Page Date:
02/23/2007
From: Anthology 2:1
Durham on the Fourth Commandment
Introduction
1. Morality of the Fourth
Commandment
Excurses: Family Worship
2. The Particular Morality of the
Fourth Commandment
3. The Change of the Day
4. The Sanctification of the day. |
| Ex.20:8-11. Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy; Six days
shalt thou labor, and do all thy work; but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy
God; in it thou shalt not do any work, thou, nor thy son, thy man servant, nor thy maid
servant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is within thy gates; for in six days the
Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the seventh day;
wherefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath and hallowed it. |
James Durham
The Fourth Commandment
Copyright © 1997
Naphtali Press |
The Lord in his infinite wisdom and goodness, has so far consulted
mans infirmity, as to sum up his duty in these ten commands, called ten words, that
thereby his darkness and dullness by sin, might be helped by an easy abbreviation. The
first command therefore contains mans duty to God in immediate worship, requiring
that the only true God should be worshipped. The second stints and limits men to that
worship alone which he prescribed. The third commands reverencing of him in all his
ordinances, and a reverent manner of going about them.
This fourth points out the time which most
solemnly the Lord will have set apart for his worship, that so he, who is both Lord of us,
and of our time, may show what share he has reserved as a tribute due to himself, who has
liberally vouchsafed on us the rest; which time is not to be understood exclusively, as if
he would have only that spent in worship (there being no exclusive determination of
exercise of worship, or duration of them in Scripture, that is to say, that they shall be
so long and so often, and no longer, no oftener) but that he will precisely have this time
as an acknowledgment from us, even as when he gave Adam the use of all the trees in the
garden, he reserved one; so when he gives six days to us, he keeps a seventh for himself.
This command is placed in a manner between the
two tables, because it is a transition as it were from the one to the other, and contains
in it duties of immediate service to God, and of charity towards men, and so in some sort
serves to reconcile (if we may speak so) the two tables, and to knit them together, that
so their harmony may be the more clearly seen. It is also more largely and fully set down
for plurality and variety of expressions and words than any other in either of the tables;
yet has it notwithstanding, been in all times in a special manner assaulted and set upon,
and endeavors used to overturn it. Satan aiming sometimes to darken the meaning of it;
sometimes to loose from the strict tie of observing it, and that not only by old
Sabbatarians, anti-Sabbatarians, and corrupt school-men, but even by those whom God has
made orthodox in the main; and especially by a generation in these days, who having a
hatred at all ordinances, and at all the commands of the decalogue, yet do especially vent
it against this command; because in it is contained a main foundation of godliness. As it
is wonderfully great presumption for men to assault and set upon Gods authority,
even where he has strengthened himself most (as it were), by more full explication, and
more large and particular pressing of duty, and forbidding of the contrary sin, as he has
done on this command, more than in any of all the rest; so it will be necessary before we
can speak to the practical part of piety comprehended in it [Part IV], concerning the
sanctification of the Christian Sabbath, or Lords Day, either in the negative or
positive part of it, to speak doctrinally (for clearing of the precept) to these three:
I. Whether this command is moral, and obliges us
in its letter as other commands do.
II. What is the particular morality of it, and
the literal meaning of the words.
III. How our Lords Day stands in reference
to this command, and whether thereby the same sanctification is required as to it, though
its institution arise from another ground, than is required to the seventh-day Sabbath?
Somewhat of all these must necessarily be spoken
unto, and we begin to speak first of its morality before we speak of its meaning, because
all depends on this, both in respect of exposition and practice. For if it is not moral
and perpetually binding, its not necessary either to explicate it, or to study and
press the practice of it. But if it is found to be moral, then no doubt it concerns us,
and requires the same moral sanctification of a day now as it did before. |
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The Fourth Commandment
Introduction
1. Morality of the Fourth Commandment
Excurses: Family Worship
2. The Particular Morality of the Fourth Commandment
3. The Change of the Day
4. The Sanctification of the day.
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