Billeder på siden
PDF
ePub

office or forms of worship: for they were then to wor-
ship God as a Creator and a gentle Father; we are to
add to that, our Redeemer, and all his other excellen-
cies and mercies. And though we have more natural
and proper reason to keep the Lord's day than the
Sabbath; yet the Jews had a Divine commandment
for their day, which we have not for ours: but we have
many commandments to do all that honour to God,
which was intended in the fourth commandment, and
the apostles appointed the first day of the week for
doing it in solemn assemblies. And the manner of
worshipping God, and doing him solemn honour and
service upon
this day, we may best observe in the fol-
lowing measures.

Rules for keeping the Lord's Day and other
Christian Festivals.

1. When you go about to distinguish festival days from common, do it not by lessening the devotions of ordinary days, that the common devotion may seem bigger upon festivals; but on every day keep your ordinary devotions entire, and enlarge upon the holiday.

2. Upon the Lord's day we must abstain from all servile and laborious works, except such which are matters of necessity, of common life, or of great charity; for these are permitted by that anthority which hath separated the day for holy uses. The Sabbath of the Jews, though consisting principally in rest, and established by God, did yield to these. The labour of love and the labours of religion were not against the reason and spirit of the commandment, for which the letter was decreed, and to which it ought to minister. And therefore much more is it so on the Lord's day, where the letter is wholly turned into spirit, and there is no commandment of God but of spiritual and holy actions. The priests might kill their beasts and dress them for sacrifice; and Christ, though born under the law, might heal a sick man; and the

P

sick man might carry his bed to witness his recovery, and confess the mercy, and leap and dance to God for joy; and an ox might be led to water, and an ass be haled out of a ditch; and a man may take physic, and he may eat meat, and therefore there were of necessity some to prepare and minister it: and the performing these labours did not consist in minute and just determined stages, but they had, even then, a reasonable latitude; so only as to exclude unnecessary labour, or such as did not minister to charity or religion. And therefore this is to be enlarged in the gospel, whose Sabbath or rest is but a circumstance, and accessory to the principal and spiritual duties. Upon the Christian Sabbath necessity is to be served first, then charity, and then religion: for this is to give place to charity in great instances, and the second to the first in all; and in all cases God is to be worshipped in spirit and in truth."

66

3. The Lord's day, being the remembrance of a great blessing, must be a day of joy, festivity, spiritual rejoicing and thanksgiving: and therefore it is a proper work of the day, to let your devotions spend themselves in singing or reading psalms, in recounting the great works of God, in remembering his mercies, in worshipping his excellencies, in celebrating his attributes, in admiring his person, in sending portions of pleasant meat to them for whom nothing is provided, and in all the arts and instruments of advancing God's glory and the reputation of religion, in which it were a great decency, that a memorial of the resurrection should be inserted, that the particular religion of the day be not swallowed up in the general. And of this we may the more easily serve ourselves, by rising seasonably in the morning to private devotion, and by retiring at the leisures and spaces of the day not employed in public offices.

4. Fail not to be present at the public hours and places of prayer, entering early and cheerfully, attending reverently and devoutly, abiding patiently during

the whole office, piously assisting at the prayers, and gladly also hearing the sermon ; and at no hand omitting to receive the holy communion when it is offered, unless some great reason excuse it, this being the great solemnity of thanksgiving, and a proper work of the day.

5. After the solemnities are past, and in the intervals between the morning and evening devotion, as you shall find opportunity, visit sick persons, reconcile differences, do offices of neighbourhood, inquire into the needs of the poor, especially housekeepers, relieve them, as they shall need, and as you are able: for then we truly rejoice in God, when we make our neighbours, the poor members of Christ, rejoice together with us.

6. Whatsoever you are to do yourself as necessary, you are to take care that others also, who are under your charge, do in their station and manner. Let your servants be called to church, and all your family that can be spared from necessary and great houshold ministeries: those that cannot, let them go by turns, and be supplied otherwise as well as they may and provide on these days especially, that they be instructed in the articles of faith and necessary parts of their duty.

7. Those who labour hard in the week must be eased upon the Lord's day; such ease being a great charity and alms: but at no hand must they be permitted to use any unlawful games, any thing forbidden by the laws, any thing that is scandalous, or any thing that is dangerous and apt to mingle sin with it; no games prompting to wantonness, to drunkenness, to quarrelling, to ridiculous and superstitious customs; but let their refreshments be innocent, and charitable, and of good report, and not exclusive of the duties of religion.

8. Beyond these bounds, because neither God nor man hath passed any obligations upon us, we must preserve our "Christian liberty, and not suffer our

selves to be entangled with a yoke of bondage:" for even a good action may become a snare to us, if we make it an occasion of scruple by a pretence of necessity, binding loads upon the conscience, not with the bands of God, but of men, and of fancy, or of opinion, or of tyranny. Whatsoever is laid upon us by the hands of man, must be acted and accounted of by the measures of a man: but our best measure is this, He keeps the Lord's day best, that keeps it with most religion and with most charity.

9. What the Church hath done in the article of the Resurrection, she hath in some measure done in the other articles of the Nativity, of the Ascension, and of the Descent of the Holy Ghost at Pentecost: and so great blessings deserve an anniversary solemnity; since he is a very unthankful person, that does not often record them in the whole year, and esteem them the ground of his hopes, the object of his faith, the comfort of his troubles, and the great effluxes of the Divine mercy, greater than all the victories over our temporal enemies, for which all glad persons usually give thanks. And if with great reason the memory of the resurrection does return solemnly every week, it is but reason the other should return once a year. To which I add, that the commemoration of the articles of our creed in solemn days and offices, is a very excellent instrument, to convey and imprint the sense and memory of it upon the spirits of the most ignorant persons. For as a picture may with more fancy convey a story to a man, than a plain narrative either in word or writing: so a real representment, and an office of remembrance, and a day to declare it, is far more impressive than a picture, or any other art of making and fixing imagery.

10. The memories of the saints are precious to God, and therefore they ought also to be so to us; and such persons who served God by holy living, industrious preaching, and religious dying, ought to have their names preserved in honour, and God be glorified

in them, and their holy doctrines and lives published and imitated and we by so doing give testimony to the article of "the communion of saints." But in these cases, as every church is to be sparing in the number of days, so also should she be temperate in her injunctions, not imposing them but upon voluntary and unbusied persons, without snare or burthen. But the holiday is best kept by giving God thanks for the excellent persons, apostles or martyrs, we then remember, and by imitating their lives: this all may do; and they that can also keep the solemnity, must do that too, when it is publicly enjoined.

The mixed Actions of Religion are, 1. Prayer. 2. Alms. 3. Repentance. 4. Receiving the blessed Sacrament.

SECTION VII.

Of Prayer.

THERE is no greater argument in the world of our spiritual danger and unwillingness to religion, than the backwardness, which most men have always, and all men have sometimes, to say their prayers: so weary of their length, so glad when they are done, so witty to excuse and frustrate an opportunity: and yet all is nothing, but a desiring of God to give us the greatest and the best things we can need, and which can make us happy it is a work so easy, so honourable, and to so great purpose, that in all the instances of religion and providence, except only the incarnation of his Son, God hath not given us a greater argument of his willingness to have us saved, and of our unwillingness to accept it, his goodness and our graceless

« ForrigeFortsæt »