respect of
the number of seven in a week, it may be invested with the name
and title of a seventh, even of such a seventh day as may
lawfully be crowned and anointed to be the Sabbath day; for
look, as Noah, though he was the first in order of years, and
dignity of entrance into the ark, yet he is called the eighth,
(2 Pet.ii.5,) in that he was one of them (as the learned
observe) qui octonarium numerum perficiebant, or who made
up the number of eight; so it is in respect of the first day,
which in divers respects may be called the first, and yet the
seventh also. Mr. Brabourn's argument therefore is of no
solidity, who goes about to prove the Christian Sabbath to be no
Sabbath, because "that Sabbath which the fourth commandment
enjoins is called the seventh day;" but all the evangelists
call the Lord's day the first day of the week, not the seventh
day. For he should remember that the same day in divers respects
may be called the first day, and yet the seventh day; for in
respect of its natural existence and being, it may be and is
called the first day, and yet in respect of divine use and
application, it may be and is called the seventh day, even by
virtue of the fourth commandment, which is the Lord's day, which
is confessed to be the first day. Thesis 8. For
although in numero numerante, (as they call it,) i.e., in
number numbering, there can be but one seventh, which
immediately follows the number six, yet in numero numerato,
i.e., in number numbered, or in things which are numbered, (as
are the days of the week,) any of the seven may be so in way of
relation and proportion. As, suppose seven men stand together;
take the last man in order from the other six, who stand about
him, and he is the seventh; so again, take the first in order,
and set him apart from the six who stand below him, and if the
number of them who are taken from him make up the number if six,
he then may and must necessarily be called the seventh. Just
thus it is in the days of the week; the first Sabbath from the
creation might be called the seventh day in respect of the six
days before it; and this first day of the week may be called the
seventh day also, in respect of the six working days together
after it. That may be called the last seventh, this the first
seventh, without any absurdity of account, which some would
imagine; and if this first day of the week is called the eighth
day, according to Ezekiel's prophecy of evangelical times, and
his reckoning onward from the creation, (Ezek.xliii.27,) why may
it not then in other respects put on the name of a seventh also? Thesis 9. The
reason why the Lord should depose the last seventh, and exalt
and crown the first of seven to be the day of the Christian
Sabbath, is not so well considered, and therefore to be here
narrowly examined. For as for those eastern Christians, who, in
the primitive times, observed two Sabbaths in a week, the Jewish
and the Christian, doubtless their milk sod over, and their zeal
went beyond the rule. The number of Jews who were believers, and
yet, too, too zealous of their old customs, we know did fill
those places in their dispersion, and before more than the
western and more remote parts, and therefore they might more
powerfully infect those in the east; and they, to gain or keep
them, might more readily comply with them. Let us therefore see
into the reasons of this change from one seventh unto another. Thesis 10. The
good will of Him who is Lord of the Sabbath, is the first
efficient and primary cause of the institution of a new Sabbath;
but the resurrection of Christ, being upon the first day of the
week, (Mark xvi.9,) is the secondary, moral, or moving cause
hereof: the day of Christ's resurrection being Christ's joyful
day for his people's deliverance, and the world's restitution
and new creation, it is no wonder if the Lord Christ appoint it,
and the apostles preach and publish it, and the primitive
Christians observe it as their holy and joyful day of rest and
consolation. For some notable work of God upon a day being ever
the moral cause of sanctifying the day, hence the work of
redemption being finished upon the day of Christ' resurrection,
and it being the most glorious work that ever was, and wherein
Christ was first most gloriously manifested to have rested from
it, (Rom.i.4,) hence the Lord Christ might have good cause to
honour this day above all others; and what other cause there
should be of the public solemn assemblies in the primitive
churches, upon the first day in the week, than this glorious
work of Christ's resurrection upon the same day which began
their great joy for the rising of the Sun of Righteousness, is
scarce imaginable. Thesis 11. No
action of Christ does of itself sanctify any time; for if it
did, why should we not then keep as many holy days every year as
we find holy actions of Christ recorded in Scripture, as the
superstitious crew of blind Papists do at this day? But if God,
who is the Lord of time, shall sanctify any such day or time
wherein any such action is done, such a day then is to be kept
holy; and therefore if the will of God has sanctified the day of
Christ's resurrection, we may lawfully sanctify the same day;
and therefore Mr Brabourn does us wrong, as if we made the
resurrection of Christ merely to be the cause of the change of
this day. Thesis 12. Why
the will of God should honour the day of Christ's resurrection
as holy, rather than any other day of his incarnation, birth,
passion, ascension: It is this; because Christ's rising day was
his resting or Sabbath day, wherein the first entered into his
rest, and whereon his rest began. For the Sabbath, or rest day,
of the Lord our God, only can be our rest day, according to the
fourth commandment. Hence the day of God's rest from the work of
creation, and the day of Christ's rest from the work of
redemption, are only fit and capable of being our Sabbaths. Now,
the Lord Christ, in the day of his incarnation and birth, did
not enter into his rest, but rather made entrance into his
labour and sorrow, who then began the work of humiliation,
(Gal.iv.4,5;) and in the day of his passion, he was then under
the sorest part and feeling of his labour, in bitter agonies
upon the cross and in the garden. And hence it is that none of
those days were consecrated to be our Sabbath, or rest days,
which were days of Christ's labour and sorrow; nor could the day
of his ascension be fit to be made our Sabbath, because,
although Christ then and thereby entered into his place of rest,
(the third heavens,) yet did he not then make his first entrance
into his estate of rest, which was in the day of his
resurrection; the wisdom and will of God did therefore choose
this day above any other to be the Sabbath day. Thesis 13. Those
that go about (as some of late have done) to make Christ's
ascension day the ground of our Sabbath day, had need be fearful
lest they lose the truth and go beyond it, while they affect
some new discoveries of it, which seems to be the case here. For
though Christ at his ascension entered into his place of rest,
yet the place is but an accidental thing to Christ's rest
itself, the state of which was begun in the day of his
resurrection; and therefore there is no reason to prefer that
which is but accidental above that which is most substantial; or
the day of entrance into the place of his rest in his ascension
before the day of rest in his resurrection; beside, it is very
uncertain whether Christ ascended upon the first day of the
week; we are certain that he arose then; and why we should build
such a vast change upon an uncertainty I know not. And yet
suppose that, by deduction and strength of wit, it might be
found out, yet we see not the Holy Ghost expressly setting it
down, viz., that Christ ascended upon the first day of the week,
which, if he had intended to have made the ground of our
Christian Sabbath, he would surely have done; the first day in
the week being ever accounted the Lord's day in Holy Scriptures;
and no other first day do we find mentioned on which he
ascended, but only on that day wherein he arose from the dead. Thesis 14. And
look, as Christ was a Lamb slain from the foundation of the
world meritoriously, but not actually, so he was also risen
again in the like manner from the foundation of the world
meritoriously, but not actually. Hence it is, that look, as God
the Father actually instituted no Sabbath day, until he had
actually finished His work of creation, so neither was it meet
that this day should be changed until Christ Jesus had actually
finished (and not meritoriously only) the work of redemption or
restoration; and hence it is that the church, before Christ's
coming, might have good reason to sanctify that day, which was
instituted upon the actual finishing of the work of creation,
and yet might have no reason to observe our Christian Sabbath;
the work of restoration and new creation, and rest from it, not
being then so much as actually begun. Thesis 15. Whether
our Saviour appointed that first individual day of his
resurrection to be the first Christian Sabbath is somewhat
difficult to determine; and I would not tie knots, and leave
them for others to unloose. This only I aim at: that although
the first individual day of Christ's resurrection should not
possibly be the first individual Sabbath, yet still the
resurrection of Christ is the ground of the institution of the
Sabbath, which one consideration dashes all those devices of
some men's heads, who puzzle their readers with many intricacies
and difficulties, in showing that the first day of Christ's
resurrection could not be the first Sabbath, and thence would
infer that the day of his resurrection was not the ground of the
institution of the Sabbath, which inference is most false; for
it was easy with Christ to make that great work on this day to
be the ground of the institution of it, some time after that
work was past. Thesis 16. The
sin and fall of man having defaced and spoiled (de jure,
though not de facto) the whole work of creation, as the
learned Bishop Lake well observes, it was not so meet therefore
that the Sabbath should be ever kept in respect of that work,
but rather in respect of this new creation or restoration of all
things by Christ, after the actual accomplishment thereof in the
day of his resurrection. But look, as God the Father having
created the world in six days, he rested therefore and
sanctified the seventh, so this work being spoiled and marred by
man's sin, and the new creation being finished and ended, the
Lord therefore rested the first day of the week, and therefore
sanctified it. Thesis 17. The
fourth commandment gives in the reason why God sanctified the
seventh day from the creation, viz.: because God rested on that
day, and as it is in Ex.xxxi.17, was refreshed in it, that is,
took a complacency and delight in his work so done and so
finished. But the sin of man in falling from his first creation
made God repent that ever he made man, (Gen.vi.,) and
consequently the world for man, and therefore it took off that
complacency or rest and refreshing in this his work; if,
therefore, the Lord betake himself to work a new work, a new
creation or renovation of all things in and by his Son, in which
he will forever rest, may not the day of his rest be then justly
changed into the first of seven, on which day his rest in his
new work began, whereof he will never repent? If the Lord vary
his rest, may not he vary the time and day of it? Nay, must not
the time and day of our rest be varied, because the ground of
God's rest in a new work is changed? Thesis 18. As it
was no necessary duty, therefore, perpetually to observe that
seventh day wherein God first rested, because his rest on that
day is now changed, so also it is not necessary orderly to
observe those six days of labour, wherein he first laboured and
built the world, of which, for the sin of man, he is said to
have repented; yet notwithstanding, though it be no necessary
duty to observe those particular six days of labour, and that
seventh of rest, yet it is a moral duty (as has been proved) to
observe six days for labour, and a seventh for rest; and hence
it follows that, although the Lord Christ's rest on the day of
his resurrection (the first day of the week) might and may
justly be taken as a ground of our rest on the same day, yet his
labour in the work of redemption three and thirty years and
upward, all the days of his life and humiliation, could not nor
can not justly be made the ground or example of our labour, so
as we must labour and work thirty-three years together before we
keep a Sabbath the day of Christ's rest. Because, although God
could alter and change the day of rest without infringement of
the morality of the fourth commandment, yet he could not make
the example of Christ's labour thirty-three years together the
ground and example of our continuance in our work, without
manifest breach of that moral rule, viz.: that man shall have
six days together for labour, and the seventh for rest. For man
may rest the first day of the week, and withal observe six days
for labour, and so keep the fourth commandment; but he can not
labour thirty-three years together, and then keep a Sabbath,
without apparent breach of the same commandment; and therefore
that argument of Master Brabourn against our Christian Sabbath
melts into vanity, wherein he urges an equity of the change of
the days of our labour, "either three days only together,
(as Christ did lie in the grave,) or thirty-three years
together, (as he did all the days of his humiliation,) in case
we will make a change of the Sabbath, from the change of the day
of Christ's rest." And yet I confess ingenuously with him,
that if the Lord had not instituted the first day of the week to
be our Christian Sabbath, all these and such like arguings and
reasonings were invalid to prove a change; for man's reason has
nothing to do to change days without divine appointment and
institution: these things only I mention why the wisdom of God
might well alter the day. The proofs that he has changed it
shall follow in due place. Thesis 19. The
resurrection of Christ may therefore be one ground, not only of
the sanctification of the Christian Sabbath, but also a
sufficient ground of the abrogation of the Jewish Sabbath. For,
first, the greater light may darken the less and a greater work
(as the restoration of the world above the creation of it) may
overshadow the less. (Jer.xxiii.7-8; Ex.xii.2.) Secondly, man's
sin spoiled the first rest, and therefore the day of it might be
justly abrogated. For the horrible wrath of God had been
immediately poured upon man, (as might be proved, and as it was
upon the lapsed angels,) and consequently upon all creatures for
man's sake, if Christ had not given the Father rest, for whose
sake the world was made, (Rev.iv.11,) and by whose means and
mediation the world continues as now it does. (John vi.22.) Thesis 20. Yet
although Christ's resurrection be one ground not only of the
institution of the new Sabbath, but also of the abrogation of
the old, yet it is not the only ground why the old was
abrogated; for (as has been shown) there was some type affixed
to the Jewish Sabbath, by reason of which there was just cause
to abrogate, or rather (as Calvin calls it) to translate the
Sabbath to another day. And, therefore, this dashes another of
Mr. Brabourn's dreams, who argues the continuance of the Jewish
Sabbath, because there is a possibility for all nations still to
observe it. "For," says he, "can not we in
England as well as they at Jerusalem remember that Sabbath?
Secondly, rest in it. Thirdly, keep it holy. Fourthly, keep the
whole day holy. Fifthly, the last of seven. Sixthly, and all
this in imitation of God. Could no nation (says he) besides the
Jews observe these six things?" Yes, verily, that they
could in respect of natural ability; but the question is not
what men may or might do, but what they ought to do, and should
do. For besides the change of God's rest through the work of the
Son, there was a type affixed to that Jewish Sabbath, for which
cause it may justly vanish at Christ's death, as well as other
types, in respect of the affixed type, which was but accidental;
and yet be continued and preserved in another day, being
originally and essentially moral. A Sabbath was instituted in
paradise, equally honoured by God in the decalogue with all
other moral laws, foretold to continue in the days of the
gospel, by Ezekiel and Isaiah, (Ezek.xliii.ult.; Is.lvi.4-6,)
and commended by Christ, who bids his people pray that their
flight may not be in the winter or Sabbath day, as it were easy
to open these places against all cavils; and therefore it is for
substance moral. Yet the word "Sabbatism,"
(Hebr.iv.9,) and the apostle's gradation from yearly holy days
to monthly new moons, and from them to weekly Sabbaths, which
are called "shadows of things to come," (Col.ii.16,)
seems strongly to argue some type affixed to those individual
Sabbaths, or Jewish seventh days; and hence it is, perhaps, that
the Sabbath is set among moral laws in the decalogue, being
originally and essentially moral, and yet is set among
ceremonial feast days, (Lev.xxiii.2,3,) because it is
accidentally typical. And therefore Mr. Brabourn need not raise
such a dust, and cry out, "O, monstrous! very strange! what
a mingle-mangle! what an hotchpotch have we here! what a
confusion and jumbling of things so far distant, as when morals
and ceremonials are here mingled together!" No, verily, we
do not make the fourth commandment essentially ceremonial; but
being accidentally so, why may it, notwithstanding this, be
mingled among the rest of the morals? Let one solid reason be
given, but away with words. Thesis 21. If the
question be, What type is affixed and annexed to the Sabbath? I
think it difficult to find out, although man's wanton wit can
easily allegorise and readily frame imaginations enough in this
point. Some think it typified Christ's rest in the grave; but I
fear this will not hold, no more than many other Popish
conjectures, wherein their allegorising postilers abound.
Bullinger and some others think that it was typical in respect
of the peculiar sacrifices annexed to it, which sacrifices were
types of Christ. (Num. xxviii.9.) And although much might be
said for this against that which Mr. Brabourn replies, yet I see
nothing cogent in this; for the multiplying of sacrifices (which
were partes cultus instituti) on this day proves rather a
specialty of worshipping God more abundantly on this day than
any ceremonialness in it; for if the offering of sacrifices
merely should make a day ceremonial, why did it not make every
day ceremonial in respect of every day's offering of the morning
and evening sacrifice? Some think that our rest upon the Sabbath
(not God the Father's rest, as Mr. Brabourn turns it) was made
not only a resemblance, but also a type, of our rest in Christ,
of which the apostle speaks, (Heb.iv.3,) which is therefore
called a Sabbatism, (ver.9,) or keeping of a Sabbath, as
the word signifies. What others would infer from this place to
make the Sabbath to be merely ceremonial, and what Mr. Brabourn
would answer from hence, that it is not at all ceremonial, may
both of them be easily answered here again, as already they have
been in some of the former theses. Some scruples I see not yet
through, about this text, enforce me herein to be silent, and
therefore to leave it to such as think they may defend it, as
one ground of some affixed type unto the Jewish Sabbath. Thesis 22.
Learned Junius goes before us herein, and points out the type
affixed to that Sabbath. For besides the first institution of it
in paradise, he makes two other causes, which he calls
accessory, or affixed and added to it. 1. One was civilis,
or civil, that men and beasts might rest from their toilsome
labour every week. 2. Ceremonialis, or ceremonial, for
their solemn commemoration of their deliverance out of Egypt,
which we know typified our deliverance by Christ. (Deut.v.15.)
Some think, indeed, that their deliverance out of Egypt was upon
the Sabbath day; but this I do not urge, because, though it be
very probable, yet it is not certain; only this is certain, that
they were to sanctify this day because of this their
deliverance; and it is certain this deliverance was typical of
our deliverance by Christ: and hence it is certain that there
was a type affixed to this Sabbath; and because the Scripture is
so plain and express in it, I am inclined to think the same
which Junius does, that this is the type rather than any other I
have yet heard of; against which I know many things may be
objected; only it may be sufficient to clear up the place
against that which Mr. Brabourn answers to it. Thesis 23.
"The deliverance out of Egypt," says he, "is not
set down as the ground of the institution of the Sabbath, but
only as a motive to the observation thereof; as it was more
general in the preface to the decalogue, to the obedience of
every other command, which, notwithstanding, are not ceremonial;
for God says, I am the Lord, who brought thee out of Egypt;
therefore keep thou the first, the second, the third, the fifth,
the sixth, as well as the fourth commandment; and therefore,
says he, we may make every commandment ceremonial as well as the
Sabbath, if the motive of deliverance out of Egypt makes the
Sabbath to be so." This is the substance and sinews of his
discourse herein; and I confess it is true, their deliverance
out of Egypt was not the first ground of the institution of it,
but God's rest after his six days' labour; yet it was such a
ground as we contend for, viz., a secondary, and an annexed or
affixed ground. And that it was not a motive only to observe
that day, (as it is in the preface to the decalogue,) but a
superadded ground of it, may appear from this one consideration,
viz., because that very ground on which the Lord urges the
observation of the Sabbath in Ex.xx.11 is wholly left out in the
repetition of the law, (Deut.v.15,) and their deliverance out of
Egypt put into the room thereof; for the ground in Ex.xx.11 is
this: "Six days God made heaven and earth, and rested the
seventh day and sanctified it;" but instead of these words,
and of this ground, we find other words put into their room,
(Deut.v.15:) "Remember thou wast a servant in the land of
Egypt, and that the Lord brought thee out thence with a mighty
hand; therefore the Lord thy God commandeth thee to keep the
Sabbath." Which seems to argue strongly that these words
are not a mere motive, but another ground of the observation of
the Sabbath. And why might not the general motive in the preface
to the decalogue serve as a sufficient motive to the obedience
of this commandment, if there was no more but a motive in these
words of Deuteronomy; and therefore I suppose this was also the
ground and affixed type unto the Jewish Sabbath. Thesis 24. But
still the difficulty remains; for Mr. Brabourn will say that
those were but human reasons: but what ground is there from
Scripture for the institution of another Sabbath, as well as the
abrogation of the old? which if it be not cleared, I confess
this cause sinks: here, therefore, let it be again observed that
we are not to expect such evidence from Scripture concerning
this change, (as fond and humorous wit sometimes pleads for,) in
this controversy, namely, that Christ should come with drum and
trumpet, as it were, upon Mount Zion, and proclaim by word or
writing, in so many express words, that the Jewish Sabbath is
abrogated, and the first day of the week instituted in its room,
to be observed of all Christians to the end of the world. For it
is not the Lord's manner so to speak in many other things which
concern his kingdom, but as it were occasionally, or in way of
history, or epistle to some particular church or people; and
thus he does concerning the Sabbath; and yet Wisdom's mind is
plain enough to them that understand. Nor do I doubt but that
those scriptures which are sometimes alleged for the change of
the Sabbath, although at the first blush they may not seem to
bear up the weight of this cause, yet being thoroughly
considered, they are not only sufficient to establish modest
minds, but are also such as may epistomizein (epistomidzein), or
stop the mouths even of wranglers themselves. Thesis 25. I do
not think that the exercise of holy duties on a day argues that
such a day is the Christian Sabbath; for the apostles preached
commonly upon the Jewish Sabbath, sometimes upon the first day
of the week also; and therefore the bare exercise of holy duties
on a day is no sufficient argument that either the one or the
other is the Christian Sabbath; for then there might be two
Sabbaths, yea, many Sabbaths, in a week, because there may be
many holy duties in several days of the week, which we know is
against the morality of the fourth commandment. Thesis 26. Yet,
notwithstanding, although holy duties on a day do not argue such
a day to be our Sabbath, yet that day which is set apart for
Sabbath services rather than any other day, and is honoured
above any other day for that end, surely such a day is the
Christian Sabbath. Now, if it may appear that the first day of
the week was thus honoured, then certainly it is to be accounted
the Christian Sabbath. Thesis 27. The
primitive pattern churches thus honoured the first day of the
week; and what they practised without reproof, that the apostles
(who planted those churches) enjoined and preached unto them so
to do; at least in such weighty matters as the change of the
days, of preferring one before that other which the Lord has
honoured before; and what the apostles preached, that the Lord
Jesus commanded, (Matt.xxviii.20,) "Go teach all nations
that which I command you." Unless any shall think that the
apostles sometimes went beyond their commission to teach that to
others which Christ never commanded, which is blasphemous to
imagine; for though they might err in practice as men, and as
Peter did at Antioch, and Paul and Barnabas in their contention,
yet in their public ministry they were infallibly and
extraordinarily assisted, especially in such things which they
hold forth as patterns for after times; if, therefore, the
primitive churches thus honoured the first day of the week above
any other day for Sabbath services, then certainly they were
instituted and taught thus to do by the apostles approving of
them herein; and what the apostles taught the churches, that the
Lord Jesus commanded to the apostles. So that the approved
practice of the churches herein shows what was the doctrine of
the apostles; and the doctrine of the apostles shows what was
the command of Christ; so that the sanctification of this first
day of the week is no human tradition, but a divine institution
from Christ himself. Thesis 28. That
the churches honoured this day above any other shall appear in
its place, as also that the apostles commanded them so to do.
Yet, Mr. Primrose says, that this latter is doubtful; and Mr.
Ironside (not questioning the matter) falls off with another
evasion, viz., that they acted herein not as apostles, but as
ordinary pastors, and consequently as fallible men, not only in
commanding this change of the Sabbath, but in all other matters
of church government, (among which he reckons this of the
Sabbath to be one,) which he thinks were imposed according to
their private wisdom, as most fit for those times, but not by
any apostolic commission as concerning all times. But to imagine
that matters of church government in the apostles' days were
coats for the moon in respect of after times, and that the form
of it is mutable, (as he would have it,) I suppose will be
digested by few honest and sober minds in these times, unless
they be biased for a season by politic ends, and therefore
herein I will not contend; only it may be considered whether any
private spirit could abolish that day, which from the beginning
of the world God so highly honoured, and then honour and advance
another day above it, and sanctify it too (as shall be proved)
for religious services. Could any do this justly but by
immediate dispensation from the Lord Christ Jesus? And if the
apostles did thus receive it immediately from Christ, and so
teach the observation of it, they could not then teach it as
fallible men and as private pastors, as he would have it; a
pernicious conceit, enough to undermine the faith of God's elect
in many matters more weighty than this of the Sabbath. Thesis 29. To
know when and where the Lord Christ instructed his disciples
concerning this change, is needless to inquire. It is sufficient
to believe this: that what the primitive churches exemplary
practised, that was taught them by the apostles who planted
them; and that whatsoever the apostles preached, the Lord Christ
commanded, as has been shown. Yet if the change of the Sabbath
be a matter appertaining to the kingdom of God, why should we
doubt but that, within the space of his forty days' abode with
them after his resurrection, he then taught it them? for it is
expressly said, that he then taught them such things. (Acts
xiii.) Thesis 30. When
the apostles came among the Jews, they preached usually upon the
Jewish Sabbath; but this was not because they did think or
appoint it herein to be the Christian Sabbath, but that they
might take the fittest opportunity and season of meeting with,
and so of preaching the gospel to, the Jews in those times. For
what power had they to call them together when they saw meet?
Or, if they had, yet was it meet for them thus to do, before
they were sufficiently instructed about God's mind for setting
apart some other time? And how could they be sufficiently and
seasonably instructed herein without watching the advantage of
those times which the Jews thought were the only Sabbaths? The
days of Pentecost, Passover, and hours of prayer in the temple
are to be observed still as well as the Jewish Sabbath, if the
apostles' preaching on their Sabbaths argues the continuance of
them, as Mr. Brabourn argues; for we know that they preached
also, and went up purposely to Jerusalem, at such times, to
preach among them, as well as upon the Sabbath days; look
therefore, as they laid hold upon the days of Pentecost and
Passover as the fittest seasons to preach to the Jews, but not
thinking that such feasts should still be continued, so it is in
their preaching upon the Jewish Sabbaths. Thesis 31. Nor
did the apostles sinfully Judaize by preaching to the Jews upon
their Sabbaths, (as Mr. Brabourn would infer;) supposing that
their Sabbaths should not be still observed, they should then
Judaize and after ceremonies, (says he,) and so build up those
things which they laboured to destroy. For suppose they did
observe such days and Sabbaths as were ceremonial for a time,
yet it being done not in conscience of the day, but in
conscience of taking so fit a season to preach the gospel in, it
could not nor can not be any sinful Judaizing, especially while
then the Jews were not sufficiently instructed about the
abolishing of those things. For Mr. Brabourn could not but know
that all the Jewish ceremonies, being once the appointment of
God, were to have an honourable burial, and that therefore they
might be lawfully observed for a time among the Jews, until they
were more fully instructed about them; and hence Paul
circumcised Timothy because of the Jews, (Acts xvi.3,) and did
otherwise conform to them, that so he might win and gain the
more upon them; and if Paul observed purposely a Jewish ceremony
of circumcision which was not necessary, nay, which was not
lawful to be observed among the Gentiles, (Gal.v.2,) and yet he
observed it to gain the Jews, why might not Paul much more
preach the gospel, which is in itself a necessary duty, upon a
Jewish Sabbath which fell out occasionally to him, and therefore
might lawfully be observed for such an end among the Jews, which
among the Gentiles might be unlawful? Suppose therefore that the
apostles might have taught the Jews from house to house, (as Mr.
Brabourn argues against the necessity put upon the apostles to
preach upon the Jewish Sabbath,) yet what reason or conscience
was there to lose the opportunity of public preaching for the
more plentiful gathering in of souls, when many are met
together, and which may lawfully be done, and be contended only
to seek their good in such private ways? And what although Paul
did assemble the chief of the Jews together at Rome, when he was
a prisoner, to acquaint them with civil matters about his
imprisonment, (Acts xxviii.17;) yet had he power to do thus in
all places where he came? or was it meet for him so to do? Did
not he submit the appointment of a sacred assembly to hear the
word rather unto them than assume it to himself? (Acts
xxviii.23.) It is therefore false and unsound which Mr. Brabourn
affirms, viz., that Paul did preach on the Jewish Sabbath in
conscience of the day, not merely with respect of the
opportunity he then took from their own public meetings then to
preach to them; for (says he) Paul had power to assemble them
together on other days. This I say, is both false; for he that
was so much spoken against among them might not in all places be
able to put forth such a power; as also it is unsound; for
suppose he had such a power, yet whether it was so meet for him
to put it forth in appointing other times, may be easily judged
of by what has been said. Thesis 32. Nor is
there a foundation here laid of making all other actions of the
apostles unwarrantable or inimitable, (as Mr. Brabourn says,)
because we are not to imitate the apostles herein in preaching
upon the Jewish Sabbaths. For no actions either of Christ or the
apostles, which were done merely in respect of some special
occasion, or special reason, are, ea tenus, or in that
respect, binding to others; for the example of Christ eating the
Lord's supper only with men, not women, in an upper chamber, and
toward the dark evening, does not bind us to exclude women, or
not to celebrate in other places and times, because we know that
these actions were merely occasioned in respect of special
reasons, (as the eating of the Passover with one's own family,
Christ's family not consisting of women,) so it is here in
respect of the Sabbath. The apostles preaching upon the Jewish
Sabbath was merely occasional, by occasion of the public
meetings (their fittest time to do good in) which were upon this
and any other day. Thesis 33. Now,
although the Jews observing this day, the apostles observed it
among the Jews by preaching among them, yet we shall find that
among the Christian Gentile churches and believers, (where no
Judaism was to be so much as tolerated for a time,) not any such
day was thus observed; nay, another day, the first day in the
week, is honoured and preferred by the apostles above any other
day in the week for religious and Sabbath services. For,
although holy duties do not argue always a holy day, yet when we
shall find the Holy Ghost single out and nominate one particular
day to be observed and honoured rather than any other day, and
rather than the Jewish seventh day itself, for Sabbath services
and holy duties, this undeniably proves that day to be the
Christian Sabbath, and this we shall make evident to be the
first day of the week; which one thing seriously minded (if
proved) does utterly subvert the whole frame and force of Mr.
Brabourn's shady discourse for the observation of the Jewish
Sabbath, and most effectually establishes the Christian Sabbath.
Mr. Brabourn therefore herein bestirs his wits, and tells us, on
the contrary, that Paul preached not only to the Jews, but even
unto the Gentiles, upon this Jewish Sabbath, rather than any
other day; and for this end brings double proof: one is Acts
xiii.42,44, where the Gentiles are said to desire Paul to preach
to them, eiV to metaxu sabbaton (eis to metaxu sabbaton), i.e.,
the week between, or any day between till the next Sabbath, (as
some translate it,) or (if Mr. Brabourn will) the next Sabbath,
or Jewish Sabbath, when almost all the city came out to hear
Paul, who were most of them Gentiles, not Jews. Be it so, they
were Gentiles indeed; but as yet no church or Christian church
of Gentiles actually under Christ's government and ordinances,
among whom (I say) the first day of the week was so much
honoured above any other day for sacred assemblies. For it is no
wonder if the apostles yield to their desires in preaching any
time of the week which they thought the best time, even upon the
Jewish Sabbath, among whom the Jews being mingled, they might
have the fitter opportunity to preach to them also, and so
become all things to all men to gain some. His second proof is
Acts xvi.12,13; and here he tells us that Paul and Timothy
preached, not to the Jews, but to the Gentiles, upon the Sabbath
day. I confess they are not called Jews no more than it
is said that they were Gentiles; but why might not Lydia
and her company be Jews or Jewish proselytes, who, we know, did
observe the Jewish Sabbath strictly till they were better
instructed, as they did all other Jewish ceremonies also? For
Lydia is expressly said to be one who worshiped God before Paul
came. Mr. Brabourn tells us they were no Jewish proselytes,
because they had no Jewish synagogue, and therefore they were
fain to go out of the city into the fields, beside a river to
pray. I confess the text says that they went out to a river
side, where prayer was wont to be made; but that this was the
open fields, and that there was no oratory, house, or place of
shelter to meet and pray in, this is not in the text, but is Mr.
Brabourn's comment and gloss on it. But suppose it was in the
open fields, and that they had no synagogue; yet will it follow
that these were not Jews? Might not the Jews be in a Gentile
city for a time, without any synagogue, especially if their
number be but small, and this small number consist chiefly of
women, as it seems this did, whose hearts God touched, leaving
their husbands to their own ways? If they were not Jews or
Jewish proselytes, why did they choose the Sabbath day, (which
the Jews so much set by,) rather than any other, to pray and
worship God together in? But verily such answers as these,
wherewith the poor man abounds in his treatise, make me
extremely fear that he rather stretched his conscience than was
acted by a plain deluded conscience in this point of the
Sabbath. Thesis 34. It
remains, therefore, to prove that the first day of the week is
the Christian Sabbath by divine institution; and this may appear
from those three texts of Scripture ordinarily alleged for this
end: 1. Acts xx.7; 2. 1 Cor.xvi.2; 3. Rev.i.10; which, being
taken jointly together, hold these three things:-- 1. That the first day of the
week was honoured above any other day for Sabbath services in
the primitive church's practice, as is evident, Acts xx.7. 2. That the apostles commanded
the observation of this day rather than any other for Sabbath
services, as is evident, 1 Cor.xvi.1,2. 3. That this day is holy and
sanctified to be holy to the Lord above any other day, and
therefore it has the Lord's name upon it, (a usual sign of
things holy to him,) and therefore called the Lord's day, as is
evident, Rev.i.10; but these things need more particular
explication. Thesis 35. In the
first of these places, (Acts xx.7,) these particulars are
manifest:-- 1. That the church of Troas
(called disciples) publicly and generally now met together, so
that it was no private church meeting, (as some say,) but
general and open, according as those times would give leave. 2. That this meeting was upon
the first day of the week, called en th mia twn sabbatwn (en tei
mia ton sabbaton) which phrase, although Gomarus, Primrose,
Heylin, and many others go about to translate thus, viz., upon
one of the days of the week. Yet this is sufficient to dash that
dream, (besides what else might be said,) viz., that this phrase
is expounded in other Scriptures to be the first day of the
week, (Luke xxiv.1; John xx.1,) but never to be found throughout
all the Scriptures expounded of one day in the week. Gomarus
indeed tells us of en mia hmerwn (en miai hemeron), (Luke v.17,
and viii.22, and xx.1,) which is translated quodam die,
or a certain day; but this will not help him, for this is not en
th mia twn sabbatwn (en te mia ton sabbaton), as it is in this
place. 3. That the end of this meeting
was holy duties, viz., to break bread, or to receive the Lord's
supper, as the phrase is expounded, (Acts ii.43,) which was
therefore accompanied with preaching the word and prayer, holy
preparation and serious meditation about those great mysteries.
Nor can this breaking of bread be interpreted of their love
feasts, or common suppers, as Gomarus suspects. For their love
feasts and common suppers were not of the whole church together,
(as this was,) but in several houses, as Mr. Cartwright proves
from Acts ii.46. And although the Corinthians used their love
feasts in public, yet they are sadly reproved for it by the
apostle, (1 Cor.xi.12,) and therefore he would not allow it
here. 4. It is not said that Paul
called them together because he was to depart the next day, or
that they purposely declined the Lord's supper till that day
because then Paul was to depart, (as Mr. Primrose urges;) but
the text speaks of it as of a time and day usually observed of
them before, and therefore it is said, that "when they came
together to break bread;" and Paul therefore took his
opportunity of preaching to them, and seems to stay purposely,
and wait seven days among them, that he might communicate with
them, and preach unto them in this ordinary time of public
meeting; and therefore, though he might privately instruct and
preach to them the other seven days, yet his preaching now is
mentioned in regard of some special solemnity of meeting on this
day. 5. The first day was honoured
above any other day for these holy duties, or else why did they
not meet upon the last day of the week, the Jewish Sabbath, for
these ends? For if the Christian churches were bound to observe
the Jewish Sabbath, why did they not meet then, and honour the
seventh day above the first day? considering that it was but the
day before, and therefore might easily have done it, more fitly,
too, had that seventh day been the Christian Sabbath. 6. Why is the first day of the
week mentioned, which is attributed only in the New Testament to
the day of Christ's resurrection, unless this day was then
usually honoured and sanctified for holy duties, called here
breaking of bread, by a synecdoche of a part for the whole, and
therefore comprehends all other Sabbath duties? For there is no
more reason to exclude prayer, preaching, singing of psalms,
etc., because these are not mentioned, than to exclude drinking
of wine in the sacrament, (as the blind Papists do,) because
this neither is here made mention of. Mr. Primrose indeed tells
us that it may be the first day of the week is named in respect
of the miracle done in it upon Eutychus. But the text is plain;
the time of the meeting is mentioned, and the end of it to break
bread, and the miracle is but brought in as a particular event
which happened on this day, which was set apart first for higher
ends. 7. Nor is it said in the text
that the church of Troas met every day together to receive the
sacrament, (as Mr. Primrose suggests,) and that therefore this
action of breaking bread was done without respect to any
particular or special day, it being performed every day. For I
do not find that the primitive church received the Lord's supper
every day; for though it be said (Acts ii.42) that the church
continued in the apostles' fellowship and breaking of bread; yet
it is not said that they brake bread every day. They are indeed
said to be daily in the temple, (ver.46,) but not that they
brake bread every day in the temple, or from house to house, or
if they should, yet the breaking of bread in this verse is meant
of common, not sacred bread, as it is verse 42, where I think
the bread was no more common than their continuance in the
apostles' doctrine and fellowship was common; and therefore in
this 46th verse the phrase is altered, and the original word
properly signifies ordinary bread for common nourishment. And
yet suppose they did receive the sacrament every day, yet here
the breaking of bread is made mention of as the opus diei,
or the special business of the day; and the day is mentioned as
the special time for such a purpose; and hence no other day (if
they break bread in it) is mentioned, and therefore it is called
in effect "the day of meeting to break bread." Nor do
I find in all the Scripture a day distinctly mentioned for holy
duties, (as this first day of the week is,) wherein a whole
people or church meet together for such ends; but that day was
holy: the naming of the particular day for such ends implies the
holiness of it, and the time is purposely mentioned, that others
in aftertimes might purposely and specially observe that day. 8. Nor is it said that the
disciples met together the night after the first day; but it is
expressly said to be upon the first day of the week: and suppose
(as Mr. Brabourn says) that their meeting was not together in
the morning, but only in the evening time to celebrate the
Lord's supper, a little before the shutting in of the day; yet
it is a sufficient ground for conscience to observe this day
above any other for holy services, although every part of the
day be not filled up with public and church duties; for suppose
the Levites on the Jewish Sabbath should do no holy public duty
on their own Sabbath until the day was far spent; will Mr.
Brabourn argue from thence that the Jewish Sabbath was not
wholly holy unto God? But again: suppose the latter part of the
day was spent in breaking of bread; yet will it follow that no
other part of the day was spent before, either in any private or
public holy duties? Possibly they might receive the Lord's
supper in the evening of this Sabbath, (for the time of this
action is in the general indifferent;) yet might they not spend
the rest of the morning in public duties, as we know some do now
in some churches, who are said to meet together to break bread
the latter part of this day, and yet sanctify the Sabbath the
whole day before? Suppose it be not expressly said that they did
shut up shop windows at Troas, and forsake the plow and the
wheel, and abstain from all servile work; yet if he believes
that no more was done this day but what is expressly set down,
Mr. Brabourn must needs see a pitiful face of Christ in the
Lord's supper, and people coming rushing upon it without any
serious examination or preparation, or singing of psalms,
because no such duties as these are mentioned to be upon this
day. 9. Lastly, Master Primrose,
like a staggering man, knows not what to fasten on in answer to
this place, and therefore tells us, that suppose it was a
Sabbath, yet that it might be taken up from the church's liberty
and custom, rather than from any divine institution; but besides
that which has been said to dash his dream, (Thesis. 27,) the
falseness of this common and bold assertion will appear more
fully in the explication of the second text, (1 Cor.xvi.1,2,)
which now follows, wherein it will appear to be an apostolic
(and therefore a divine) institution from Jesus Christ. Thesis 36. In the
second of the places therefore alleged, (1 Cor.xvi.1,2,) these
things are considerable to prove the first day in the week to be
the Christian Sabbath, and that not so much by the church's
practice, as by the apostle's precept; for, -- 1. Although it be true, that in
some cases collections may be made any day for the poor saints,
yet why does the apostle here limit them to this day for the
performance of this duty? They that translate kata mian sabbatwn
(kata mian sabbaton), upon one day of the week, do miserably
mistake the phrase, which in Scripture phrase only signifies the
first day of it, and beat their foreheads against the main scope
of the apostle, viz., to fix a certain day for such a duty as
required such a certain time; for they might (by this
translation) collect their benevolences one day in four or ten
years, for then it should be done one day in a week. 2. The apostle does not only
limit them to this time, but also all the churches of Galatia, (ver.
1,) and consequently all other churches, if that be true, (2
Cor.viii.13,14,) wherein the apostle professes he presses not
one church, that he may ease another church, but that there be
an equality; and although I see no ground, from this text, that
the maintenance of the ministry should be raised every Sabbath
day, (for Christ would not have them reckoned among the poor,
being labourers worthy of their hire,) and although this
collection was for the poor saints of other churches, yet the
proportion strongly holds, that if there be ordinary cause of
such collections in every particular church, these collections
should be made the first day of the week, much more carefully
and religiously for the poor of one's own church; and that in
all the churches of Christ Jesus to the end of the world. 3. The apostle does not limit
them thus with wishes, and counsels only to do it if they
thought most meet, but wsper dietaxa (hosper dietaxa), (ver.1,)
as I have ordained, or instituted; and therefore binds their
consciences to it; and if Paul ordained it, certainly he had it
from Christ Jesus, who first commanded him so to appoint it; who
professes that what he had received of the Lord, that only he
commanded unto them to do. (1 Cor.xi.13) 4. If this day had not been
more holy and more fit for this work of love than any other day,
he durst not have limited them to this day, nor durst he have
honoured this day above any other in the week, yea, above the
Jewish seventh day. For we see the very apostle tender always of
Christian liberty, and not to bind where the Lord leaves his
people free; for thus doing he should rather make snares than
laws for churches, (1 Cor.vii.27,35,) and go expressly against
his own doctrine, (Gal.v.1,) who bids them "stand fast in
their liberty," and that in this very point of the
observation of days. (Gal.iv.10.) But what fitness was there on
this day for such a service? Consider therefore, -- 5. That the apostle does not in
this place immediately appoint and institute the Sabbath, but
supposes it to be so already, (as Mr. Primrose is forced to
acknowledge,) and we know duties of mercy and charity, as well
as of necessity and piety, are Sabbath duties; for which end
this day (which Beza finds in an ancient manuscript to be called
the Lord's day) was more fit for those collections than any
other day; partly because they usually met together publicly on
this day, and so their collections might be in a greater
readiness against Paul's coming; partly, also, that they might
give more liberally, at least freely, it being supposed that
upon this day men's hearts are more weaned from the world, and
are warmed, by the word and ordinances, with more lively faith
and hope of better things to come, and therefore, having
received spiritual things from the Lord more plentifully on this
day, every man will be more free to impart of his temporal good
things therein for refreshing of the poor saints, and the very
bowels of Christ Jesus. And what other reason can be given of
limiting this collection to this day I confess I can not
honestly (though I could wickedly) imagine. And certainly if
this was the end, and withal the Jewish day was the Christian
Sabbath, the apostle would never have thus limited them to this
day, nor honoured and exalted this first day before that Jewish
seventh; which if it had been the Christian Sabbath, had been
more fit for such a work as this than the first day (if a
working day) could be. 6. Suppose therefore that this
apostolic and divine institution is to give their collections,
but not to institute the day, (as Master Primrose pleads;)
suppose also that they were not every Lord's day or first day,
but sometimes upon the first day; suppose also that they were
extraordinary, and for the poor of other churches, and to
continue for that time only of their need; suppose also that no
man is enjoined to bring into the public treasury of the church,
but (par eantw tiqetw (par heanto titheto)) privately to lay it
by on this day by himself, (as Mr. Brabourn urges against this
text,) yet still the question remains unanswered, viz.: Why
should the apostle limit them to this day? Either for
extraordinary or private collections, and such special acts of
mercy, unless the Lord had honoured this day for acts of mercy
(and much more of piety) above any other ordinary and common
day? What then could this day be but the Christian Sabbath
imposed by the apostles, and magnified and honoured by all the
churches in those days? I know there are some other replies made
to this Scripture by Mr. Brabourn; but they are wind eggs (as
Plutarch calls that philosopher's notions,) and have but little
in them; and therefore I pass them by as I do many other things
in that book as not worth the time to name them. 7. This, lastly, I add, this
first day was thus honoured either by divine or human
institution; if by divine, we have what we plead for; if by
human custom and tradition, then the apostle assuredly would
never have commended the observation of this day, who elsewhere
condemns the observation of days, though the days were formerly
by divine institution. "Ye observe," says he,
"days and times;" and would he then have commended the
observation of these days above any other which are only by
human, but never by divine institution? It is strange that the
churches of Galatia are forbidden the observation of days,
(Gal.iv.10,) and yet commanded (1 Cor.xvi.1,2) a more sacred and
solemn observation of the first day of the week rather than any
other. Surely, this could not be, unless we conclude a divine
institution hereof. For we know how zealous the holy apostle is
every where to strike at human customs, and therefore could not
lay a stumbling block (to occasion the grievous fall of
churches) to allow and command them to observe a human
tradition, and to honour this above the seventh day for such
holy services as are here made mention of. But whether this day
was solemnly sanctified as the Sabbath of the Lord our God, we
come now to inquire. Thesis 37. In the
third text, (Rev.i.10,) mention is made of the Lord's day, which
was ever accounted the first day of the week. It seems,
therefore, to be the Lord's day, and consequently the Sabbath of
the Lord our God. Two things are needful here to be considered
and cleared: -- 1. That this day being called
the Lord's day, it is therefore set apart and sanctified by the
Lord Christ as holy. 2. That this day thus
sanctified is the first day of the week, and therefore that
first day is our holy or Sabbath day. Thesis 38. The
first difficulty here to prove and clear up is, that this day,
which is here called the Lord's day, is a day instituted and
sanctified for the Lord's honour and service above any other
day. For, as the sacrament of bread and wine is called the
Lord's supper, and the Lord's table, for no other reason but
because they were instituted by Christ, and sanctified for him
and his honour, so what other reason can be given by any
Scripture light why this is called the Lord's day, but because
it was in the like manner instituted and sanctified as they
were? Mr. Brabourn here shifts away from the light of this text,
by affirming that it might be called the Lord's day in respect
of God the Creator, not Christ the Redeemer, and therefore may
be meant of the Jewish Sabbath, which is called the Lord's holy
day. (Is.lviii.3.) But why might he not as well say, that it is
called the Lord's supper and table, in respect of God the
Creator, considering that in the New Testament, since Christ is
actually exalted to be Lord of all, this phrase is only applied
to the Lord Christ as Redeemer? Look, therefore, as the Jewish
Sabbath, being called the Lord's Sabbath, or the Sabbath of
Jehovah, is by that title and note certainly known to be a day
sanctified by Jehovah, as Creator, so this day, being called the
Lord's day, is by this note as certainly known to be a day
sanctified by our Lord Jesus, as Redeemer. Nor do I find any one
distinct thing in all the Scripture which has the Lord's
superscription or name upon it, (as the Lord's temple, the
Lord's offerings, the Lord's people, the Lord's priests, etc.,)
but it is sanctified of God and holy to him. Why is not this
day, then, holy to the Lord, if it equally bears the Lord's
name? Master Primrose, indeed, puts us off with another shift,
viz., that this day being called so by the church's customs,
John, therefore, calls it so in respect of that custom which the
church then used, without divine institution. But why may not he
as well say that he calls it the Lord's table in respect of the
church's custom also? The designation of a day, and of the first
time in the day for holy public services, is, indeed, in the
power of each particular church, (suppose it be a lecture, and
the hours of Sabbath meetings;) but the sanctification of a day,
if it be divine worship, to observe it if God command and
appoint it, then surely it is will worship for any human custom
to institute it. Now, the Lord's name being stamped upon this
day, and so set apart for the honour of Christ, it can not be
that so it should be called in respect of the church's custom;
for surely then they should have been condemned for will worship
by some of the apostles; and therefore it is in respect of the
Lord's institution hereof. Thesis 39. The
second difficulty now lies in clearing up this particular, viz.,
that this day, thus sanctified, was the first day of the week,
which is therefore the holy day of the Lord our God, and
consequently the Christian Sabbath: for this purpose let these
ensuing particulars be laid together. 1. That this day of which John
speaks is a known day, and was generally known in those days by
this glorious name of the Lord's day, and therefore the apostle
gives no other title to it but the Lord's day, as a known day in
those times; for the scope of John in this vision is, as in all
other prophetical visions when they set down the day and time of
it, to gain the more credit to the certainty of it, when every
one sees the truth circumstantiated, and they hear of the
particular time; and it may seem most absurd to set down the day
and time for such an end, and yet the day is not particularly
known. 2. If it was a known day, what
day can it be either by evidence of Scripture, or any antiquity,
but the first day of the week? For, -- 1. There is no other day on
which mention is made of any other work or action of Christ
which might occasion a holy day, but only this of the
resurrection, which is exactly noted of all the evangelists to
be upon the first day of the week, and by which work he is
expressly said to have all power given him in heaven and earth,
(Matt.xxviii.18,) and to be actually Lord of dead and living,
(Rom.xiv.9;) and therefore why should any other Lord's day be
dreamed of? Why should Master Brabourn imagine that this day
might be some superstitious Easter day, which happens once a
year? the Holy Ghost, on the contrary, not setting down the
month or day of the year, but of the week wherein Christ arose,
and therefore it must be meant of a weekly holy day here called
the Lord's day. 2. We do not read of any other
day besides this first day of the week, which was observed for
holy Sabbath duties, and honoured above any other day for
breaking of bread, for preaching the word, (which were acts of
piety,) nor for collections for the poor, (the most eminent act
of mercy:) why, then, should any imagine any other day to be the
Lord's day, but that first day? 3. There seems to be much in
that which Beza observes out of an ancient Greek manuscript
wherein that first day of the week (1 Cor. xvi. 2) is expressly
called the Lord's day; and the Syriac translation says that
their meeting together to receive the sacrament (1 Cor.xi.20)
was upon the Lord's day; nor is there any antiquity but expounds
this Lord's day of the first day of the week, as learned Rivet
makes good against Gomarus, professing that Quotquot
interpretes hactenus ferunt, hoec verba de die resurrectionis
Domini intellexerunt; solus quod quidem sciam, Cl. D. Gomarus
contradixit." 4. Look, as Jehovah's or the
Lord's holy day (Is.lviii.13) was the seventh day in the week
then in use in the Old Testament, so why should not this Lord's
day be meant of some seventh day, (the first of seven in the
week which the Lord appointed, and the church observed under the
New Testament,) and therefore called (as that was) the Lord's
day? 5. There can be no other day
imagined but this to be the Lord's day. Indeed, Gomarus affirms
that it is called the Lord's day, because of the Lord Jesus'
apparition in vision to John; and therefore he tells that, in
Scripture phrase, the day of the Lord is such a day wherein the
Lord manifests himself either in wrath or in favor, as here to
John. But there is a great difference between those phrases; the
Lord's day and the day of the Lord, which is not called here.
For such an interpretation of the Lord's day, as if it was an
uncertain time, is directly cross to the scope of John in
setting down this vision, who, to beget more credit to it, tells
us, first, of the person that saw it, -- I, John, -- (Rev.i.9;)
secondly, the particular place, in Patmos; thirdly, the
particular time, the Lord's day. These considerations do utterly
subvert Mr. Brabourn's discourse, to prove the Jewish Sabbath to
be the Lord's day, which we are still to observe, and may be
sufficient to answer the scruples of modest and humble minds;
for, if we ask the time of it, it is on the first day of the
week. Would we know whether this time was spent in holy duties
and Sabbath services? This also has been proved. Would we know
whether it was sanctified for that end? Yes, verily, because it
is called the Lord's day, and consequently all servile work was
and is to be laid aside in it. Would we know whether it is the
Christian Sabbath day? Verily, if it be the day of the Lord our
God, (the Lord's day,) why is it not the Sabbath of the Lord our
God? If it be exalted and honoured by the apostles of Christ
above the Jewish Sabbath duties, why should we not believe but
that it was our Sabbath day? And although the words Sabbath
day, or seventh day, be not expressly mentioned, yet
if they be for substance in this day, and by just consequence
deduced from Scripture, it is all one as if the Lord had
expressly called them so. Thesis 40. Hence
therefore it follows, that although this particular seventh day,
which is the first of seven, be not particularly made mention of
in the fourth commandment, yet the last of seven being
abrogated, and this being instituted in its room, it is
therefore to be perpetuated and observed in its room. For though
it be true (as Mr. Brabourn urges) that new institutions can not
be founded, no, not by analogy of proportion, merely upon old
institutions, as, because children were circumcised, it will not
follow that they are therefore to be baptised, and so because
the Jews kept that seventh day, that we may therefore keep the
first day; yet this is certain, that when new things are
instituted not by human analogy, but by divine appointment, the
application of these may stand by virtue of old precepts and
general rules, from whence the application even of old
institutions formerly arose. For we know that the cultus
institutus in the New Testament, in ministry and sacraments,
stands at this day by virtue of the second commandment, as well
as the instituted worship under the Old. And though baptism
stands not by virtue of the institution of circumcision, yet it
being, de novo, instituted by Christ, as the seal of
initiation into Christ's mystical body, (1 Cor.xii.12,) it now
stands by virtue of that general rule by which circumcision
itself was administered, viz., that the seal of initiation into
Christ's body be applied to all the visible members of that
body; and hence children are to be now baptized, as once they
were circumcised, being members of Christ's body. So the first
day of the week being instituted to be the Lord's day, or Lord's
Sabbath, hence it follows, that, if the first seventh, which is
now abrogated, was once observed because it was the Lord's
Sabbath, or the Sabbath day which God appointed, -- by the very
same rule, and on the very same ground, we also are bound to
keep this first day, being also the Sabbath of the Lord our God,
which he has now appointed anew under the New Testament. Thesis 41. It is
true that some of the primitive churches, in the eastern parts,
did for some hundred of years observe both Sabbaths, both Jewish
and Christian. But they did this without warrant from God, (who
allows but one Sabbath in a week,) and also against the rule of
the apostles; for I think that Paul, foreseeing this observation
of days and Jewish Sabbaths to be stirring and ready to creep
into the church, that he did therefore condemn the same in his
Epistles to the Galatians and Colossians; and that therefore
Christian emperors and councils, in after times, did well and
wisely both to condemn the observation of the one and withal
honour the other. Thesis 42.
Although the work of redemption be applied unto few in respect
of the special benefits of it, yet Christ, by his death, is made
Heir and Lord of all things, being now set down at the right
hand of God, and there is some benefit which befalls all the
world by Christ's redemption; and the government of all things
is not now in the hand of God as Creator, but in the hand of a
Mediator, (Heb.i.1,2; ii.8,9; John v.22; Col.i.16,17; 1
Tim.iv.10; John iii.35;) and hence it is no wonder if all men,
as well as a few elected, selected, and called, be commanded to
sanctify the Lord's day, as once they were the Jewish seventh
day; the work of Christ being in some respect of as great
extent, through all the work of creation, as the work of the
Father. And therefore it is a great feebleness in Mr. Brabourn
to go about to vilify the work of redemption, and extol that of
creation above it; and that therefore the Sabbath ought still to
be kept in reference to the work of creation, which concerns all
men, rather than in respect of redemption, which he imagines
concerns only some few. Thesis 43. The
Lord Christ rested from the work of redemption by price, upon
the day of his resurrection; but he is not yet at rest from the
work of redemption by power, until the day of our resurrection
and glory be perfected. But it does not hence follow (as Mr.
Primrose imagines) that there is no Lord's day instituted in
respect of Christ's resurrection, because he has not, nor did
not then rest from redemption by power; for look, as the Father,
having rested from the works of creation, might therefore
appoint a day of rest, although he did not, nor does not yet
rest from providence, (John v.17,) so the Lord Christ having
finished the great work of redemption, he might justly appoint a
day of rest, although his redeeming work by power was yet
behind. Thesis 44. The
heavy and visible judgments of God revealed from heaven against
profaneness of this our Lord's day Sabbath will one day be a
convincing argument of holiness of this day, when the Lord
himself shall have the immediate handling and pressing of it.
Meanwhile I confess my weakness to convince an adversary by it;
nor will I contend with any other arguments from antiquity for
the observation of this day; but these may suffice, which are
alleged from the holy word.
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