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SERMON
XV
THE
PERPETUITY AND CHANGE OF THE SABBATH
I
Cor. xvi. 1, 2.
Now 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, us God hath prospered
him, that there be no gatherings when I come.
It
is the mind and will of God, that the first day of the
week should be especially set apart among Christians for
religious exercises and duties.
On this doctrine I have already discoursed, under
two propositions, showing, first, That it is the will
of God, that one day of the week be, in all ages, set apart
for religious duties; and secondly, That under the
gospel, this day ought to be the first day of the
week. I now proceed to the:
APPLICATION
This shall be in a use of exhortation.
1. Let us be thankful
for the institution or the christian sabbath. It is a
thing wherein God hath shown his mercy to us, and his care
for our souls. He shows, that he, by his infinite wisdom, is
contriving for our good, as Christ teaches us, that the
sabbath was made for man; Mark ii. 27. "The sabbath was made
for man, and not man for the sabbath." It was made for the
profit and for the comfort of our souls.
The sabbath is a day of
rest: God hath appointed that we should, every
seventh day, rest from all our worldly labours. Instead of
that, he might have appointed the hardest labours for us to
go through, some severe hardships for us to endure. It is a
day of outward, but especially of spiritual rest. It is a
day appointed of God, that his people thereon may find rest
unto their souls; that the souls of believers may rest and
be refreshed in their Saviour. It is a day of rejoicing:
God made it to be a joyful day to the church; Ps.
cxviii. 24.—" This is the day which the Lord hath made,
we will rejoice and be glad in it." They that aright receive
and improve the sabbath, call it a delight and
honourable: it is a pleasant and a joyful day to
them; it is an image of the future heavenly rest of the
church. Heb. iv. 9, 10, II. "There remaineth therefore a
rest" (or sabbatism, as it is in the original) "to the
people of God. For he that hath entered into his rest, he
also hath ceased from his own works, as God did from his.
Let us labour therefore to enter into that rest."
The christian sabbath is one
of the most precious enjoyments of the visible church.
Christ showed his love to his church in instituting it; and
it becomes the christian church to be thankful to her Lord
for it. The very name of this day, the Lord’s day,
or Jesus’s day, should endear it to
Christians, as it intimates the special relation it has to
Christ, and also the design of it, which is the
commemoration of our dear Saviour, and his love to his
church in redeeming it.
2. Be exhorted to keep
this day holy.—God hath given such evidences that
this is his mind, that he will surely require it of you, if
you do not strictly and conscientiously observe it. And if
you do thus observe it, you may have this comfort in the
reflection upon your conduct, that you have not been
superstitious in it, but have done as God hath
revealed it to be his mind and will in his word, that you
should do; and that in so doing you are in the way of
God’s acceptance and reward.
Here let me lay before you the following motives
to excite you to this duty.
(1.) By a strict
observation of the sabbath, the name of God is honoured, and
that in such a way as is very acceptable to him. Isa. lviii.
13. "If thou call the sabbath a delight, the holy of the
Lord, and shalt honour him." God is honoured by it,
as it is a visible manifestation of respect to God’s
holy law, and a reverencing of that which has a peculiar
relation to God himself, and that more in some respects than
the observance of many other commands. And man may be just,
and generous, and yet not so plainly show respect to the
revealed mind and will of God, for many of the heathen have
been so. But if a person, with evident strictness and care,
observe the sabbath, it is a visible manifestation of a
conscientious reward to God’s declaration of his mind,
and so is a visible honour done to his authority.
By a strict observance of the
sabbath, the face of religion is kept up in the world. If it
were not for the sabbath, there would be but little public
and visible appearance of serving, worshipping, and
reverencing the supreme and invisible Being. The sabbath
seems to have been appointed very much for this end, viz,
to uphold the visibility of religion in public, or among
professing societies of men; and by how much greater the
strictness is with which the sabbath is observed, and with
how much more solemnity the duties of it are observed among
a people; by so much the greater is the manifestation among
them of respect to the Divine Being.
This should be a powerful
motive with us to the observation of the sabbath. It
should be our study above all things to honour and glorify
God. It should be the great thing with all that bear the
name of Christians, to honour their great God and King, and
I hope is a great thing with many that hear me at this time.
If it be your inquiry, if it be your desire, to honour God;
by this subject you are directed to one way whereby you may
do much in that way, viz, by honouring the sabbath,
and by avowing a careful and strict observance of it.
(2.) That which is the
business of the sabbath is the greatest business of our
lives, viz, that of religion. To serve and worship
God is that for which we were made, and for which we had our
being given us. Other business, which is of a secular
nature, and on which we are wont to attend on week days, is
but subordinate, and ought to be subservient to the higher
purposes and ends of religion. Therefore surely we should
not think much of devoting one seventh part of our time, to
be wholly spent in this business, and to be set apart
to exercise ourselves in the immediate duties of
religion.
(3.) Let it be
considered, that all our time is God’s, and therefore
when he challenges of us one day in seven, he challenges his
own. He doth not exceed his right; he would not have
exceeded it, if he had challenged a far greater proportion
of our time to be spent in his immediate service, But he
hath mercifully considered our state, and our necessities
here; and, as he hath consulted the good of our souls in
appointing a seventh day for the immediate duties of
religion, so he bath considered our outward necessities, and
hath allowed us six days for attendance on our outward
affairs.—What unworthy treatment therefore will it be
of God, if we refuse to allow him even the seventh day!
(4.) As the sabbath is a
day which is especially set apart for religious exercises,
so it is a day wherein God especially confers his grace and
blessing.—As God hath commanded us to set it apart to
have converse with him, so hath he set it apart for himself
to have converse with us. As God hath commanded us to
observe the sabbath, so God observes the sabbath too. It is
with respect to the sabbath, as Solomon prayed that it might
be with respect to the temple, 2 Chron. vi. 20. His eyes are
open upon it: he stands ready then especially to hear
prayers, to accept of religious services, to meet his
people, to manifest himself to them, to give his Holy Spirit
and blessing to those who diligently and conscientiously
sanctify it.
That we should sanctify the
sabbath, as we have observed, is according to God’s
institution. God in a sense observes his own institutions;
i.e. is wont to cause them to be attended with a
blessing. The institutions of God are his appointed means of
grace, and with his institutions he hath promised his
blessing; Exod. xx. 24. "In all places where I record my
name, I will come unto thee, and I will bless thee." For the
same reason we may conclude, that God will meet his people
and bless them, waiting upon him not only in appointed
places, but at appointed times and in all appointed
ways. Christ hath promised, that where two or three are
gathered together in his name, he will be in the midst of
them, Matt. xviii. 20. One thing included in the expression,
in his name is, that it is by his appointment, and
according to his institution.
God hath made it our duty, by
his institution, to set apart this day for a special seeking
of his grace and blessing. From which we may argue, that he
will be especially ready to confer his grace on those who
thus seek it. If it be the day on which God requires
us especially to seek him, we may argue, that it is a day on
which especially he will be found. That God is ready on this
day especially to bestow his blessing on them that keep it
aright, is implied in that expression of God’s
blessing the sabbath-day. God hath not only hallowed the
sabbath-day, but blessed it; he hath given his blessing to
it, and will confer his blessing upon all the due observers
of it. He hath hallowed it, or appointed that it be kept
holy by us, and hath blessed it; he hath determined to give
his blessing upon it.
So that here is great
encouragement for us to keep holy the sabbath, as we would
seek God’s grace and our own spiritual good. The
sabbath-day is an accepted time, a day of salvation, a time
wherein God especially loves to be sought, and loves to be
found. The Lord Jesus Christ takes delight in his own day;
he delights to honour it; he delights to meet with and
manifest himself to his disciples on it, as he showed before
his ascension, by appearing to them from time to time on
this day. On this day he delights to give his Holy Spirit,
as he intimated, by choosing it as the day on which to pour
out the Spirit in so remarkable a manner on the primitive
church, and on which to give his Spirit to the apostle
John.
Of old God blessed the seventh
day, or appointed it to be a day whereon especially he would
bestow blessings on his people, as an expression of his own
joyful remembrance of that day, and of the rest and
refreshment which he had on it. Exod. Xxxi. 16, 17.
"Wherefore the children of Israel shall keep the
sabbath-day.—For in six days the Lord made heaven and
earth, and on the seventh day he rested and was refreshed."
As princes give gifts on their birth-days, on their
marriage-days, and the like; so God was wont to dispense
spiritual gifts on the seventh day.
But how much more reason has
Christ to bless the day of his resurrection, and to delight
to honour it, and to confer his grace and blessed gifts on
his people on this day. It was a day whereon Christ rested
and was refreshed in a literal sense. It was a day of
deliverance from the chains of death, the day of his
finishing that great and difficult work of redemption, which
had been upon his heart from all eternity; the day of his
justification by the Father; the day of the beginning of his
exaltation, and of the fulfilment of the promises of the
Father; the day when he had eternal life, which he had
purchased, put into his hands.—On this day Christ doth
indeed delight to distribute gifts, and blessings, and joy,
and happiness, and will delight to do the same to the end of
the world.
O therefore, how well is it
worth our while to improve this day, to call upon God and
seek Jesus Christ! Let awakened sinners be stirred up by
these things to improve the sabbath-day, as they would lay
themselves most in the way of the Spirit of God. Improve
this day to call upon God; for then he is near. Improve
it for reading the Holy Scriptures, and diligently
attending his word preached; for then is the likeliest time
to have the Spirit accompanying it. Let the saints
who are desirous of growing in grace, and enjoying communion
with Christ, improve the sabbath in order to it.
(5.) The last motive which
I shall mention, is the experience of the influence which a
strict observance of the sabbath has upon the whole of
religion. It may be observed, that in those places where the
sabbath is well kept, religion in general will be most
flourishing; and that in those places where the sabbath is
not much noticed, and much is not made of it, there is no
great matter of religion any way.—But,
INQ. How ought we to keep the
sabbath?
ANS. 1. We ought to be exceedingly
careful on this day to abstain from sin. Indeed, all
breaches of the sabbath are sinful; but we speak now of
those things which are in themselves sinful, or sinful upon
other accounts, besides that they are done upon the sabbath.
The sabbath being holy time, it is especially defiled by the
commission of sin. Sin by being committed on this day
becomes the more exceeding sinful. We are required to
abstain from sin at all times, but especially on holy time.
The commission of immoralities on the sabbath is the worst
way of profaning it, that which most provokes God, and
brings most guilt upon the souls of men.
How provoking must it be to
God, when men do those things on that day—which he has
sanctified, and set apart to be spent in the immediate
exercises of religion—which are not fit to be done on
common days, which are impure and wicked whenever they are
done!
Therefore if any persons be
guilty of any such wickedness, as intemperance or any
unclean actions, they do in a very horrid manner pro6ne the
sabbath. Or if they be guilty of wickedness in speech, of
talking profanely, or in an unclean and lascivious manner,
or of talking against their neighbours, they do in a
dreadful manner profane the sabbath. Yet very commonly those
who are used to such things on week-days, have not a
conscience to restrain them on the sabbath. It is
well if those that live in the indulgence of the lust of
uncleanness on week-days, be not some way or other unclean
on the sabbath. They will be indulging the same lusts then;
they will be indulging their impure flames in their
imaginations at least: and it is well if they keep clear
while in the house of God, and while they pretend to be
worshipping God. The unclean young man gives this account of
himself, Prov. v. 14. " I was almost in all evil in
the midst of the congregation and the assembly." So those
who are addicted to an impure way of talking in the
week-time, have nothing to keep them from the same upon the
sabbath, when they meet together. But dreadfully is God
provoked by such things.
We ought carefully to watch
over our own hearts, and to avoid all sinful thoughts on the
sabbath. We ought to maintain such a reverence for the
sabbath, as to have a peculiar dread of sin, such as shall
awe us to a very careful watch over ourselves.
2. We ought to be careful
to abstain from all worldly concerns. The reason, as we have
showed, why it is needful and proper, that certain stated
parts of time should be set apart to be devoted to religious
exercises is because the state of mankind is such in this
world, that they are necessitated to exercise their minds,
and employ their thoughts, about secular matters. It is
therefore convenient that there should be stated times,
wherein all should be obliged to throw by all other
concerns, that their minds may the more freely, and with
less entanglement, be engaged in religious and spiritual
exercises.
We are therefore to do thus,
or else we frustrate the very design of the institution of a
sabbath. We are strictly to abstain from being outwardly
engaged in any worldly thing, either worldly business or
recreations. We are to rest in remembrance of God’s
rest from the work of creation, and of Christ’s rest
from the work of redemption. We should be careful that we do
not encroach upon the sabbath at its beginning, by busying
ourselves about the world after the sabbath is begun. We
should avoid talking about worldly matters, and even
thinking about them; for whether we outwardly concern
ourselves with the world or not, yet if our minds be upon
it, we frustrate the end of the sabbath. The end of its
separation from other days is, that our minds may be
disengaged from worldly things: and we are to avoid being
outwardly concerned with the world, only for this reason,
that cannot be without taking up our minds.—We ought
therefore to give the world no place in our thoughts on the
sabbath, but to abstract ourselves from all worldly concerns
and maintain a watch over ourselves, that the world do not
encroach, as it is very apt to do. Isa. lviii. 13,14.
3. We ought to spend the time in religious exercises.
This is the more ultimate end of the sabbath.
We are to keep our minds
separate from the world, principally for this end, that we
may be the more free for religious exercises.—Though it
be a day of rest, yet it was not designed to be a day of
idleness. To rest from worldly employments, without
employing ourselves about any thing, is but to lay ourselves
so much more in the devil’s way. The mind will be
employed some way or other; and therefore doubtless the end
for which we are to call off our minds from worldly things
on the sabbath is, that we may employ them about things that
are better.
We are to attend on spiritual
exercises with the greatest diligence. That it is a day of
rest, doth not hinder us in so doing; for we are to look on
spiritual exercises but as the rest and refreshment of the
soul. In heaven, where the people of God have the most
perfect rest, they are not idle, but are employed in
spiritual and heavenly exercises.— We should take care
therefore to employ our minds on a sabbath-day on spiritual
objects by holy meditation; improving for our help therein
the Holy Scriptures, and other books that are according to
the word of God. We should also employ ourselves outwardly
on this day in the duties of divine worship, in public and
private. It is proper to be more frequent and abundant in
secret duties on this day, than on other days, as we
have time and opportunity, as well as to attend on public
ordinances.
It is proper on this day, not
only especially to promote the exercise of religion in
ourselves, but also in others; to be assisting them, and
endeavouring to promote their spiritual good, by religious
conference. —Especially those who have the care of
others ought, on this day, to endeavour to promote their
spiritual good: heads of families should be instructing and
counselling their children, and quickening them in the ways
of religion, and should see to it that the sabbath be
strictly kept in their houses. A peculiar blessing may be
expected upon those families where there is due care taken
that the sabbath be strictly and devoutly observed.
4.We are on this day
especially to meditate upon and celebrate the work of
redemption. We are with special joy to remember the
resurrection of Christ; because that was the finishing of
that work. And this is the day whereon Christ rested and was
refreshed, after he had endured those extreme labours which
he endured for our perishing souls. This was the day of the
gladness of Christ a heart; it was the day of his
deliverance from the chains of death, and also of our
deliverance; for we are delivered in him who is our head.
He, as it were, rose with his elect. He is the
first—fruits; those that are Christ’s will follow.
Christ, when be rose, was justified as a public person, and
we are justified in him. This is the day of our deliverance
out of Egypt.
We should therefore meditate
on this with joy; we should have a sympathy with Christ in
his joy. As he was refreshed on this day, so we should be
refreshed, as those whose hearts are united with his. When
Christ rejoices, it becomes all his church every where to
rejoice. —We are to say of this day, "This is the day
that the Lord hath made; we will rejoice and be glad in
it."
But we are not only to
commemorate the resurrection of Christ, but the whole work
of redemption, of which this was the finishing. We keep the
day on which the work was finished, because it is in
remembrance of the whole work.—We should on this day
contemplate the wonderful love of God and of Christ, as
expressed in the work of redemption; and our remembrance of
these things should be accompanied with suitable exercises
of soul with respect to them. When we call to mind the love
of Christ, it should be with a return of love on our part.
When we commemorate this work, it should be with faith in
the Saviour. And we should praise God and the Lamb for this
work, for the divine glory and love manifested in it, in our
private and public prayers, in talking of the wonderful
works of God, and in singing divine songs.
Hence it is proper that
Christ’s disciples should choose this day to come
together to break bread, or to celebrate the ordinance of
the Lord's supper, Acts xx. 7. because it is an ordinance
instituted in remembrance of the work of redemption.
5. Works of mercy and
charity are very proper and acceptable to Christ on this
day. They were proper on the ancient sabbath. Christ was
wont to do such works on the sabbath-day. But they
especially become the christian sabbath, because it is a day
kept in commemoration of the greatest work of mercy and love
towards us that ever was wrought. What can be more proper
than that on such a day we should be expressing our love and
mercy towards our fellow-creatures, and especially our
fellow-Christians. Christ loves to see us show our
thankfulness to him in such ways as these. Therefore we find
that the Holy Ghost was especially careful, that such works
should be performed on the first day of the week in the
primitive church, as we learn by our text.
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