QUESTIONS ABOUT THE NATURE AND
PERPETUITY
OF THE SEVENTH-DAY
SABBATH.
AND PROOF,
THAT THE FIRST DAY OF THE WEEK IS THE
TRUE CHRISTIAN SABBATH.
BY JOHN BUNYAN.
'The Son of man is lord also of the
Sabbath day.'
London: Printed for Nath, Ponder, at the
Peacock in the Poultry, 1685.
EDITOR'S
ADVERTISEMENT.
All our inquiries into divine commands are
required to be made personally, solemnly, prayerful. To
'prove all things,' and 'hold fast' and
obey 'that which is good,' is a precept, equally
binding upon the clown, as it is upon the philosopher.
Satisfied from our observations of nature, that there is a
God; our next inquiry is into the revelation of his will:
which, when understood, must be implicitly obeyed, in
defiance of any usages of society, and of every erroneous
pre-conceived opinion. In this important investigation, we
shall find, that the commands of God revealed to man, fall
under two classes.
First, Moral and Eternal, being essential to
the happiness of all created intelligences, whether pure or
sinful. As, the fear and love of the Creator, who preserves
and bountifully blesses his creatures; and flowing from
this is love to all his creation. He who wantonly destroys
life in order that he may glut a demoniac propensity with
the agonizing death struggle, is a practical atheist. The
Christian will cherish and promote the happiness of all; he
dares only to take away life to preserve life.
Second, Ceremonial or Temporal. Those which
have been commanded by God, for local, family or national
observances, and which, when they have fulfilled their
intended object, are removed or suffered gradually to die
away.
The well-being of society requires that a
portion of time be set apart for divine worship.
Individuals are commanded to pray without ceasing. An
invaluable custom leads families to unite in morning and
evening prayer; and it is an important question whether the
Creator having sanctified, and rested on, the seventh day,
intended that rest as a pattern to all his rational
creatures. If so, the seventh day must depend upon
our being able to fix upon which day of the week the
creation commenced. Again our inquiries will extend to
those injunctions, given to the Jews in the wilderness, to
sanctify certain days to public worship; and whether that
law was intended for all mankind. In either case it is
essential that we ascertain whether those various Sabbaths
of weeks—of months or of years—with the
ceremonies to be performed on them, were to continue to the
end of time or for a limited period.
In all these inquiries we are strictly
confined to revelation, for there is no indication in
nature, or in any of its laws, of a day of rest; but on the
contrary a state of progression marks every day alike. Our
Lord has taught us that 'the Sabbath was made for
man,' and therefore did not exist among the angels,
prior to the creation of man, as all moral or universal
obligations must have existed; for they are the same from
eternity to eternity; and over this, like other ceremonial
or local commands, the Creator claims dominion. 'The
Son of man is Lord also of the Sabbath.'
Researches into these questions were made in
earlier times, and some curious calculations have appeared
to prove, that the work of creation commenced on the day
called Monday, so that what is now termed the first day of
the week, was originally the rest of God from creation; as
it was his rest from the work of redemption, by rising from
the tomb. But the extent of that period called a day, in
creation, has never been defined: and the terms
'work' or 'rest,' as applied to the Deity,
are used in condescension to our finite powers. The
controversy upon this subject assumed a more public and
definite form at the Reformation. Sir Thomas More asserted
that the seventh day was superseded by the first, in
obedience to tradition:[1] it forms the first of the five
commandments of Holy Church—'The Sundays hear
thou mass.' William Tyndale, in reply, contends that
'we be lords over the Sabbath'; we may change it
for Monday, or any other day, as we see need, or have two
every week, if one is not enough to teach the people.[2]
Calvin preferred a daily assembling of the church, but if
that was impossible, then at stated intervals: his words
are—'Since the Sabbath is abrogate, I do not so
rest upon the number of seven, that I would bind the church
to the bondage thereof; neither will I condemn those
churches that have other solemn days for their
meetings.'[3] Luther considers the observance of the
Jewish Sabbath one of the 'weak and beggarly
rudiments.'[4]
The controversy became still more popular in
this country, when James the First and Charles the First
put forth the book of sports to be allowed and encouraged
on Sundays. The Puritans called Sunday 'The
Sabbath,' and a voluminous contest was carried on as to
whether it ought not rather to be called 'The
Lord's day.' In 1628, Mr. Brabourne, a clergyman of
note, kept the Jewish Sabbath, and in a short time several
churches, in England, assembled on that day, and were
called 'seventh day, or Sabbath keepers'—many
of them were Baptists. This led to the controversy in which
Bunyan took his part, in this very conclusive and admirable
treatise.
The work was first published in the year
1685, and was not reprinted until the year 1806, when it
appeared in the third volume of select works by John
Bunyan; since then it has been reprinted in two American
editions of his works. The reason why it was not
republished, probably was, that the churches of the Sabbath
keepers died away. At this time only three are known in
England; one of these is at Millyard, London, where my
talented antiquarian friend, W. H. Black, is elder and
pastor. These places of worship are supported by an
endowment. Bunyan's book does not appear to have been
answered; indeed, it would require genius of no ordinary
kind to controvert such conclusive evidence.
His arguments are, that the appearances of
nature shew no difference of days—that no Sabbath or
other day was set apart for worship before the giving of
the Law at Sinai. 'Thou camest down also upon Mount
Sinai, and madest KNOWN unto them thy holy Sabbaths, by the
hand of Moses' (Neh 9:13,14). 'The seventh day is
the Sabbath of the Lord thy God: in it thou shalt
not do any work—and remember that thou wast a servant
in the land of Egypt, and that the Lord thy God
brought thee out thence through a mighty hand and by a
stretched out arm, THEREFORE the Lord thy God commanded
thee to keep the Sabbath day' (Deut 5:14,15). While
many crimes are mentioned in patriarchal times, there is no
complaint of Sabbath-breaking. We read of fratricide,
drunkenness, lying, unbelief, theft, idolatry,
slave-dealing, and other crimes, but no hint as to
sanctifying or desecrating the Sabbath. At length, a few
days before the giving of the law, a natural phenomenon
announced to the Jews the great change that was at
hand—the manna fell in double quantity on Friday, and
was not found on Saturday. So new was this that, contrary
to the command, the people went out on the seventh day as
on other days, and were rebuked but not punished for it.
But no sooner is the Sabbath instituted by Moses, than it
is broken, and the Sabbath-breaker is punished with a cruel
death. It was instituted as a peculiar observance to
distinguish the Jews from all other nations—'The
Lord hath given YOU the Sabbath' (Exo 16:39). 'The
children of Israel shall keep the Sabbath' (Exo
31:16,17). 'I gave them [the Israelites who were
delivered from Egypt] my Sabbaths to be a sign between me
and them' (Eze 20:12). Ceremonies were commanded to be
performed as the Sabbath worship, which cannot now be
observed (see Lev 24; Numb 28: Neh 13:22; Eze 46:4). The
Jewish Sabbath was 'a shadow of things to come, but the
body is of Christ' (Col 2:16,17). The shadows have fled
away; we possess the substance. The covenant of Moses was
written on stone—the new covenant is written on our
hearts (Heb 8:9,10). Bunyan admits no uncertainty as to a
fixed day for christian worship: the law of nature requires
it; the God of nature fixes the day, without borrowing it
from the ministration of death. The Jewish passover and
Sabbaths are superseded; Christ our passover is slain, and
we have not an annual but a perpetual feast. We have an
infinitely greater deliverance to commemorate than that of
the Jews from Egypt. Released from the dominion and
punishment of sin, we have entered into a rest boundless as
eternity. Manna, which never fell on the Jewish Sabbath,
falls in peculiar and rich abundance on the first day of
the week, when it first began to fall. The first day is
peculiarly sanctified and honoured of God. On this
day the Son rested from His work of redemption (Heb 4:10).
He is Lord of the Sabbath, and hath peculiarly blessed his
own day. On this day some of the saints that slept
arose (Matt 27:52,53). On this day Christ was made
the head of the corner, and we will rejoice and be glad in
it. On the first day God begat his beloved Son from
the dead (Acts 13:33). Let all the angels of God worship
him (Heb 1:6). Hence it is called the Lord's day (Rev
1:10). This day is the only one named upon which
Christ appeared to his disciples after his resurrection: it
was on the evening of the first day of the week, and on the
evening of the following eighth day, that they assembled
and Christ appeared in the midst of them. On this
day he walked with his disciples to Emmaus, and made their
hearts to burn within them with holy joy and wonder. The
marvels of the day of Pentecost honoured the first day of
the week. On this day the first great conversion of
'about three thousand souls' took place. On
this day the disciples at Jerusalem came together to
break bread (Acts 20:7). Upon THE, not A, first day they
broke bread; and upon THE first day, the collections were
made for the poor saints (1 Cor 16:1,2). With such
concurrent and ample testimony we must conclude that the
seventh day Sabbath, with its Jewish ritual, is dissolved,
and the first day has taken its place.The Saviour said,
'It is finished'; and from that moment to the end
of the inspired volume, the seventh day is swallowed up in
the glories of the first day of the week. Let Jews
commemorate their temporal deliverance from Pharaoh and
Egypt with their divers ceremonies; but Christians, blessed
with a foretaste of eternal glory, will commemorate the
resurrection of their Lord, as the first fruits of an
unspeakable rest from the dominion of sin, of Satan, and of
hell. Our glorified Redeemer sanctioned and blessed the
first day, with his personal appearance in the assemblies
of his saints. His inspired apostles kept it, as it is
recorded, and thus it is sanctioned by the Holy Ghost; and
their descendants are bound to keep it to the end of the
world. Go, little treatise, and carry conviction with thee.
Emancipate the christian mind from all the beggarly
rudiments of Jewish rites and ceremonies. Add to the holy
enjoyments of God's saints in public worship, on the
day when their eternal redemption is commemorated by the
triumphant resurrection of their Lord.—GEO.
OFFOR.
TO THE READER.
Some may think it strange, since God's
church has already been so well furnished with sound
grounds and reasons by so many wise and godly men, for
proof that the first day of the week is our true Christian
sabbath, that I should now offer this small treatise
upon the same account. But when the scales are even by what
already is put in, a little more, you know, makes the
weight the better.
Or grant we had down weight before, yet
something over and above may make his work the harder, that
shall by hanging fictions on the other end, endeavour to
make things seem too light.
Besides, this book being little, may best
suit such as have but shallow purses, short memories, and
but little time to spare, which usually is the lot of the
mean and poorer sort of men.
I have also written upon this subject, for
that I would, as in other gospel truths, be a fellow
witness with good men that the day in which our Lord rose
from the dead should be much set by of
Christians.
I have observed that some, otherwise sound
in faith, are apt to be entangled with a Jewish sabbath,
&c., and that some also that are afar off from the
observation of that, have but little to say for their own
practice, though good; and might I help them I should be
glad.
A Jewish seventh-day sabbath has no promise
of grace belonging to it, if that be true, as to be sure it
is, where Paul says, The command to honour parents is the
first commandment with promise (Eph 6:1-3).
Also it follows from hence, that the sabbath
that has a promise annexed to the keeping of it, is rather
that which the Lord Jesus shall give to the churches of the
Gentiles (Isa 56).
Perhaps my method here may not in all things
keep the common path of argumentation with them that have
gone before me: but I trust [that] the godly wise will find
a taste of scripture truth in what I present them with as
to the sanction of our Christian sabbath.
I have here, by handling four questions,
proved, that the seventh day sabbath was not moral. For
that must of necessity be done, before it can be made
appear that the first day of the week is that which is the
sabbath day for Christians. But withal it follows, that if
the seventh day sabbath was not moral,[5] the first day is
not so. What is it then? Why, a sabbath for holy worship is
moral; but this or that day appointed for
such service, is sanctified by precept or by approved
example. The timing then of a sabbath for us lies in God,
not man; in grace, not nature; nor in the ministration of
death, written and engraven in stones: God always reserving
to himself a power to alter and change both time and
modes of worship according to his own
will.
A sabbath then, or day of rest from worldly
affairs to solemnize worship to God in, all good men do by
nature conclude is meet; yea, necessary: yet that,
not nature, but God reveals.
Nor is that day or time by God so fixed on,
in its own nature, better than any other: the holiness then
of a sabbath lies, not in the nature or place of a day, but
in the ordinance of God.
Nor doth our sanctifying of it, to the ends
for which it is ordained, lie in a bare confession that it
is such; but in a holy performance of the duty of the day
to God by Christ, according to his word.
But I will not enlarge to detain the reader
longer from the following sheets; but shall commit both him
and them to the wise dispose of God, and rest,
Thine to serve thee,
JOH. BUNYAN.
QUESTIONS ABOUT THE NATURE AND PERPETUITY
OF THE SEVENTH-DAY SABBATH.
QUESTION I.
Whether the seventh day sabbath is of, or
made known to, man by the law and light of
nature?
Something must be here premised before I
show the grounds of this question. First then, by the law
or light of nature, I mean that law which was concreate
with man; that which is natural to him, being original
with, and essential to, himself; consequently, that which
is invariable and unalterable, as is that nature. Secondly,
I grant that by this law of nature, man understands that
there is one eternal God; that this God is to be worshiped
according to his own will; consequently, that time
must be allowed to do it in: but whether the law or light
of nature teacheth, and that of itself, without the help of
revelation, that the seventh day of the week is that
time sanctified of God, and set apart for his worship, that
is the question; and the grounds of it are
these:
First, Because the law of nature is
antecedent to this day, yea completed as a law before it
was known or revealed to man, that God either did or would
sanctify the seventh day of the week at all.
Now this law, as was said, being natural to
a man, for man is a law unto himself (Rom 2), could only
teach the things of a man, and there the Apostle stints it
(1 Cor 2:11). But to be able to determine, and that about
things that were yet without being, either in nature or by
revelation, is that which belongs not to a man as a man;
and the seventh day sabbath, as yet, was such. For Adam was
completely made the day before; and God did not sanctify
the seventh day before it was, none otherwise than by his
secret decree. Therefore, by the law of nature, Adam
understood it not, it was not made known to him
thereby.
Second, To affirm the contrary, is to
make the law of nature supernatural, which is an
impossibility. Yea, they that do so make it a predictor, a
prophet; a prophet about divine things to come; yea, a
prophet able to foretell what shall be, and that without a
revelation; which is a strain that never yet prophet
pretended to.
Besides, to grant this, is to run into a
grievous error; for this doth not only make the law of
nature the first of prophets, contrary to Genesis 3:10
compared with John 1:1 but it seems to make the will of
God, made known by revelation, a needless thing. For if the
law of nature, as such, can predict, or foretell God's
secrets, and that before he reveals them, and this law of
nature is universal in every individual man in the world,
what need is there of particular prophets, or of their holy
writings? And indeed here the Quakers and others split
themselves. For if the law of nature can of itself reveal
unto me one thing pertaining to instituted worship, for
that we are treating of now, and the exact time which God
has not yet sanctified and set apart for the performance
thereof, why may it not reveal unto me more, and so still
more; and at last all that is requisite for me to know,
both as to my salvation, and how God is to be worshiped in
the church on earth.
Third, If it be of the law of nature,
then all men by nature are convinced of the necessity of
keeping it, and that though they never read or heard of the
revealed will of God about it; but this we find not in the
world.
For though it is true that the law of nature
is common to all, and that all men are to this day under
the power and command thereof; yet we find not that they
are by nature under the conviction of the necessity of
keeping of a seventh day sabbath. Yea, the Gentiles, though
we read not that they ever despised the law of nature, yet
never had, as such, a reverence of a seventh day sabbath,
but rather the contrary.
Fourth, If therefore the seventh day
sabbath is not of the law of nature, then it should seem
not to be obligatory to all. For instituted worship, and
the necessary circumstances thereunto belonging, is
obligatory but to some. The tree that Adam was forbid to
eat of, we read not but that his children might have eat
the fruit thereof: and circumcision, the passover, and
other parts of instituted worship was enjoined but to
some.
Fifth, I doubt the seventh day
sabbath is not of the law of nature, and so not moral;
because though we read that the law of nature, and that
before Moses, was charged upon the world, yet I find not
till then, that the profanation of a seventh day sabbath
was charged upon the world: and indeed to me this very
thing makes a great scruple in the case.
A law, as I said, we read of, and that from
Adam to Moses (Rom 5:13,14). The transgressions also of
that law, we read of them, and that particularly, as in
Genesis 4:8, 6:5, 9:21, 22, 12:13, 13:13, 18:12-15, 19:5;
(Eze 16:49,50[6]); Genesis 31:30, 35:2, 40:15, 44:8-10;
Deuteronomy 8:19, 20, 12:2; Psalm 106:35-37 and Romans the
first and second chapters.
But in all the scriptures we do not read,
that the breach of a seventh day sabbath was charged upon
men as men all that time. Whence I gather, that either a
seventh day sabbath was not discerned by the light of
nature, and so not by that law imposed; or else, that men
by the help and assistance of that, for we speak of men as
men,[7] in old time kept it better, than in after ages did
the church of God with better assistance by far. For they
are there yet found fault with as breakers of the sabbath
(Eze 20:13).
It follows therefore, that if the law of
nature doth not of itself reveal to us, as men, that the
seventh day is the holy sabbath of God. That that day, as
to the sanction of it, is not moral, but rather arbitrary,
to wit, imposed by the will of God upon his people, until
the time he thought fit to change it for another
day.
And if so, it is hence to be concluded, that
though by the light of nature men might see that time must
be allowed and set apart for the performance of that
worship that God would set up in his house, yet, as such,
it could not see what time the Lord would to that end
choose. Nature therefore saw that, by a positive
precept, or a word revealing it, and by no other
means.
Nor doth this at all take away a whit of
that sanction which God once put upon the seventh day
sabbath; unless any will say, and by sufficient argument
prove, that an ordinance for divine worship receiveth
greater sanction from the law of nature than from a divine
precept: or standeth stronger when it is established by a
law humane, for such is the law of nature, than when
imposed by revelation of God.
But the text will put this controversy to an
end. The sanction of the seventh day sabbath, even as it
was the rest of God, was not till after the law of nature
was completed; God rested the seventh day and sanctified it
(Gen 2:3). Sanctified it; that is, set it apart to the end
there mentioned, to wit, to rest thereon.
Other grounds of this question I might
produce, but at present I will stop here, and conclude,
That if a seventh day sabbath was an essential necessary to
the instituted worship of God, then itself also as to its
sanction for that work, was not founded but by a positive
precept; consequently not known of man at first, but by
revelation of God.
QUESTION II.
Whether the seventh day sabbath, as to
man's keeping of it holy, was ever made known to, or
imposed by, a positive precept upon him until the time of
Moses? which from Adam was about two thousand
years.
Something must also be here premised, in
order to my propounding of my grounds for this question;
and that is, That the seventh day was sanctified so soon as
it had being in the world, unto the rest of God, as it is
Genesis 2:2, 3 and he did rest, from all his works which he
had made therein. But the question is, Whether when God did
thus sanctify this day to his own rest, he did also
by the space of time above-mentioned, impose it as an holy
sabbath of rest upon men; to the end they might solemnize
worship to him in special manner thereon? And I question
this,
First, Because we read not that it was. And
reading, I mean, of the divine testimony, is ordained of
God, for us to find out the mind of God, both as to faith
and our performance of acceptable service to
him.
In reading also, we are to have regard to
two things.
I. To see if we can find a precept:
or,
II. A countenanced practice for what we do.
For both these ways we are to search, that we may find out
what is that good, that acceptable will of God.
For the first of these we have Genesis 2:16,
17 and for the second, Genesis 8:20, 21 [as to public
worship but not on a stated day].
Now as to the imposing of a seventh day
sabbath upon men from Adam to Moses,of that we find nothing
in holy writ either from precept or example. True, we find
that solemn worship was performed by the saints that then
lived: for both Abel, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob,
sacrificed unto God (Gen 4:4, 8:20,21, 12:7, 13:4, 35:1),
but we read not that the seventh day was the time prefixed
of God for their so worshipping, or that they took any
notice of it. Some say, that Adam in eating the forbidden
fruit, brake also the seventh day sabbath, because he fell
on that day;[8] but we read not that the breach of a
sabbath was charged upon him. That which we read is this;
'Hast thou eaten of the tree, whereof I commanded thee
that thou shouldest not eat?' (Gen 3:11). Some say also
that Cain killed Abel on a sabbath day;[9] but we read not
that, in his charge, God laid any such thing at his door.
This was it of which he stood guilty before God; namely,
That his brother's blood cried unto God against him
from the ground (Gen 4:10).
I therefore take little notice of what a man
saith, though he flourisheth his matter with many brave
words, if he bring not with him, 'Thus saith the
Lord.' For that, and that only, ought to be my ground
of faith as to how my God would be worshiped by me. For in
the matters material to the worship of God, it is safest
that thus I be guided in my judgment: for here only I
perceive 'the footsteps of the flock' (Cant 1:8;
Eze 3:11). They say further, that for God to sanctify a
thing, is to set it apart. This being true; then it
follows, that the seventh day sabbath was sanctified, that
is, set apart for Adam in paradise; and so, that it was
ordained a sabbath of rest to the saints from the
beginning.
But I answer, as I hinted before, that God
did sanctify it to his own rest. 'The LORD [also] hath
set apart him that is godly for himself.' But again, it
is one thing for God to sanctify this or that thing to an
use, and another thing to command that that thing be
forthwith in being to us. As for instance: the land of
Canaan was set apart many years for the children of Israel
before they possessed that land. Christ Jesus was long
sanctified; that is, set apart to be our redeemer before he
sent him into the world (Deut 32:8; John 10:36).
If then, by God's sanctifying of the
seventh day for a sabbath, you understand it for a sabbath
for man, (but the text saith not so) yet it might be so set
apart for man, long before it should be, as such, made
known unto him. And that the seventh day sabbath was not as
yet made known to men.
Second, Consider secondly, Moses
himself seems to have the knowledge of it at first, not by
tradition, but by revelation; as it is Exodus 16:23,
'This is that [saith he] which the Lord hath
said, [namely to me; for we read not, as yet, that he said
it to any body else]. To morrow is the sabbath of
the holy rest unto the Lord.'
Also holy Nehemiah suggesteth this, when he
saith of Israel to God, Thou 'madest known unto them
thy holy sabbath [by the hand of Moses thy servant]'
(Neh 9:14). The first of these texts shews us, that tidings
of a seventh day sabbath for men, came first to
Moses from heaven: and the second, that it was to Israel
before unknown.
But how could be either the one or the
other, if the seventh day sabbath was taught to men by the
light of nature, which is the moral law? Or if from the
beginning it was given to men by a positive precept for to
be kept.
This therefore strengtheneth my doubt about
the affirmative of the first question, and also prepareth
an argument for what I plead as to this we have now under
consideration.
Third, This yet seems to me more
scrupulous, because that the punishment due to the breach
of the seventh day sabbath was hid from men to the time of
Moses; as is clear, for that it is said of the breaker of
the sabbath, 'They put him in ward, because it was not
[as yet] declared what should be done to him' (Num
15:32-36).
But methinks, had this seventh day sabbath
been imposed upon men from the beginning, the penalty or
punishment due to the breach thereof had certainly been
known before now.
When Adam was forbidden to eat of the tree
of the knowledge of good and evil, the penalty was then, if
he disobeyed, annexed to the prohibition. So also it was as
to circumcision, the passover, and other ordinances for
worship. How then can it be thought, that the seventh day
sabbath should be imposed upon men from the beginning; and
that the punishment for the breach thereof, should be hid
with God for the space of two thousand years! (Gen 2:16,17,
17:13,14; Exo 12:43-48) and the same chapter (v
19).
Fourth, God's giving of the
seventh day sabbath was with respect to stated and
stinted worship in his church; the which, until the
time of Moses, was not set up among his people. Things till
then were adding or growing: now a sacrifice,
then circumcision, then again long after that the
passover, &c.
But when Israel was come into the
wilderness, there to receive as God's congregation, a
stated, stinted, limited way of worship, then he appoints
them a time, and times, to perform this worship in; but as
I said afore, before that it was not so, as the whole five
books of Moses plainly shew: wherefore the seventh day
sabbath, as such a limited day cannot be moral, or of the
law of nature, nor imposed till then.
And methinks Christ Jesus and his apostles
do plainly enough declare this very thing. For that when
they repeat unto the people, or expound before them the
moral law, they quite exclude the seventh day sabbath. Yea,
Paul makes that law to us complete without it.
We will first touch upon what Christ doth in
this case.
As in his sermon upon the mount (Matt 5-7).
In all that large and heavenly discourse upon this law, you
have not one syllable about the seventh day
sabbath.
So when the young man came running, and
kneeling, and asking what good thing he should do to
inherit eternal life, Christ bids him keep the
commandments; but when the young man asked which; Christ
quite leaves out the seventh day, and puts him upon the
other. As in Matthew 19:16-19. As in Mark 10:17-20. As in
Luke 18:18-20.
You will say, he left out the first, and
second, and third likewise. To which I say, that was
because the young man by his question did presuppose that
he had been a doer of them: for he professed in his
supplication, that he was a lover of that which is
naturally good, which is God, in that his petition was so
universal for every thing which he had
commanded.
Paul also when he makes mention of the moral
law, quite leaves out of that the very name of the seventh
day sabbath, and professeth, that to us Christians the law
of nature is complete without it. As in Romans 3:7-19. As
in Romans 13:7-10. As in 1 Timothy 1:8-11.
'He that loveth another, saith he, hath
fulfiled the law. For this, Thou shalt not commit adultery,
Thou shalt not kill, Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt not
covet; and if there be any other commandment, it is
briefly comprehended in this saying, Thou shalt love thy
neighbour as thyself. Love worketh no ill to his neighbour:
therefore love is the fulfilling of the
law.'
I make not an argument of this, but take an
occasion to mention it as I go. But certainly, had the
seventh day sabbath been moral, or of the law of nature, as
some would fain persuade themselves, it would not so
slenderly have been passed over in all these repetitions of
this law, but would by Christ or his apostles have been
pressed upon the people, when so fair an opportunity as at
these times offered itself unto them. But they knew what
they did, and wherefore they were so silent as to the
mention of a seventh day sabbath when they so well talked
of the law as moral.
Fifth, Moses and the prophet Ezekiel
both, do fully confirm what has been insinuated by us; to
wit, that the seventh day, as a sabbath, was not imposed
upon men until Israel was brought into the
wilderness.
1. Moses saith to Israel, 'Remember that
thou wast a servant int he land of Egypt, and that
the Lord thy God brought thee out thence through a mighty
hand and by a stretched out arm: THEREFORE the Lord thy God
commanded thee to keep the sabbath day.' Yea, he tells
us, that the covenant which God made with them in Horeb,
that written in stones, was not made with their
forefathers, to wit, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, but with
them (Deut 5:1-15).
2. Ezekiel also is punctual as to this: I
caused them, saith God by that prophet, 'to go forth
out of the land of Egypt, and brought them into the
wilderness. And I gave them my statutes, and shewed them my
judgments, which if a man do, he shall even live in
them. Moreover also I gave them my sabbaths, to be a sign
between me and them, that they might know that I am
the Lord that sanctify them' (Eze 20:10-12; Exo 20:8,
31:13, 35:2).
What can be more plain? And these to be
sure, are two notable witnesses of God, who, as you see, do
jointly concur in this; to wit, That it was not from
paradise, nor from the fathers, but from the wilderness,
and from Sinai, that men received the seventh day sabbath
to keep it holy.
True, it was God's sabbath before: for
on the first seventh day we read, that God rested thereon,
and sanctified it. Hence he calls it in the first place, MY
sabbath. I gave them my sabbath: But it seems it was not
given to the church till he had brought them into the
wilderness.
But I say, if it had been moral, it
had been natural to man; and by the light of nature men
would have understood it, even both before it was, and
otherwise. But of this you see we read nothing, either by
positive law, or countenanced example, or any other way,
but rather the flat contrary; to wit, that Moses had the
knowledge of it first from heaven, not by tradition. That
Israel had it, not of, or from their fathers, but in the
wilderness, from him, to wit, Moses, after he had brought
them out of the land of Egypt. And that that whole law in
which this seventh day sabbath is placed, was given for the
bounding and better ordering of them in their church state
for their time, till the Messias should come and put, by a
better ministration, this out of his church, as we shall
further shew anon.
The seventh day sabbath therefore was not
from paradise, nor from nature, nor from the fathers, but
from t he wilderness, and from Sinai.
QUESTION III.
Whether when the seventh day sabbath was
given to Israel in the wilderness the Gentiles, as such,
was concerned therein.
Before I shew my ground for this question, I
must also first premise, That the Gentiles, as such, were
then without the church of God, and pale thereof;
consequently had nothing to do with the essentials or
necessary circumstances of that worship which God had set
up for himself now among the children of Israel.
Now then for the ground of the
question.
First, we read not that God gave it
to any but to the seed of Jacob. Hence it is said to
Israel, and to Israel only, 'The Lord hath given YOU
the sabbath' (Exo 16:29). And again, 'also I gave
THEM my sabbath' (Eze 20:5,12).
Now, if the gift of the seventh day sabbath
was only to Israel, as these texts do more than seem to
say; then to the Gentiles, as such, it was not given.
Unless any shall conclude, that God by thus doing preferred
the Jew to a state of gentileism; or that he bestowed on
them, by thus doing, some high Gentile privilege. But this
would be very fictious. For, to lay aside reason, the text
always, as to preference, did set the Jew in the first of
places (Rom 2:10). Nor was his giving the seventh day
sabbath to them but a sign and token thereof.
But the great objection is, because the
seventh day sabbath is found amongst the rest of those
precepts which is so commonly called the moral law; for
thence it is concluded to be of a perpetual
duration.
But I answer: That neither that as given on
Sinai is moral; I mean, as to the manner and ends of its
ministration, of which, God permitting, we shall say more
in our answer to the fourth question, whither I direct you
for satisfaction. But,
Second, The Gentiles could not be
concerned, as such, with God's giving of a seventh day
sabbath to Israel, because, as I have shewed before, it was
given to Israel, considered as a church of God (Acts 7:32).
Nor was it given to them, as such, but with rites and
ceremonies thereto belonging, so Leviticus 24:5-9; Numbers
28:9, 10; Nehemiah 13:22; Ezekiel 46:4.
Now, I say, if this sabbath hath ceremonies
thereto belonging, and if these ceremonies were essential
to the right keeping of the sabbath: and again, if these
ceremonies were given to Israel only, excluding all but
such as were their proselytes, then this sabbath was given
to them as excluding the Gentiles as such. But if it had
been moral, the Gentiles could as soon have been deprived
of their nature as of a seventh day sabbath, though the
Jews should have appropriated it unto themselves
only.
Again, to say that God gave this seventh day
sabbath to the Gentiles, as such, (and yet so he must, if
it be of the moral law) is as much as to say, that God hath
ordained that that sabbath should be kept by the
Gentiles without; but by the Jews, not
without her ceremonies. And what conclusion will follow
from hence, but that God did at one and the
same time set up two sorts of acceptable worships in
the world: one among the Jews, another among the Gentiles!
But how ridiculous such a thought would be, and how
repugnant to the wisdom of God, you may easily
perceive.
Yea, what a diminution would this be to
God's church that then was, for one to say, the
Gentiles were to serve God with more liberty than the Jew!
For the law was a yoke, and yet the Gentile is called the
dog, and said to be without God in the world (Deut 7:7; Psa
147:19,20; Matt 15:26; Eph 2:11,12).
Third, When the Gentiles, at the
Jews' return from Babylon, came and offered their wares
to sell to the children of Israel at Jerusalem on this
sabbath; yea, and sold them to them too: yet not
they, but the Jews were rebuked as the only
breakers of that sabbath. Nay, there dwelt then at
Jerusalem men of Tyre, that on this sabbath sold
their commodities to the Jews, and men of Judah: yet not
they, but the men of Judah, were contended with, as the
breakers of this sabbath.
True, good Nehemiah did threaten the
Gentiles that were merchants, for lying then about the
walls of the city, for that by that means they were a
temptation to the Jews to break their sabbaths; but
still he charged the breach thereof only upon his
own people (Neh 13:15-20).
But can it be imagined, had the Gentiles now
been concerned with this sabbath by law divine, that so
holy a man as Nehemiah would have let them escape without a
rebuke for so notorious a transgression thereof; especially
considering, that now also they were upon God's ground,
to wit, within and without the walls of
Jerusalem.
Fourth, Wherefore he saith to Israel
again, 'Verily my sabbaths YE shall keep.' And
again, 'YE shall keep the sabbath.' And again,
'The children of Israel shall keep the sabbath, to
observe the sabbath throughout THEIR generations' (Exo
31:14-16, 16:29).[10]
What can be more plain, these things thus
standing int he testament of God, than that the seventh day
sabbath, as such, was given to Israel, to Israel ONLY; and
that the Gentiles, as such, were not concerned
therein!
Fifth, The very reason also of
God's giving of the seventh day sabbath to the Jews,
doth exclude the Gentiles, as such, from having any concern
therein. For it was given to the Jews, as was said before,
as they were considered God's church, and for a sign
and token by which they should know that he had chosen and
sanctified them to himself for a peculiar people (Exo
31:13-17; Eze 20:12,13).
And a great token and sign it was that he
had so chosen them: for in that he had given to them this
sabbath, he had given to them (his own rest) a figure and
pledge of his sending his Son into the world to redeem them
from the bondage and slavery of the devil: of which indeed
this sabbath was a shadow or type (Col
2:16,17).[11]
Thus have I concluded my ground for this
third question. I shall therefore now propound
another.
QUESTION IV.
Whether the seventh day sabbath did not
fall, as such, with the rest of the Jewish rites and
ceremonies? Or whether that day, as a sabbath, was
afterwards by the apostles imposed upon the churches of the
Gentiles?
I would now also, before I shew the grounds
of my proposing this question, premise what is necessary
thereunto; to wit, That time and day were
both fixed upon by law, for the solemn performance of
divine worship among the Jews; and that time and
day is also by law fixed, for the solemnizing of divine
worship to God in the churches of the Gentiles. But that
the seventh day sabbath, as such, is that time,
that day, that still I question.
Now before I shew the grounds of my
questioning of it, I shall enquire into the nature of that
ministration in the bowels of which this seventh day
sabbath is placed. And,
First, I say, as to that, the
nature of that law is moral, but the ministration, and
circumstances thereunto belonging, are shadowish and
figurative.
By the nature of it, I mean the matter
thereof: by the ministration and circumstances thereto
belonging, I do mean the giving of it by such hands, at
such a place and time, in such a mode, as when it was given
to Israel in the wilderness.
The matter therefore, to wit, 'Thou
shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with
all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy
strength': and 'thy neighbour as thyself,' is
everlasting (Mark 12:29-31), and is not from Sinai, nor
from the two tables of stone, but in nature; for this law
commenced and took being and place that day in which man
was created. Yea, it was concreate with him, and without it
he cannot be a rational creature, as he was in the day in
which God created him. But for the ministration of it from
Sinai, with the circumstances belonging to that
ministration,
they are not moral, nor everlasting, but
shadowish and figurative only.
That ministration cannot be moral for three
reasons. 1. It commenced not when morality commenced, but
two thousand years after. 2. It was not universal as the
law, as moral, is; it was given only to the church of the
Jews in those tables. 3. Its end is past as such a
ministration, though the same law as to the morality
thereof abides. Where are the tables of stone and this law
as therein contained? We only, as to that, have the notice
of such a ministration, and a rehearsal of the law, with
that mode of giving of it, in the testament of
God.
But to come to particulars.
1. The very preface to that ministration
carrieth in it a type of our deliverance from the bondage
of sin, the devil, and hell. Pharaoh, and Egypt; and
Israel's bondage there, being a type of
these.
2. The very stones in which this law was
engraven, was a figure of the tables of the heart. The
first two were a figure of the heart carnal, by which the
law was broken: the last two, of the heart spiritual, in
which the new law, the law of grace is written and
preserved (Exo 34:1; 2 Cor 3:3).
3. The very mount on which this ministration
was given, was typical of Mount Zion. See Hebrews 12 where
they are compared (vv 18-22).
4. Yea, the very church to whom that
ministration was given, was a figure of the church of the
gospel that is on Mount Zion. See the same scripture, and
compare it with Acts 7:38; Revelation 14:1-5.
5. That ministration was given in the hand
and by the disposition of angels, to prefigure how the new
law or ministration of the Spirit was to be given
afterwards to the churches under the New Testament by the
hands of the angel of God's everlasting covenant of
grace, who is his only begotten Son (Isa 63:9; Mal 3:1[12];
Acts 3:22,23).
6. It was given to Israel also in the hand
of Moses, as mediator, to shew, or typify out, that the law
of grace was in after times to come to the church of Christ
by the hand and mediation of Jesus our Lord (Gal 3:19; Deut
5:5; Heb 8:6; 1 Tim 2:5; Heb 9:15, 12:24).
7. As to this ministration, it was to
continue but 'till the seed should come'; and then
must, as such, give place to a better ministration (Gal
3:19). 'A better covenant, established upon better
promises' (Heb 8:6).
From all this therefore I conclude, that
there is a difference to be put between the morality of the
law, and the ministration of it upon Sinai. The law, as to
its morality was before; but as to this
ministration, it was not till the church was with Moses,
and he with the angels on Mount Sinai in the
wilderness.
Now in the law, as moral, we conclude a time
propounded, but no seventh day sabbath enjoined. But in
that law, as thus ministered, which ministration is already
out of doors;[13] we find a seventh day; that seventh day
on which God rested, on which God rested from all his
works, enjoined. What is it then? Why the whole
ministration as written and engraven in stones being
removed, the seventh day sabbath must also be removed; for
that the time nor yet the day, was as to our
holy sabbath, or rest, moral; but imposed with that whole
ministration, as such, upon the church, until the time of
reformation: which time being come, this ministration, as I
said, as such, ceaseth; and the whole law, as to the
morality of it, is delivered into the hand of Christ, who
imposes it now also; but not as a law of works, nor as that
ministration written and engrave in stones, but as a rule
of life to those that have believed in him (1 Cor
9:21).
So then, that law is still moral, and still
supposes, since it teaches that there is a God, that time
must be set apart for his church to worship him in,
according to that will of his that he had revealed in his
word. But though by that law time is required; yet
by that, as moral, the time never was prefixed.
The time then of old was appointed by such a
ministration of that law as we have been now discoursing
of; and when that ministration ceaseth, that time did also
vanish with it. And now by our new law-giver, the Son of
God, he being 'lord also of the sabbath day,' we
have a time prefixed, as the law of nature requireth, a
new day, by him who is the lord of it; I say,
appointed, wherein we may worship, not in the oldness of
that letter written and engraven in stones, but according
to, and most agreeing with, his new and holy testament. And
this I confirm further by those reasons that now shall
follow.
First, Because we find not from the
resurrection of Christ to the end of the Bible, anything
written by which is imposed that seventh day sabbath upon
the churches. Time, as I said, the law as moral
requires; but that time we find no longer imposed.
And in all duties pertaining to God and his true worship in
his churches, we must be guided by his laws and testaments.
By his old laws, when his old worship was in force; and by
his new laws, when his new worship is in force. And he hath
verily now said, 'Behold, I make all things new'
(Rev 21:5).
Second, I find, as I have shewed,
that this seventh day sabbath is confined, not to the law
of nature as such, but to that ministration of it which was
given on Sinai: which ministration as it is come to an end
as such, so it is rejected by Paul as a ministration no
ways capable of abiding in the church now, since the
ministration of the Spirit also hath taken its place (2 Cor
3). Wherefore instead of propounding it to the churches
with arguments tending to its reception, he seeks by
degrading it of its old lustre and glory, to wean the
churches from any likement[14] thereof:
1. By calling of it the ministration of
death, of the letter, and of condemnation, a term most
frightful, but no ways alluring to the godly.
2. By calling it a ministration that
now has no glory, by reason of the exceeding glory of
that ministration under which by the Holy Spirit the New
Testament churches are. And these are weaning
considerations (2 Cor 3).
3. By telling of them it is a ministration
that tendeth to blind the mind, and to veil the heart as to
the knowledge of their Christ: so that they cannot, while
under that, behold his beauteous face, but as their heart
shall turn from it to him (2 Cor 3).
4. And that they might not be left in the
dark, but perfectly know what ministration it is that he
means, he saith expressly, it is that 'written
and engraven in stones.' See again 2 Corinthians 3.
And in that ministration it is that this seventh day
sabbath is found.
But shall we think that the apostle speaks
any thing of all here said, to wean saints off from the law
of nature, as such! No verily, that he retains in the
church, as being managed there by Christ: but THIS
ministration is dangerous now, because it cannot be
maintained in the church, but in a way of contempt to the
ministration of the Spirit, and is derogatory to the glory
of that.
Now these, as I said, are weaning
considerations. No man, I do think, that knows himself, or
the glory of a gospel ministration, can, if he understands
what Paul says here, desire that such a ministration should
be retained in the churches.
Third. This seventh day sabbath has
lost its ceremonies (those unto which before you are cited
by the texts) which was with it imposed upon the old church
for her due performance of worship to God thereon. How then
can this sabbath now be kept? Kept, I say,
according to law. For if the church on which it was first
imposed, was not to keep it, yea, could not keep it legally
without the practising of those ceremonies: and if those
ceremonies are long ago dead and gone, how will those that
pretend to a belief of a continuation of the sanction
thereof, keep it, I say, according as it is
written?
If they say, they retain the day, but change
their manner of observation thereof; I ask, who has
commanded them so to do? This is one of the laws of
this sabbath. 'Thou shalt take fine flour, and bake
twelve cakes thereof: two tenth deals shall be in one cake.
And thou shalt set them in two rows, six on a row, upon the
pure table before the Lord. And thou shalt put pure
frankincense upon each row, that it may be on the
bread for a memorial, even an offering made by fire
unto the Lord. Every sabbath he shall set it in order
before the Lord continually, being taken from the
children of Israel by an everlasting covenant' (Lev
24:5-8). You may see also other places, as Numbers 28:9,
10; Nehemiah 13:22 and Ezekiel 46:4.
Now if these be the laws of the sabbath,
this seventh day sabbath; and if God did never command that
this sabbath should by his church be sanctified
without them: and, as was said before, if these ceremonies
have been long since dead and buried, how must this
sabbath be kept?
Let men take heed, lest while they plead for
law, and pretend themselves to be the only doers of
God's will,[15] they be not found the biggest
transgressors thereof. And why can they not as well keep
the other sabbaths? As the sabbath of months, of years, and
the jubilee? For this, as I have shewed, is no moral
precept, it is only a branch of the ministration of death
and condemnation.
Fourth, The seventh day sabbath, as
such, was a sign and shadow of things to come; and a sign
cannot be the thing signified and substance too. Wherefore
when the thing signified or substance, is come, the sign or
thing shadowing ceaseth. And, I say, the seventh day
sabbath being so, as a seventh day sabbath it ceaseth also.
See again Exodus 31:13, 14; Ezekiel 20:12, 21; Colossians
2:14.
Nor do I find that our Protestant writers,
notwithstanding their reverence of the sabbath, do conclude
otherwise; but that though time as to worshipping God, must
needs be contained in the bowels of the moral law, as
moral; yet they for good reasons forbear to affix the
seventh day as that time there too.
They do it, I say, for good reasons; reason
drawn from the scripture; or rather, for that the scripture
draws them so to conclude: yet they cast not away the
morality of a sabbath of rest to the church. It is to be
granted them, that time for God's worship abideth for
ever, but the seventh day vanishes as a shadow and sign;
because such indeed it was, as the scripture above cited
declares as to the sanction thereof as a
sabbath.
The law of nature then calls for time; but
the God of nature assigns it, and has given power to his
Son to continue SUCH time as himself shall by his eternal
wisdom judge most meet for the churches of the Gentiles to
solemnize worship to God by him in. Hence he is said to be
'Lord even of the sabbath day' (Matt
12:8).
Fifth, I find by reading God's
word, that Paul by authority apostolical, takes away the
sanctions of all the Jews' festivals and
sabbaths.
This is manifest, for that he leaves the
observation or non-observation of them, as things
indifferent, to the mind and discretion of the believers.
'One man esteemeth one day above another: another
esteemeth every day alike. Let every man be fully
persuaded in his own mind' (Rev 14:5).
By this last clause of the verse, 'Let
every man be fully persuaded in his own mind,' he doth
plainly declare, that such days are now stript of
their sanction.[16] For none of God's laws, while they
retain their sanction, are left to the will and mind of the
believers, as to whether they will observe them or no. Men,
I say, are not left to their liberty in such a case; for
when a stamp of divine authority is upon a law, and abides,
so long we are bound, not to our mind, but to that
law: but when a thing, once sacred, has lost its sanction,
then it falls, as to faith and conscience, among other
common or indifferent things. And so the seventh day
sabbath did. Again,
Sixth, Thus Paul writes to the church
of Colosse. 'Let no man therefore judge you in meat, or
in drink, or in respect of an holyday, or of the new moon,
or of the sabbath: which are a shadow of things to come;
but the body is of Christ' (Col 2:16,17). Here
also, as he serveth other holy days, he serveth the
sabbath. He gives a liberty to believers to refuse the
observation of it, and commands that no man should judge
against them for their so doing. And as you read, the
reason of his so doing is, because the body, the substance
is come. Christ saith he, is the body, or that which these
things were a shadow or figure of. 'The body is
of Christ.'
Nor hath the apostle, since he saith 'or
of the sabbath' one would think, left any hole, out at
which men's inventions could get: but man has sought
out many; and, so, many he will use.
But again, That the apostle by this word
'sabbath' intends the seventh day sabbath, is
clear; for that it is by Moses himself counted for a sign,
as we have shewed: and for that none of the other sabbaths
were a more clear shadow of the Lord Jesus Christ than
this. For that, and that alone, is called 'the
rest of God': in it God rested from all his works.
Hence he calls it by way of eminency, 'MY sabbath, and
MY holy day' (Isa 56:4, 58:13).
Yet could that rest be nothing else but
typical; for God, never since the world began, really
rested, but in his Son. 'This is he,' saith God,
'in whom I am well pleased.' This sabbath then, was
God's rest typically, and was given to Israel as a sign
of his grace towards them in Christ. Wherefore when Christ
was risen, it ceased, and was no longer of obligation to
bind the conscience to the observation thereof. [Or of the
sabbath.] He distinctly singleth out this seventh
day, as that which was a most noble shadow, a most exact
shadow. And then puts that with the other together; saying,
they are a shadow of things to come; and that Christ has
answered them all. 'The body is of
Christ.'
Seventh, No man will, I think, deny
but that Hebrews 4:45 intends the seventh day sabbath, on
which God rested from all his works; for the text doth
plainly say so: yet may the observing reader easily
perceive that both it, and the rest of Canaan also,
made mention of verse 5 were typical, as to a day made
mention of verses 7 and 8 which day he calls another. He
would not afterwards have made mention of another day. If
Joshua had given them rest, he would not. Now if they had
not that rest in Joshua's days, be sure they had it not
by Moses; for he was still before.
All the rests therefore that Moses gave
them, and that Joshua gave them too, were but typical of
another day, in which God would give them rest (Heb
4:9,10). And whether the day to come, was Christ, or
Heaven, it makes no matter: it is enough that they before
did fail, as always shadows do, and that therefore mention
by David is, and that afterward, made of another day.
'There remains therefore a rest to the people of
God.' A rest to come, of which the seventh day in which
God rested, and the land of Canaan, was a type; which rest
begins in Christ now, and shall be consummated in
glory.
And in that he saith 'There remains a
rest,' referring to that of David, what is it, if it
signifies not, that the other rests remain not? There
remains therefore a rest, a rest prefigured by the seventh
day, and by the rest of Canaan, though they are fled and
gone.
'There remains a rest'; a rest which
stands not now in signs and shadows, in the seventh day, or
Canaan, but in the Son of God, and his kingdom, to whom,
and to which the weary are invited to come for rest (Isa
28:12; Matt 11:20; Heb 4:11).
Yet this casts not out the Christians
holiday or sabbath: for that was not ordained to be a type
or shadow of things to come, but to sanctify the name of
their God in, and to perform that worship to him which was
also in a shadow signified by the ceremonies of the law, as
the epistle to the Hebrews doth plentifully
declare.
And I say again, the seventh day sabbath
cannot be it, for the reasons shewed afore.
Eighth, Especially if you add to all
this, that nothing of the ministration of death written and
engraven in stones, is brought by Jesus, or by his
apostles, into the kingdom of Christ, as a part of his
instituted worship. Hence it is said of that ministration
in the bowels of which this seventh day sabbath is found,
that it has now NO glory; that its glory is done away, in
or by Christ, and so is laid aside, the ministration of the
Spirit that excels in glory, being come in the room
thereof.
I will read the text to you. 'But if the
ministration of death, written and engraven in
stones, was glorious, so that the children of Israel could
not stedfastly behold the face of Moses for the glory of
his countenance; which glory was to be done away:
[It was given at first with this proviso, that it should
not always retain its glory, that sanction, as a
ministration]. How shall not the ministration of the Spirit
be rather glorious? For if the ministration of condemnation
be glory, much more doth the ministration of
righteousness exceed in glory. For even that which was made
glorious had no glory in this respect, by reason of the
glory that excelleth. For if that which was done away was
glorious, much more that which remaineth is
glorious' (2 Cor 3:7-11).
What can be more plain? The text says
expressly, that this ministration doth NOT remain; yea, and
insinuates, that in its first institution it was ordained
with this proviso, 'It was to be done away.' Now if
in its first institution upon Sinai it was thus ordained;
and if by the coming in of the ministration of the spirit,
this ordination is now executed; that is, if by it, and the
apostle saith it, it is done away by a ministration that
remains: then where is that seventh day sabbath?
Thus therefore I have discoursed upon this
fourth question: And having shewed by this discourse that
the old seventh day sabbath is abolished and done away, and
that it has nothing to do with the churches of the
Gentiles; I am next to shew what day it is that must abide
as holy to the Christians, and for them to perform their
New Testament church service in.
Take the question thus.
QUESTION V.
Since it is denied that the seventh day
sabbath is moral, and it is found that it is not to abide
as a sabbath for ever in the church, What time is to be
fixed on for New Testament saints to perform together,
divine worship to God by Christ in?
Upon this question hangs the stress of all,
as to the subject now under consideration: but before I can
speak distinctly to it, I must premise, as I have in order
to my speaking to the questions before, something for the
better clearing of our way—
[Therefore I remark, that] we are not now
speaking of all manner of worshipping God, nor of all times
in which all manner of worship is to be performed; but of
that worship, which is church worship, or worship that is
to be performed by the assembly of saints, when by the will
of God they in all parts of his dominion assemble together
to worship him; which worship hath a prefixed time allotted
to, or for its performance, and without which it cannot,
according to the mind of God, be done. This is the time, I
say, that we are to discourse of, and not of ALL time
appointed for all manner of worship.
I do not question but that worship by the
godly is performed to God every day of the week; yea, and
every night too, and that time is appointed or allowed of
God for the performance of such worship. But this time is
not fixed to the same moment or hour universally, but is
left to the discretion of the believers, as their frame of
spirit, or occasions, or exigencies, or temptations, or
duty shall require.
We meddle then only with that time that the
worship aforesaid is to be performed in; which time the law
of nature as such supposes, but the God of nature chooses.
And this time as to the churches of the Gentiles, we have
proved is not that time which was assigned to the Jews, to
wit, THAT seventh day which was imposed upon them by the
ministration of death; for, as we have shewed already, that
ministration indeed is done away by a better and more
glorious ministration, the ministration of the spirit;
which ministration surely would be much more inferior than
that which has now no glory, was it defective as to this.
That is, if it imposed a gospel service, but appointed not
time to perform that worship in: or if notwithstanding all
its commendation, it should be forced to borrow of a
ministration inferior to itself; that, to wit, the time
without which by no means its most solemn worship can be
performed.
This then is the conclusion, that TIME to
worship God in, is required by the law of nature; but that
the law of nature doth, as such, fix it on the seventh day
from the creation of the world, that I utterly deny, by
what I have said already, and have yet to say on that
behalf. Yea, I hope to make it manifest, as I have, that
this seventh day is removed; that God, by the ministration
of the spirit, has changed the time to another day, to wit,
The first day of the week. Therefore we conclude the time
is fixed for the worship of the New Testament Christians,
or churches of the Gentiles, unto that day.
Now in my discourse upon this subject, I
shall,
I. Touch upon those texts that are more
close, yet have a divine intimation of this thing in
them.
II. And then I shall come to texts more
express.
FIRST, for those texts that are more close,
yet have a divine intimation of this thing in
them.
First, The comparison that the Holy
Ghost makes between the rest of God from his works, and the
rest of Christ from his, doth intimate such a thing.
'He that is entered into his rest, he also hath ceased
from his own works, as God did from his' (Heb
4:10).
Now God rested from his works, and
sanctified a day of rest to himself, as a signal of that
rest, which day he also gave to his church as a day of holy
rest likewise. And if Christ thus rested from his own
works, and the Holy Ghost says he did thus rest, he also
hath sanctified a day to himself, as that in which he hath
finished his work, and given it (that day) also to his
church to be an everlasting memento of his so doing, and
that they should keep it holy for his sake.
And see, as the Father's work was first,
so his day went before; and as the Son's work came
after, so his day accordingly succeeded. The Father's
day was on the seventh day from the creation, the Son's
the first day following.
Nor may this be slighted, because the text
says, as God finished his work, so Christ finished his; He
also hath ceased from his own works as God did from his. He
rested, I say, as God did; but God rested on his resting
day, and therefore so did Christ. Not that he rested on the
Father's resting day; for it is evident, that then he
had great part of his work to do; for he had not as then
got his conquest over death, but the next day he also
entered into his rest, having by his rising again, finished
his work, viz., made a conquest over the powers of
darkness, and brought life and immortality to light through
his so doing.
So then, that being the day of the rest of
the Son of God, it must needs be the day of the rest of his
churches also. For God gave his resting day to his church
to be a sabbath; and Christ rested from his own works as
God did from his, therefore he also gave the day in which
he rested from his works, a sabbath to the churches, as did
the Father. Not that there are TWO sabbaths at once: the
Father's was imposed for a time, even until the
Son's should come; yea, as I have shewed you, even in
the very time of its imposing it was also ordained to be
done away. Hence he saith, that ministration 'was to be
done away' (2 Cor 3:7). Therefore we plead not for two
sabbaths to be at one time, but that a succession of time
was ordained to the New Testament saints, or churches of
the Gentiles, to worship God in; which time is that in
which the Son rested from his own works as God did from
his.
Second, Hence he calls himself, The
'Lord even of the sabbath day,' as Luke 5; Matthew
12:8 shews. Now to be a LORD, is to have dominion, dominion
over a thing, and so power to alter or change it according
to that power; and where is he that dares say Christ has
not this absolutely! We will therefore conclude that it is
granted on all hands he hath. The question then is, Whether
he hath exercised that power to the demolishing or removing
of the Jews' seventh day, and establishing another in
its room? The which I think is easily answered, in that he
did not rest from his own works therein, but chose, for his
own rest, to himself another day.
Surely, had the Lord Jesus intended to have
established the seventh day to the churches of the
Gentiles, he would himself in the first place have rested
from his own works therein; but since he passed by that
day, and took no notice of it, as to the finishing of his
own works, as God took notice of it when he had finished
his; it remains that he fixed upon another day, even the
first of the week; on which, by his rising again, and
shewing himself to his disciples before his passion, he
made it manifest that he had chosen, 'as Lord of the
sabbath,' that day for his own rest: consequently, and
for the rest of his churches, and for his worship to be
solemnized in.
Third, And on THIS day some of the
saints that slept arose, and began their eternal sabbath
(Matt 27:52,53). See how the Lord Jesus hath glorified
this day! Never was such a stamp of divine honour put
upon any other day, no not since the world began. 'And
the graves were opened; and many bodies of the saints which
slept arose, and came out of the graves after his
resurrection,' &c. That is, they arose as soon as
he was risen. But why was not all this done on the seventh
day? No, that day was set apart that saints might adore God
for the works of creation, and that saints through that
might look for redemption by Christ. But now a work more
glorious than that is to be done, and therefore another day
is assigned for the doing of it in. A work, I say, of
redemption completed, a day therefore by itself must be
assigned for this; and some of the saints to begin their
eternal sabbath with God in heaven, therefore a day by
itself must be appointed for this. Yea, and that this day
might not want that glory that might attract the most
dim-sighted Christian to a desire after the sanction of it,
the resurrection of Christ, and also of those saints met
together on it: yea, they both did begin their eternal rest
thereon.
Fourth, The psalmist speaks of a day
that the Lord Jehovah, the Son of God, has made; and saith,
'we will rejoice and be glad in it.' But what day
is this? Why the day in which Christ was made the 'head
of the corner,' which must be applied to the day in
which he was raised from the dead, which is the first of
the week.
Hence Peter saith to the Jews, when he
treateth of Christ before them, and particularly of his
resurrection. 'This is the stone which WAS set at
nought of you builders, which IS become the head of the
croner.' He was set at nought by them, the whole
course of his ministry unto his death, and was made the
head of the corner by God, on that day he rose from
the dead. This day therefore is the day that the Lord
Jehovah has made a day of rejoicing to the church of
Christ, and we will rejoice and be glad in it (Psa
118:24).
For can it be imagined, that the Spirit by
the prophet should thus signalise this day for nothing;
saying, 'This is the day which the Lord
hath made'; to no purpose? Yes, you may say, for the
resurrection of his son.
But I add, that that is not all, it is a day
that the Lord has both made for that, and that we might
'rejoice and be glad in it.'[17] Rejoice, that is
before the Lord while solemn divine worship is performed on
it, by all the people that shall partake of the redemption
accomplished then.
Fifth, God the Father again
leaves such another stamp of divine note and honour upon
this day as he never before did leave upon any; where he
saith to our Lord, 'Thou art my Son, this day have I
begotten thee' (Acts 13:33). Still, I say, having
respect to the first day of the week; for that, and no
other, is the day here intended by the apostle. This day,
saith God, is the day: 'And as concerning that he
raised him up from the dead, now no more to return
to corruption, he said on this wise, I will give thee the
sure mercies of David. Wherefore he saith also in another
Psalm, Thou shalt not suffer thine Holy One to see
corruption.' Wherefore the day in which God did this
work, is greater than that in which he finished the work of
creation; for his making of the creation saved it not from
corruption, but now he hath done a work which corruption
cannot touch, wherefore the day on which he did this, has
this note from his own mouth, THIS day, as a day that doth
transcend.
And, as I said, this day is the first of the
week; for it was on that day that God begat his beloved Son
from the dead. This first day of the week therefore, on it
God found that pleasure which he found not in the seventh
day from the world's creation, for that in it his Son
did live again to him.
Now shall not Christians, when they do read
that God saith, 'This day,' and that too with
reference to a work done on it by him, so full of delight
to him, and so full of life and heaven to them, set also a
remark upon it, saying, This was the day of God's
pleasure, for that his Son did rise thereon, and shall it
not be the day of my delight in him!
This is the day on which his Son was both
begotten and born, and became the first fruits to God of
them that sleep; yea, and in which also he was made by him
the chief, and head of the corner; and shall not we rejoice
in it? (Acts 13:33; Heb 1:5; Col 1:18; Rev 1:5).
Shall kings, and princes, and great men set
a remark upon the day of their birth and coronation, and
expect that both subjects and servants should do them high
honour on that day, and shall the day in which Christ was
both begotten and born, be a day contemned by Christians!
And his name not be but of a common regard on that
day?
I say again, shall God, as with his finger,
point, and that in the face of the world, at this day,
saying, 'Thou art my Son, this day,' &c., and
shall not Christians fear, and awake from their
employments, to worship the Lord on this day!
If God remembers it, well may I! If God
says, and that with all gladness of heart, 'Thou art my
Son, this day have I begotten thee!' may not! ought not
I also to set this day apart to sing the songs of my
redemption in?
THIS day my redemption was
finished.
This day my dear Jesus revived.
This day he was declared to be the Son of
God with power.
Yea this is the day in which the Lord Jesus
finished a greater work than ever yet was done in the
world; yea, a work in which the Father himself was more
delighted than he was in making of heaven and earth. And
shall darkness and the shadow of death stain this day! Or
shall a cloud dwell on this day! Shall God regard this day
from above! And shall not his light shine upon this day!
What shall be done to them that curse this day, and would
not that the stars should give their light thereon. This
day! After this day was come, God never, that we read of,
made mention with delight, of the old seventh day sabbath
more.
Sixth, Nor is that altogether to be
slighted, when he saith, 'When he bringeth in the
first-begotten into the world, Let all the angels of God
worship him.' To wit, at that very time and day (Heb
1:6).
I know not what our expositors say of this
text, but to me it seems to be meant of his resurrection
from the dead; both because the apostle is speaking of that
(v 5), and closes that argument with this text, 'Thou
art my Son, this day have I begotten thee? and again, I
will be to him a Father, and he shall be to me a Son? And
again, when he bringeth in the first-begotten into the
world, he saith, And let all the angels of God worship
him.'
So then, for God's bringing of his
first-begotten now into the world, was by his raising him
again from the dead after they by crucifying of him had
turned him out of the same.
Thus then God brought him into the world,
never by them to be hurried out of it again. For Christ
being now raised from the dead, dies no more; death hath no
more dominion over him.
Now, saith the text, when he bringeth him
thus into the world, he requireth that worship be done unto
HIM. When? That very day, and that by all the angels of
God. And if by all, then ministers are not excluded;
and if not ministers, then not churches; for what is said
to the angels, is said to the church itself (Rev
2:1-7,8,11,12,17,18,29, 3:1,6,7,13,14,22).
So then, if the question be asked, when they
must worship him: the answer is, when he brought him into
the world, which was on the first day of the week; for then
he bringeth him again from the dead, and gave the whole
world and the government thereof into his holy hand. This
text therefore is of weight as to what we have now under
consideration, to wit, that the first day of the week, the
day in which God brought his first-begotten into the world,
should be the day of worshipping him by all the angels of
God.
Seventh, Hence this day is called
'the Lord's day,' as John saith, 'I was in
the Spirit on the Lord's day,' the day in which
Jesus rose from the dead (Rev 1:10).
'The Lord's day.' Every day, say
some, is the Lord's day. Indeed this for discourse sake
may be granted; but strictly, no day can so properly be
called the Lord's day, as this first day of the
week; for that no day of the week or of the year has those
badges of the Lord's glory upon it, nor such divine
grace put upon it as has the first day of the
week.
This we have already made appear in part,
and shall make appear much more before we have done
therewith.
There is nothing, as I know of, that bears
this title but the Lord's supper, and this day (1 Cor
11:20; Rev 1:10). And since Christians count it an abuse to
allegorize the first, let them also be ashamed to
fantasticalize the last. The Lord's day is doubtless
the day in which he rose from the dead. To be sure it is
not the old seventh day; for from the day that he arose, to
the end of the Bible, we find not that he did hang so much
as one twist of glory upon that; but this day is beautified
with glory upon glory, and that both by the Father and the
Son; by the prophets and those that were raised from the
dead thereon; therefore this day must be more than the
rest.
But we are as yet but upon divine
intimations, drawn from such texts which, if candidly
considered, do very much smile upon this great truth;
namely, that the first day of the week is to be accounted
the Christian sabbath, or holy day for divine worship in
the churches of the saints. And SECOND, Now I come to the
texts that are more express.
Then First, This was the day in the
which he did use to shew himself to his people, and to
congregate with them after he rose from the dead. On the
first first-day, even on the day on which he rose from the
dead, he visited his people, both when together and apart,
over, and over, and over, as both Luke and John do testify
(Luke 24; John 20). And preached such sermons of his
resurrection, and gave unto them; yea, and gave them such
demonstration of the truth of all, as was never given them
from the foundation of the world. Shewing, he shewed them
his risen body; opening, he opened their understandings;
and dissipating, he so scattered their unbelief on THIS
day, as he never had done before. And this continued one
way or another even from before day until the
evening.
Second, On the next first day
following the church was within again; that is, congregated
to wait upon their Lord. And John so relates the matter, as
to give us to understand that they were not so assembled
together again till then. 'After eight days,' saith
he, 'again his disciples were within,' clearly
concluding, that they were not so on the days that were
between, no not on the old seventh day.
Now why should the Holy Ghost thus precisely
speak of their assembling together upon the first day, if
not to confirm us in this, that the Lord had chosen that
day for the new sabbath of his church? Surely the
Apostles knew what they did in their meeting together upon
that day; yea, and the Lord Jesus also; for that he used so
to visit them when so assembled, made his practice a law
unto them. For practice is enough for us New Testament
saints, especially when the Lord Jesus himself is in the
head of that practice, and that after he rose from the
dead.
Perhaps some may stumble at the word
'after,' after eight days; but the meaning is, at
the conclusion of the eighth day, or when they had spent in
a manner the whole of their sabbath in waiting upon their
Lord, then in comes their Lord, and finisheth that their
day's service to him with confirming of Thomas'
faith, and by letting drop other most heavenly treasure
among them. Christ said, he must lie three days and three
nights in the heart of the earth, yet it is evident, that
he rose the third day (1 Cor 15:4).
We must take then a part for the whole, and
conclude, that from the time that the Lord Jesus rose from
the dead, to the time that he shewed his hands and his side
to Thomas, eight days were almost expired; that is, he had
sanctified unto them two first days, and had accepted that
service they had performed to him therein, as he testified
by giving of them so blessed a farewell at the conclusion
of both those days.
Hence now we conclude, that this was the
custom of the church at this day, to wit, upon the first
day of the week to meet together, and to wait upon their
Lord therein. For the Holy Ghost counts it needless to make
a continued repetition of things; it is enough therefore if
we have now and then mention made thereof.
Obj. But Christ shewed himself alive
to them at other times also, as in John 21
&c.
Ans. The names of all those days in
which he so did are obliterated and blotted out, that they
might not be idolized; for Christ did not set them apart
for worship, but this day, the first day of the
week, by its name is kept alive in the church, the Holy
Ghost surely signifying thus much, that how hidden soever
other days were, Christ would have his day, the
first day had in everlasting remembrance among
saints.
Churches also meet together now on the week
days, and have the presence of Christ with them too in
their employments; but that takes not off from them the
sanction of the first day of the week, no more than it
would take away the sanction of the old seventh day, had it
still continued holy to them: wherefore this is no let or
objection to hinder our sanctifying of the first day of the
week to our God. But,
Third, Add to this, that upon
Pentecost, which was the first day of the week, mention is
made of their being together again: for Pentecost was
always the morrow after the sabbath, the old seventh day
sabbath. Upon this day, I say, the Holy Ghost saith,
they were again 'with one accord together in one
place.'
But oh! the glory that then attended them,
by the presence of the Holy Ghost among them: never was
such a thing done as was done on that first day until then.
We will read the text, 'And when the day of Pentecost
was fully come, they were all with one accord in one place.
And suddenly there came a sound from heaven as of a rushing
mighty wind, and it filled all the house where they were
sitting. And there appeared unto them cloven tongues like
as of fire, and it sat upon each of them. And they were all
filled with the Holy Ghost' (Acts 2:1-4).
Here is a first day glorified! Here's a
countenance given to the day of their Christian assembling.
But we will note a few things upon it.
1. The church was now, as on other first
days, all with one accord in one place. We read not that
they came together by virtue of any precedent revelation,
nor by accident, but contrariwise by agreement, they were
together 'with one accord,' or by appointment, in
pursuance of their duty, setting apart that day, as
they had done the first days afore, to the holy service of
their blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.
2. We read that this meeting of theirs was
not begun on the old sabbaths, but when Pentecost was
fully come: the Holy Ghost intimating, that they had
left now, and began to leave, the seventh day sabbath to
the unbelieving Jews.
3. Nor did the Holy Ghost come down upon
them till every moment of the old sabbath was past,
Pentecost, as was said, was FULLY come first. 'And when
the day of Pentecost was fully come, they were all with one
accord in one place.' And then, &c.
And why was not this done on the seventh day
sabbath? But, possibly, to shew, that the ministration of
death and condemnation was not that, by or through which
Christ the Lord would communicate so good a gift unto his
churches (Gal 3:1-5).
This gift must be referred to the Lord's
day, the first day of the week, to fulfil the scripture,
and to sanctify yet farther this holy day unto the use of
all New Testament churches of the saints. For since on the
first day of the week our Lord did rise from the dead, and
by his special presence, I mean his personal, did accompany
his church therein, and so preach as he did, his holy
truths unto them, it was most meet that they on the same
day also should receive the first fruits of their eternal
life most gloriously.
And, I say again, since from the
resurrection of Christ to this day, the church then did
receive upon the first day, but as we read, upon no other,
such glorious things as we have mentioned, it is enough to
beget in the hearts of them that love the Son of God, a
high esteem of the first day of the week. But how much
more, when there shall be joined to these, proof that it
was the custom of the first gospel church, the church of
Christ at Jerusalem, after our Lord was risen, to assemble
together to wait upon God on the first day of the week with
their Lord as leader.
To say little more to this head, but only to
repeat what is written of this day of old, to wit, that it
should be proclaimed the selfsame day, to wit, the morrow
after the sabbath, which is the first day of the week,
'that it may be an holy convocation unto you; ye
shall do no servile work therein: it shall be a
statute for ever in all your dwellings' (Lev
23:21).
This ceremony was about the sheaf that was
to be waved, and bread of first fruits, which was a type of
Christ; for he is unto God 'the first fruits of them
that slept' (1 Cor 15:20).
This sheaf, or bread, must not be waved on
the old seventh day, but on the morrow after, which is the
first day of the week, the day in which Christ rose from
the dead, and waved himself as the first fruits of the
elect unto God. Now from this day they were to count seven
sabbaths complete, and on the morrow after the seventh
sabbath, which was the first day of the week again; and
this Pentecost upon which we now are, then they were to
have a new meat offering, with meat offerings and drink
offerings, &c.
And on the selfsame day they were to
proclaim that that first day should be a holy convocation
unto them. The which the apostles did, and grounded that
their proclamation so on the resurrection of Jesus Christ,
not on ceremonies, that at the same day they brought three
thousand souls to God (Acts 2:41).
Now what another signal [applause] was here
put upon the first day of the week! The day in which our
Lord rose from the dead, assembled with his disciples,
poured out so abundantly of the Spirit, and gathered even
by the first draught that his fishermen made by the gospel,
such a number of souls to God.
Thus then they proclaimed, and thus they
gathered sinners on the first first-day that they preached;
for though they had assembled together over and over with
their Lord before therein, yet they began not jointly to
preach until this first day Pentecost.
Now, after this the apostles to the churches
did never make mention of a seventh day sabbath. For as the
wave sheaf and the bread of first fruits were a figure of
the Lord Jesus, and the waving, of his life from the dead:
so that morrow after the sabbath on which the Jews waved
their sheaf, was a figure of that on which our Lord
did rise; consequently, when their morrow after the sabbath
ceased, our morrow after that began, and so has
continued a blessed morrow after their sabbath, as a holy
sabbath to Christians from that time ever since.
Fourth, We come yet more close to the
custom of churches; I mean, to the custom of the churches
of the Gentiles; for as yet we have spoken but of the
practice of the church of God which was at Jerusalem; only
we will add, that the customs that were laudable and
binding with the church at Jerusalem, were with reverence
to be imitated by the churches of the Gentiles; for there
was but one law of Christ for them both to worship
by.
Now then, to come to the point, to wit, that
it was the custom of the churches of the Gentiles, on the
first day of the week, but upon no other that we read
of,[18] to come together to perform divine worship to their
Lord.
Hence it is said 'And upon the first
day of the week, when the disciples came together to
break bread,' &c. (Acts 20:7). This is a text, that
as to matter of fact cannot be contradicted by any, for the
text saith plainly they did so, the disciples then came
together to break bread, the disciples among the Gentiles,
did so.
Thus you see that the solemnizing of a first
day to holy uses was not limited to, though first preached
by the church that was at Jerusalem. The church at
Jerusalem was the mother church, and not that at Rome, as
some falsely imagine; for from this church went out the law
and the holy word of God to the Gentiles. Wherefore it must
be supposed that this meeting of the Gentiles on the first
day of the week to break bread, came to them by holy
tradition[19] from the church at Jerusalem, since they were
the first that kept the first day as holy unto the Lord
their God.
And indeed, they had the best advantage to
do it; for they had their Lord in the head of them to back
them to it by his presence and preaching
thereon.
But we will a little comment upon the text.
'Upon the first day of the week.' Thus you
see the day is nominated, and so is kept alive among the
churches. For in that the day is nominated on which this
religious exercise was performed, it is to be supposed that
the Holy Ghost would have it live, and be taken notice of
by the churches that succeed.
It also may be nominated to shew, that both
the church at Jerusalem, and those of the Gentiles did
harmonize in their sabbath, jointly concluding to solemnize
worship on a [the same] day. And then again to shew, that
they all had left the old sabbath to the unbelievers, and
jointly chose to sanctify the day of the rising of their
Lord, to this work.
They 'came together to break bread,'
to partake of the super of the Lord. And what day so fit as
the Lord's day for this? This was to be the work of
that day, to wit, to solemnize that ordinance among
themselves, adjoining other solemn worship thereto, to fill
up the day, as the following part of the verse shews. This
day therefore was designed for this work, the whole
day, for the text declares it. The first day of the week
was set by them apart for this work.
'Upon THE first day'; not upon A
first day, or upon one first day, or upon
such a first day; for had he said so, we had had from
thence not so strong an argument for our purpose: but when
he saith, 'upon the first day of the week'
they did it, he insinuates, that it was their custom. [It
was] also upon one of these, [that] Paul being among them,
preached unto them, ready to depart on the morrow. Upon the
first day: what, or which first day of this, or that, of
the third or fourth week of the month? No, but upon the
first day, every first day; for so the text admits us to
judge.
'Upon the first day of the week,
WHEN the disciples came together,' supposes a custom
when, or as they were wont to come together to
perform such service among themselves to God: then
Paul preached unto them, &c.
It is a text also that supposes an agreement
among themselves as to this thing. They came together then
to break bread; they had appointed to do it then,
for that then was the day of their Lord's resurrection,
and that in which he himself congregated after he revived,
with the first gospel church, the church at
Jerusalem.
Thus you see, that breaking of bread, was
the work, the work that by general consent was agreed to be
by the churches of the Gentiles performed upon the first
day of the week. I say, by the churches; for I doubt not
but that the practice here, was also the practice of the
rest of the Gentile churches, even as it had been before
the practice of the church at Jerusalem.
For this practice now did become universal,
and so this text implies; for he speaks here universally of
the practice of all disciples as such, though he limits
Paul preaching to that church with whom he at present
personally was. Upon the first day of the week, 'when
the disciples came together to break bread,' Paul being
at that time at Troas preached to them on that
day.
Thus then you see how the Gentile churches
did use to break bread, not on the old sabbath, but on the
first day of the week. And, I say, they had it from the
church at Jerusalem; where the apostles were first seated,
and beheld the way of their Lord with their
eyes.
Now, I say, since we have so ample an
example, not only of the church at Jerusalem, but also of
the churches of the Gentiles, for the keeping of the first
day to the Lord, and that as countenanced by Christ and his
apostles, we should not be afraid to tread in their steps,
for their practice is the same with law and commandment.
But,
Fifth, We will add to this another
text. 'Now [saith Paul] concerning the collection for
the saints, as I have given order to the churches of
Galatia, even so do ye. Upon the first day of the
week let every one of you lay by him in store, as
God hath prospered him, that there be no gatherings
when I come' (1 Cor 16:1,2).
This text some have greatly sought to evade,
counting the duty here, on this day to be done, a duty too
inferior for the sanction of an old seventh day sabbath;
when yet to show mercy to an ass on the old sabbath, was a
work which our Lord no ways condemns (Luke 13:15,
14:5).
But to pursue our design, we have a duty
enjoined, and that of no inferior sort. If charity be
indeed as it is, the very bond of perfectness: and if
without it all our doings, yea and sufferings too, are not
worthy so much as a rush (1 Cor 13; Col 3:14). we have here
a duty, I say, that a seventh day sabbath, when in force,
was not too big for it to be performed in.
The work now to be done, was, as you see, to
bestow their charity upon the poor; yea, to provide for
time to come. And I say, it must be collected upon the
first day of the week. Upon THE first day; not A first day,
as signifying one or two, but upon THE first day, even
every first day; for so your ancient Bibles have
it;[20] also our later must be so understood, or else Paul
had left them to whom he did write, utterly at a loss. For
if he intended not every first day, and yet did not specify
a particular one, it could hardly even have been understood
which first day he meant. But we need not stand upon this.
This work was a work for A first-day, for EVERY first day
of the week.
Note again that we have this duty here
commanded and enforced by an apostolical order: 'I have
given order,' saith Paul, for this; and his orders, as
he saith in another place, 'are the commandments of the
Lord.' You have it in the same epistle (chap.
14:37).
Whence it follows, that there was given even
by the apostles themselves, a holy respect to the first day
of the week above all the days of the week; yea, or of the
year besides.
Further, I find also by this text, that this
order is universal. I have, saith he, given this order not
only to you, but to the churches of Galatia. Consequently
to all other that were concerned in this collection (2 Cor
8, 9, &c.).
Now this, whatever others may think, puts
yet more glory upon the first day of the week. For in that
all the churches are commanded, as to make their
collections, so to make them on this day: what is
it, but that this day, by reason of the sanction that
Christ put upon it, was of virtue to sanctify the offering
through and by Christ Jesus, as the altar and temple afore
did sanctify the gift and gold that was, and was offered on
them. The proverb is, 'The better day, the better
deed.' And I believe, that things done on the
Lord's day, are better done, than on other days of the
week, in his worship.
Obj. But yet, say some, here are no
orders to keep this first day holy to the Lord.
Ans. 1. That is supplied; for that by
this very text this day is appointed, above all the days of
the week, to do this holy duty in.
2.. You must understand that this order is
but additional, and now enjoined to fill up that which was
begun as to holy exercise of religious worship by the
churches long before.
3. The universality of the duty being
enjoined to this day, supposes that this day was
universally kept by the churches as holy
already.
4. And let him that scrupleth this, shew me,
if he can, that God by the mouth of his apostles did ever
command that all the churches should be confined to this or
that duty on such a day, and yet put no sanction upon that
day; or that he has commanded that this work should be done
on the first day of the week, and yet has reserved other
church ordinances as a public solemnization of worship to
him, to be done of another day, as of a day more fit, more
holy.
5. If charity, if a general collection for
the saints in the churches is commanded on this day, and on
no other day but this day; for church collection is
commanded on no other, there must be a reason for it: and
if that reason had not respect to the sanction of the day,
I known to why the duty should be so strictly confined to
it.
6. But for the apostle now to give with this
a particular command to the churches to sanctify that day
as holy unto the Lord, had been utterly superfluous; for
that they already, and that by the countenance of their
Lord, and his church at Jerusalem, had done.
Before now, I say, it was become a custom,
as by what hath been said already is manifest: wherefore
what need that their so solemn a practice be imposed again
upon the brethren? An intimation now of a continued respect
thereto, by the very naming of the day, is enough to keep
the sanctity thereof on foot in the churches. How much more
then, when the Lord is still adding holy duty to holy duty,
to be performed upon that day. So then, in that the apostle
writes to the churches to do this holy duty on the first
day of the week, he puts them in mind of the sanction of
the day, and insinuates, that he would still have them have
a due respect thereto.
Quest. But is there yet another
reason why this holy duty should, in special as it is, be
commanded to be performed on the first day of the
week?
Ans. 1. Yes: for that now the
churches were come together in their respective places, the
better to agree about collections, and to gather them. You
know church worship is a duty, so long as we are in the
world, and so long also is this of making collections for
the saints. And for as much as the apostle speaks here, as
I have hinted afore, of a church collection, when is it
more fit to be done, than when the church is come together
upon the first day of the week to worship God?
2. This part of worship is most comely to be
done upon the first day of the week, and that at the close
of that day's work. For thereby the church shows, not
only her thankfulness to God for a sabbath day's mercy,
but also returneth him, by giving to the poor, that
sacrifice for their benefit that is most behoveful to make
manifest their professed subjection to Christ (Prov 19:17;
2 Cor 9:12-15). It is therefore necessary, that this work
be done on the first day of the week, for a comely close of
the worship that we perform to the Lord our God on that
day.
3. On the first day of the week, when the
church is performing of holy worship unto God, then that of
collection for the saints is most meet to be performed;
because then, in all likelihood, our hearts will be most
warm with the divine presence; consequently most open and
free to contribute to the necessity of the saints. You
know, that a man when his heart is open, is taken with some
excellent thing; then, if at all, it is most free to do
something for the promoting thereof.
Why, waiting upon God in the way of his
appointments, opens, and makes free, the heart to the poor:
and because the first day of the week was it in which now
such solemn service to him was done, therefore also the
apostle commanded, that upon the same day also, as on a day
most fit, this duty of collecting for the poor should be
done. 'For God loveth a cheerful giver' (2 Cor
9:6,7).
Wherefore the apostle by this, takes the
churches as it were at the advantage, and as we say,
[strikes] while the iron is hot, to the intent he might,
what in him lay, make their collections, not sparing nor of
a grudging mind, but to flow from cheerfulness. And the
first day of the week, though its institution be set aside,
doth most naturally tend to this; because it is the day,
the only day, on which we received such blessings from God
(Acts 3:26).
This is the day on which, at first, it
rained manna all day long from heaven upon the new
testament church, and so continues to do this
day.
Oh! the resurrection of Christ, which was on
this day, and the riches that we receive thereby. Though it
should be, and is, I hope thought on every day; yet when
the first of the week is fully come! Then
to-day! This day! This is the day to be warmed; this
day he was begotten from the dead.
The thought of this, will do much with an
honest mind: this is the day, I say, that the first saints
did find, and that after saints do find the blessings of
God come down upon them; and therefore this is the day here
commanded to be set apart for holy duties.
And although what I have said may be but
little set by of some, yet, for a closing word as to this,
I do think, could but half so much be produced from the day
Christ rose from the dead quite down [to the end of
revelation], for the sanction of a seventh day sabbath in
the churches of the Gentiles, it would much sway with me.
But the truth is, neither doth the apostle Paul, nor any of
his fellows, so much as once speak one word to the churches
that shows the least regard, as to conscience to God, of a
seventh day sabbath more. No, the first day, the first day,
the first day, is now all the cry in the churches by the
apostles, for the performing church worship in to God.
Christ began it on THAT day: then the Holy Ghost seconded
it on that day: then the churches practised it on that day.
And to conclude; the apostle by the command now under
consideration, continues the sanction of that day to the
churches to the end of the world.
But as to the old seventh day sabbath, as
hath been said afore in this treatise, Paul, who is the
apostle of the Gentiles, has so taken away that whole
ministration in the bowels of which it is; yea, and has so
stript it of its old testament grandeur, both by terms and
arguments, that it is strange to me it should by any be
still kept up in the churches; specially, since the same
apostle, and that at the same time, has put a better
ministration in its place (2 Cor 3).
But when the consciences of good men are
captivated with an error, none can stop them from a
prosecution thereof, as if were itself of the best of
truths.
Obj. But Paul preached frequently on
the old sabbath, and that after the resurrection of
Christ.
Ans. To the unbelieving Jews and
their proselytes, I grant he did. But we read not that he
did it to any new testament church on that day: nor did he
celebrate the instituted worship of Christ in the churches
on that day. For Paul, who had before cast out the
ministration of death, as that which had no glory, would
not now take thereof any part for new testament instituted
worship; for he knew that that would veil the heart, and
blind the mind from that, which yet instituted worship was
ordained to discover.
He preached then on the seventh day sabbath,
of a divine and crafty love to the salvation of the
unbelieving Jews.
I say, he preached now on that day to them
and their proselytes, because that day was theirs by their
estimation. He did it, I say, of great love to their souls,
that if possible, he might save some of them.
Wherefore, if you observe, you shall still
find, that where it is said that he preached on that day,
it was to that people, not to the churches of Christ. See
Acts 9:20, 13:14-16, 16:13, 17:1-3, 18:4.
Thus, though he had put away the sanction of
that day as to himself, and had left the Christians that
were weak to their liberty as to conscience to it, yet he
takes occasion upon it to preach to the Jews that still
were wedded to it, the faith, that they might be saved by
grace.
Paul did also many other things that were
Jewish and ceremonial, for which he had, as then, no
conscie